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Gay spider man comic

gay spider man comic

Marvel’s Gay Spider-Man Takes the Spider-Verse to Fashion Week

This article contains SPOILERS for Edge of Spider-Verse #5!

Marvel's first gaySpider-Man has yet to take center stage, but new preview material shows Web Weaver slinging the Spider-Verse straight into the world of lofty fashion. Only a limited details are known about Web Weaver and his origin, collated together from Comic-Con announcements and upcoming solicits. However, recently common cover art and preview pages from Steve Foxe, Kei Zama, VC's Joe Caramagna, and Nick Lowe's Edge of Spider-Verse #5 story have given fans their best tease yet about Web Weaver's story and his passion for fashion.

Web Weaver was created by writer Steve Foxe and artist Kris Anka. At this year's San Diego Comic-Con Nick Lowe, editor of Marvel's Spider-Office, shared that Web Weaver's name is Cooper Cohen. Cohen's sexuality, personality, and profession as a fashion designer at Van Dyne were also revealed between Marvel's solicit for Edge of Spider-Verse #5 as well as Steve Foxe's own tweets. Taken together, one can begin to picture Cooper in move, but this newest free of preview material truly shows how Web Weaver work

Marvel Reveals Details From the First Gay Spider-Man's Source Story

Marvel has revealed unused details regarding the first gay Spider-Man's origin story, which will be featured in the upcoming Edge of Spider-Verse#5.

Arriving in October, Edge of Spider-Verse #5 will introduce readers to Web-Weaver, a new Spider-Man variant who will be featured in a story by Steve Foxe and Kei Zama. Preview images for Edge of Spider-Verse #5 show the personality, who appears to own been classmates with Peter Parker, pushed Peter out of the way from being bitten by the radiated spider and then began developing powers. The images also show the character being kicked out of home and seemingly being comforted and potentially taken in by Aunt May and another woman.

RELATED: Marvel Debuts a Unused Revolutionary War Era Spider-Man Variant

Marvel said of the character's role in Edge of Spider-Verse #5, "Web-Weaver, a not-so-mild mannered fashion designer at Van Dyne gets spider-powers and shows us a very diverse kind of Spider-Slayer in a story by Steve Foxe and Kei Zama. See him strut the runway in front of his fellow Spiders in a variant cover by Kris Anka, the marvelous artist behind

Meet Cooper Coen, Marvel's First Gay Spider-Man (SpiderSpoilers)

Posted in: Comics, Marvel Comics, Spider-Man | Tagged: Andrew Lloyd Webber, Cooper Coen, Edge of Spider-Verse, spider-man, spider-verse, Web-Weaver


Tomorrow's Edge Of Spider-Verse #5 introduces a brand-new Spider-Man to the Marvel multiverse, with the alliterative Cooper Coen, also acknowledged as Web Weaver, the gay Spider-Man of his own universe. Created by Steve Foxe and Kris Anka, his first story by Steve Foxe and Kei Zama reveals his origin – and Peter Parker was right there.

Basically, he saved the Peter Parker he fancied, and took the radioactive spider bite for himself. And while Peter Parker's parents were dead and he lived with his aunt and uncle, Cooper Coen lives with his aunt and her wife instead, when his parents are homophobic enough to fling him out.

Family get-togethers must be a hoot. Also, graduating as a fashion designer at Van Dyne, Cooper Coen also has a better sense of design when conceiving of his Spider suit. Peter Parker only had Aunt May's sewing machine to use. Still, it turned out okay. And yes, just as a reminder, you'll want to peruse Edge Of Spider-Verse #5 tomorrow bef

Get ready comic book readers, you’re about to obtain your first ever queer Spider-Man.

Back in , a Sony Pictures Entertainment and Marvel Entertainment legal licensing agreement stated that Peter Parker and his change ego Spider-Man must always be a straight and Caucasian man. This facts came out of a massive document leak from Sony that included , private files, emails and financial data. The shrink went into effect in September and listed “mandatory” character traits for both Peter Parker and Spider-Man. This includes the caveat that Spider-Man is “not a homosexual (unless Marvel has portrayed that modify ego as a homosexual).”

But it seems that Marvel Comics is not under such a limitation. And now, LGBTQ comic publication fans will be getting their first gay Spider-Man.

According to Inside The Magic, Edge of Spider-Verse #5 will explore and bring in this new version of the classic hero. The series is meant to play with the character&#;s mythos and introduce readers to new concepts and versions of the web-slinger. This includes a T-Rex version called Spider-Rex.

Steve Foxe, the writer of the series revealed the fresh variant over Twitter. Foxe stated that a unused characte

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