Peter Parker
Gwen Stacy
Miles Morales
Venom
Miscellaneous Comic Facts (1000 points minimum0
100

Who Made Spiderman?

Stan Lee

100

What are both canon names for Gwen's spider-hero persona?

(fifty points for each)

Spider-Gwen

Ghost Spider

100

What is the name of Miles' electricity powers (COMICS ONLY)

Venomshock

100

Who was Venom's original host?

Spider-Man

100

Explain the web of life.

(1000 points)

The Web of Life and Destiny in Marvel Comics is an immense, multidimensional metaphysical lattice created by the goddess Neith on Earth‑001, functioning as the cosmic architecture that maps, stabilizes, and interconnects every universe in the Marvel Multiverse while binding together all Spider‑Totems—mystical archetypes that manifest as Spider‑People across realities—into a single, living network of fate. Existing as a three‑dimensional structure woven through five‑dimensional space, the Web not only maintains the structural integrity of the Multiverse but also channels the precognitive energies that power abilities like Spider‑Sense and Madame Web’s visions, making every Spider‑Person a “node” in a vast system of shared destiny. Its physical anchor, Loomworld, houses the Loom and the Master Weaver—eventually revealed to be Karn—who literally weaves the strands of fate, while the vampiric Inheritors exploit the Web to hunt Spider‑Totems across dimensions. The Web enables multiversal travel, underpins the events of Spider‑Verse and Spider‑Geddon, and explains why Spider‑People share similar powers, instincts, and mythic roles; yet it is also fragile, and when damaged or corrupted, entire universes destabilize, Spider‑Totems lose their abilities, and the Multiverse itself begins to unravel. Known by many names—including the Great Web, the Web of Reality, the Time Web, and even the Arachno‑Humanoid Poly‑Multiverse—it stands as one of Marvel’s most important cosmic constructs, the metaphysical backbone of all spider‑related mythology, and the narrative engine that makes the Spider‑Verse possible.

200

Who gave Spider-Man his iconic motto and what is it?

(100 points each)

Uncle Ben

With great power comes great responsibility

200
who made Gwen Stacy's web shooters?

The Wasp

200

Which family member learns Miles’ secret identity first, and what was the encounter?

His father, Jefferson Davis, who discovers it during a battle with Venom.

200

What are all canon abilities Venom has

(10 points for each)

200

ALL of Venom's lore.

(2000 points)

Venom’s lore begins with the Klyntar, an alien species of amorphous symbiotes created by the primordial god Knull, who forged the first symbiote from living darkness and used it as a weapon before the species eventually rebelled and sought to become peaceful, bond‑enhancing organisms; the Venom symbiote itself was once one of these corrupted warriors, later imprisoned on Battleworld where it first encountered Spider‑Man, bonding with him and mimicking his powers before Peter rejected it, leading the symbiote—emotionally wounded and desperate for connection—to merge with disgraced journalist Eddie Brock, whose hatred for Spider‑Man fused with the symbiote’s abandonment issues to create the lethal anti‑hero known as Venom, a being defined by duality, rage, and a twisted sense of justice. Over time, Venom evolved from a villain into a complex protector, forming uneasy alliances with Spider‑Man, battling other symbiotes like Carnage (spawned from Venom and bonded to serial killer Cletus Kasady), and uncovering deeper cosmic truths about its species, including the revelation of Knull’s ancient war against light and creation; the symbiote’s hosts expanded to include characters like Flash Thompson, who became the government‑sanctioned super‑soldier Agent Venom, and even Eddie’s son Dylan Brock, who inherited unique symbiote‑controlling abilities. As its mythology grew, Venom became central to massive cosmic events—such as King in Black, where Knull invaded Earth and Venom ascended to become the new God of the Symbiotes—cementing the character as not just a Spider‑Man villain but a cornerstone of Marvel’s cosmic horror, identity‑driven storytelling, and ever‑expanding multiversal lore.

300

Who was Spiderman's first villain?

(triple points to guess the comic, issue, and date of debut)

The Chameleon

The Amazing Spider-Man #1, March 1963.

