nice story of Spider-Man but three is just one problem Venom cannot remember who Spider-Man is both Eddie Brock and Mac Gargan plus i want to see Anti-Venom change into Venom again but this in the other and Mac Gargan Scorpion too as venom where they can keep there old and new powers as Venom for Eddie Brock as Anti-Venom and Venom persona and Gargan the Scorpion and Venom Persona if the Venom symbiote splits into two Eddie as Vneom and Anti-Venom execpt that the Anti-Venom symbiote is not hurting it since it is maid out of Eddie's White blodd cells and apart of the Venom symbiote and Gargan the birth of the Scoprion maid out of Gargan's White boold cells and a part of the Venom symbiote so they can change into Vneom at will and change into like eddie brock into Anti-Venom to venom and Mac Gargan into Scorpion to venom if you just added The two of Them in into the other and brought it back none of this would have been possible also add Spider-Man Green Goblin Norman Osborn Harry Osborn Hobgoblin Lizard carnage and toxin after the End of Dark Reign.
Venom Eddie Brock and Mac Gargan should have remembered that Spider-Man is Peter Parker so after Dark Reign and Captain America reborn could you make this and the return of the Other event where the Venom Symbiote too large and split into two it merge with Eddie Brock and his Anti-Venom Symbiote and the other with Mac Gargan and his Scorpion coustme what later become a living Symbiote so they can be both Venom and also Spider-Man too beucase they must know who Spider-Man is and everything about him in the other in Venom:Reborn in Dark Reign storyline event in Spider-Man Spidey evoles and Anti-Venom beocming Venom Again also Mac Gargan as Scorpion(in Symbiotic form) where they can be both Venom for Brock normal form as Venom than Anti-Venom and Gargan Symbiote Scorpion to Venom (with stinger tail) where they have Spider'Man's new powers and his information they will know who Spider-Man is including Norman Osborn and His son plus the return of Hobgoblin and Carnage plu Lizard and Toxin where they can all evoled
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Spider-man real name:Peter Parker Height:5'10" Weight:167 lbs Eyes:Hazel Hair:Brown Strength level:Spider-Man can lift 10 tons
The ongoing struggle between Spider-Man and the Green Goblin goes beyond mere adversity—it's all about madness.
Green Goblin real name:Norman Osborn height:5'11"-6'4" weight:185 lbs-385 lbs eyes:blue hair: reddish brown strength level:Goblin orginally lift 10 tons now with the iron patriot armor he can lift 100 tons Green Goblin ll Real name:Harry Osborn height:5'10" weight:175 lbs eyes:blue hair:reddish brown Strength level:Harry can lift 10 tons As Peter Parker braces for the final chapter of his latest Goblin crisis, "New Ways to Die," arriving October 15 in the double-sized AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #573 by Dan Slott and John Romita Jr., we reflect upon the uncompromising hatred of Norman Osborn for his arachnid archenemy. Through life and death, his obsession for obliterating Spider-Man has driven him to maniacal insanity.
Where the father has failed, the son has taken up the crusade, as Norman's prodigal, Harry targeted his best friend's Peter Parker's masked alter ego for a time. When the son has fallen, the father has returned to once again continue the attack. The specter of the Green Goblin and his plots will forever haunt our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man…
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #14 (1964)
The mysterious Green Goblin first soared into Spider-Man's life with an amazing proposition for the hero: a starring role in a movie. Roping in the deadly Enforcers for extra panache, the Goblin's fake film rolled and Spidey took his lumps. The fiction of the film forgotten, the pitched battle extended to a cave in the desert where not only did the webslinger contend with his new green-hued foe but also the Incredible Hulk.
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #121-122 (1973)
Faced with financial ruin, Norman Osborn's sanity cracked in two and his Green Goblin personality dominated once more. Abducting the love of Peter's life, Gwen Stacy, the Goblin meted out his revenge on Spider-Man in the form of the poor girl's death. His world shattered, Peter tracked Norman down and delivered a punishing beating, which ended with the Goblin's apparent accidental demise by his own hand. Spider-Man's life would never again be the same.
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #136-137 (1974)
The Green Goblin lived again, this time in the form of Peter's best friend Harry Osborn. His sanity as fragile as his father's, Harry conceived a revenge of his own and kidnapped three of Spider-Man's loved ones, a "small shaped-charge clean fusion nuclear bomb" hanging over each of their heads. Spidey subdued Harry and raced to his friends' and family's rescue. Crisis averted, Peter watched an incoherent Harry taken into custody.
SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #200 (1993)
Harry Osborn relapsed and the Green Goblin proceeded to drive Spider-Man insane. Having loaded a memorial Foundation in his father's name with explosives, Harry once again planned a revenge for Norman. Peter engaged the Goblin in a furious battle at the Foundation, and eventually Harry's mind cleared once he realized he had put his own child in danger. A hero in the end, the second Green Goblin succumbed to his illness and seemingly died after having saved his best friend.
PETER PARKER: SPIDER-MAN #47 (2002)
The horror of Norman Osborn back from the dead magnified a hundred-fold when Spider-Man once more confronted the original Green Goblin. Using his old tactics of threatening those close to Peter and trying to drive him insane, the Goblin culminated his scheme in a brutal fistfight with his enemy. Peter turned the tables on Norman by attempting to talk to him about the beauty and grace of Gwen Stacy instead of killing him. In doing so, Spider-Man delivered a far greater blow to the Green Goblin than any physical violence ever could.
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Spider-man real name:Peter Parker Height:5'10" Weight:167 lbs Eyes:Hazel Hair:Brown Strength level:Spider-Man can lift 10 tons
Insane even by alien symbiote standards, Venom's got a mad-on for our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man that burns bright battle after battle.
VENOM: DARK ORIGIN #1, by the incredible team of Zeb Wells & Angel Medina, due on August 6, illuminates the dark spots of the saga between loser Eddie Brock and the alien parasite that changed his life, just in time for the sinister symbiote to slither its way back into Spidey's life this August and September in the six-part "New Ways to Die" epic spinning into AMAZING SPIDER-MAN courtesy of Dan Slott and John Romita Jr. Venom Real Name:Eddie Brock
Height:6'4"-7'6" Weight:277 lbs-795 lbs Eyes:Blue Hair:Reddish Blond Strength level:Venom can lift 15-25 tons but brock becmoe Anti-venom he is Able to lift 86-100 tons
Venom lll Real name:Mac Gargan Height:6'4"-7'6" Weight:278 lbs-895 lbs Eyes:Brown Hair:Brown (Shaved head) Strength level:Gargan can lift 15-25 tons as Scorpion,Now as Venom he is ,able to lift 86-100 tons
Together, Brock and Venom cemented their place in Spider-Man history forever as one of Peter Parker's deadliest opponents—and this new limited series aims to shed a bit of life on that malignant partnership.
Now, drool over these choice historic tussles betwixt Spider and Symbiote!
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #258 (1984)
After gaining his dope black duds in SECRET WARS #8, Spider-Man soon sensed something wasn't quite fresh about said threads. Peter swung off to consult with Dr. Reed Richards, Mr. Fantastic, and ol' Big Brain scanned the problem: the suit possessed a mind of its own, and not a terribly friendly one. Spidey's first struggle with the Venom symbiote ended under a barrage of sonics and Peter believed he'd seen the last of the alien stickum.
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #300 (1988)
The symbiote joined with journalist Eddie Brock and together the pair's only collective thought amounted to "Kill Spider-Man!" Joined in fierce battle on the roof of Our Lady of Saints Church, Spidey and the newly-revealed Venom both depleted their reserves until a terrifyingly high fall delivered Brock & Co. to Slumberland—and back into Fantastic Four HQ incarceration.
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #332 (1990)
Not even the super-secure prison known as the Vault could hold the living ball of fury known as Venom. Back on the trail of Spider-Man, Brock lured his nemesis to a public park where a tense battle ensued. In the midst of the titanic tussle, innocents became entangled in Venom's rage over Spider-Man and a baby's life hung in the balance. Peter then witnessed an incredible sight: the symbiote rescued the child and put the kibosh on any further fisticuffs.