300

What is Gwen Stacy's catchphrase?

“Face it, tiger… it’s your last shot!”

300

Who is Miles of Earth 616?

a syndicate crime boss who worked with King Pin to reopen the multiverse in order to find his wife. He ends up taking over the entirety of Earth 1610.

300

In the movie with ANDREW GARFIELD SPECIFICALLY how was venom defeated?

The Bell

300

ALL Gwenom Lore (from both comics)

3000 points

The Gwenom saga unfolds on Earth‑65 when Gwen Stacy—already operating as Spider‑Woman—bonds with her universe’s version of the Venom symbiote, a living biological weapon originally created by the Hand and later manipulated by Matt Murdock, the Kingpin of her world; after Gwen’s father is brutally beaten into a coma by Aleksei Sytsevich on Murdock’s orders, the symbiote senses her grief, rage, and desperation, merging with her and amplifying her darkest impulses until she becomes Gwenom, a far more violent and emotionally unstable incarnation of Spider‑Gwen. Consumed by vengeance, Gwen tears through New York’s criminal underworld, hunting down Aleksei with lethal intent, only for her revenge to be stolen when Frank Castle kills him first, forcing Gwen to confront the futility of her rage even as the symbiote tightens its psychological grip. Throughout the arc, Gwen battles not only external enemies like the Rhino, the Hand, and Murdock’s criminal empire, but also the corruptive influence of the symbiote itself, which feeds on her trauma and tempts her toward becoming a monster indistinguishable from the villains she fights. Her relationships fracture—her bandmates in the Mary Janes fear her, her allies question her judgment, and her identity as a hero erodes—while Murdock manipulates events from the shadows, hoping to mold Gwen into his personal weapon. The Gwenom storyline ultimately becomes a crucible for Gwen’s character: she must choose between surrendering to the symbiote’s intoxicating power or reclaiming her moral center, leading to a brutal internal and external struggle that defines her evolution and sets the stage for later arcs like Gwenom vs. Carnage, where the consequences of her bond with the symbiote echo far beyond this initial transformation.

400

Who is Team Red?

(name their debut and comic issue for 300 points each)

Spider-Man, Deadpool, DareDevil

Deadpool Vol. 3 #11 (1997)

400

What is: Edge of Spider-Verse #2, about?

(a hundred extra points if you can guess the villains name)

Gwen Stacy and Miles Morales fight energy vampires who feed on spider-people

Morlun

400

What part-time job did Miles have?

Brooklyn Visions Academy cafeteria

400

Which Avengers did Venom infect in the Venom Spore Saga

25 points for each

Name Them

400

All Harry Osborn Lore

(5000 points)

Harry Osborn of Earth‑616 is the deeply conflicted son of Norman Osborn, raised in privilege but emotionally neglected after his mother’s early death, which left him desperate for approval and vulnerable to the psychological damage that would define his life. He met Peter Parker at Empire State University and formed a genuine friendship, unaware that Peter was secretly Spider‑Man, even as Harry struggled with drug addiction, insecurity, and the growing realization that his father was the Green Goblin. After Norman’s apparent death, Harry discovered the Goblin identity and, consumed by grief, resentment, and a need to live up to his father’s twisted legacy, took the Goblin Formula himself, becoming the second Green Goblin and entering a tragic cycle of villainy, mental instability, and attempts at redemption. Though he tried repeatedly to build a normal life—marrying Liz Allan, fathering Normie Osborn, and attempting to distance himself from Oscorp—his fractured psyche and the weight of his family legacy continually pulled him back into conflict with Spider‑Man, culminating in his own death after sacrificing himself to save Peter during a final breakdown. Later resurrected through cloning and continuity shifts, Harry continued to wrestle with his identity, taking on roles like American Son and even adopting the alias Harry Lyman in an attempt to escape Norman’s influence, before becoming central to the Kindred saga, where revelations about trauma, manipulation, and the sins of the Osborn family shaped his final arcs. Across decades of storytelling, Harry Osborn stands as one of Marvel’s most tragic figures—a man torn between love and legacy, friendship and madness, forever struggling to escape the shadow of the Green Goblin.

500

Name EVERY spider-man villain.

(50 points for each)

name them. I know over seventy

500

name EVERY difference between Earth 616 (Peter's universe) and Earth 65 (Gwen's universe)

(50 points for each)

Go Ahead. I've read all the comics.

500

Name EVERY time Miles Morales gets the Spider-Man writer special.

(50 points each)

I know a lot

500

Name EVERY symbiote Venom comes into contact with

(50 points for each)

Go Ahead.

500

the entirety of spider-man's lore

(100,000 points)

Spider‑Man’s Earth‑616 history begins with Peter Parker, a brilliant but lonely Queens teenager raised by Aunt May and Uncle Ben after his S.H.I.E.L.D. agent parents died on a mission, whose life changes when a radioactive spider bite grants him superhuman strength, agility, wall‑crawling, and a danger‑sensing spider‑sense, powers he initially uses for fame until his refusal to stop a thief leads to Uncle Ben’s murder, forging his lifelong creed that with great power must come great responsibility and launching him into a career as Spider‑Man, a masked hero constantly balancing school, poverty, and emotional trauma with the burden of protecting New York. His early years are defined by battles with villains who become Marvel icons—Doctor Octopus, the Vulture, Sandman, Electro, Mysterio, Kraven, the Lizard, and especially Norman Osborn’s Green Goblin, who discovers Peter’s identity and kills Gwen Stacy in one of the most defining tragedies in comic history—while Peter juggles college, work at the Daily Bugle under J. Jonah Jameson’s relentless smear campaigns, and complicated relationships with Gwen, Mary Jane Watson, Flash Thompson, and Harry Osborn, whose own descent into madness as the second Green Goblin becomes a recurring emotional wound. Peter’s life spirals through the Bronze Age with the death of Captain Stacy, the introduction of the Punisher, the debut of the Jackal, and the original Clone Saga, which introduces Ben Reilly and forces Peter to question his own identity, a theme that returns decades later when the 1990s Clone Saga expands the mythos with Kaine, Spidercide, and the revelation—later reversed—that Peter might be the clone. He gains the black suit during Secret Wars, later discovering it is a symbiote that bonds with Eddie Brock to create Venom, spawning Carnage and an entire symbiote mythology; he faces cosmic threats like the Beyonder, mystical predators like Morlun who reveal Peter’s role as a Spider‑Totem, and psychological nightmares like Kraven’s Last Hunt, where he is buried alive and forced to confront his own mortality. Peter marries Mary Jane, joins the Avengers, and becomes a global hero before Civil War forces him to unmask publicly, leading to Aunt May being shot and the controversial One More Day deal with Mephisto that erases his marriage and rewrites reality, restoring his secret identity at the cost of his personal happiness. In the modern era, Peter works at Horizon Labs, becomes CEO of Parker Industries, and loses it due to Doctor Octopus’s takeover during the Superior Spider‑Man era, where Otto swaps bodies with Peter and lives as Spider‑Man until Peter’s consciousness returns; he mentors Miles Morales, Silk, and Spider‑Gwen during multiversal crises like Spider‑Verse and Spider‑Geddon, battles the Inheritors, and becomes deeply tied to the Web of Life and Destiny. He repeatedly confronts Norman Osborn as the villain becomes the Iron Patriot, the Red Goblin, and a recurring symbol of Peter’s greatest failures; he faces Kindred, a demonic manifestation tied to Harry Osborn’s tortured soul; he loses and regains his powers multiple times; he dies and returns; he joins and leaves the Fantastic Four; he battles the Beyond Corporation; he becomes a teacher, a scientist, a fugitive, and a multiversal anchor; and through every retcon, resurrection, cosmic revelation, and personal tragedy—from the death of Gwen to the erasure of his marriage, from the Clone Saga to Superior Spider‑Man, from Secret Wars to Spider‑Verse

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