VENOM: FINALE #2-3 (1997-1998)
Alongside the Overreach Committee and a certain Agent Smith, Spider-Man confronted an amnesiac Venom in the heart of the city. Hoping to trap the symbiote with sonics, Spidey and Smith's plan blew up in their faces and the super hero resorted to old-fashioned streetfighting. Eddie Brock's deeply-buried hatred of Peter erupted in full-force during the melee, endangering Spidey, but a last-minute shot of Dopamine inhibitors from Smith put the capper on the sordid story.
PETER PARKER: SPIDER-MAN v2 #10 (1999)
Having re-digested his "son," Carnage, Venom triumphantly returned to the mission of ridding the world of Spider-Man. The symbiote kidnapped J. Jonah Jameson and swung off to the site of his first battle with Peter: Our Lady of Saints Church. There, Spidey saved JJJ and delivered some punishing punches to his long-time foe, hoping to then deliver the coup de grace with Venom's weakness: sound. Unfortunately, Venom curtailed that hope but also fortunately something he ate didn't agree with him—Carnage!
MARVEL KNIGHTS: SPIDER-MAN #11 (2005)
One Spidey-villain: bad. 12 Spidey-villains: worse. An all-new Venom—former-Scorpion Mac Gargan merged with the original alien symbiote—joined the Sinister Twelve and their atrocious attempt to squash Spider-Man. Webslinging across the city to save Mary Jane, Peter fell under a vicious Venom attack and the wily symbiote split itself to deliver double-disaster to Our Hero. Venom failed to consider Spidey's great love for MJ in his equation and ended up with an entire building on his pointy head for his troubles.
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On Marvel these are there option On Spider's Villain i just did this for fun
10. THE BURGLAR First Appearance: AMAZING FANTASY v1 #15 (1962) Why He Makes The List: You all know the story: young Peter Parker let a burglar run past him, considering it "not his job" to do something, and later that same lowlife shot and killed the boy's beloved Uncle Ben, teaching him a valuable lesson about great power and great responsibility. While Spider-Man has faced a vast assortment of exotic and dangerous enemies over the years, perhaps none have cut him as deeply as this common burglar. Vilest Villainy: It doesn't get much worse than shooting an elderly
man in cold blood. But then considering that this horrible, cowardly act led to the creation of Spider-Man, perhaps the Burglar actually committed a good deed...? Spotlight Comic: AMAZING FANTASY v1 #15, the Burglar's first appearance.
9. THE LIZARD First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #6 (1963) Find Out His Deal… Here Why He Makes The List: Dr. Curt Connors has long served as a friend, mentor and confidante to Peter Parker, giving him the guidance of an experienced adult when necessary. However, Connors' alter ego, the Lizard, presents Spider-Man with the agonizing dilemma of needing to corral a foe who can't be reasoned with while at the same time not harming a valued comrade. Vilest Villainy: Under the control of the voodoo priestess Calypso, the Lizard unleashes his most violent campaign ever. Initially attacking
criminals, Lizard ends up massacring pedestrians and scores of other innocent bystanders before Spider-Man can bring him back under control. (SPIDER-MAN v1 #1-5—1990) Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #44, the Lizard stalks Spider-Man on his home turf of New York City for the first time.
8. THE HOBGOBLIN First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #238 (1983) Find Out His Deal… Here Why He Makes The List: Just as Spider-Man began to get comfortable with the usual assortment of Vultures, Scorpions and Rhinos comprising his rogues gallery, along came the Hobgoblin to turn his world upside down. A far cry from the gimmick-laden villains Spidey had grown accustomed to encountering, and more committed to crime over personal vendettas, Hobby represented a new, darker, more dangerous threat in a new era of Spider-Man's career. Vilest Villainy: Roderick Kingsley cemented his initial rise to power as the Hobgoblin in large part by relying on deception and manipulation, keeping his
enemies guessing as to his true identity. In one instance, he framed Peter Parker's friend Flash Thompson and had him thrown in jail as the Hobgoblin, but in a more tragic turn, he brainwashed Ned Leeds, husband of Peter's first love, Betty Brant, into thinking himself the Hobgoblin, resulting in Ned's death at the hands of the Foreigner. (AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #249-251—1984) Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-GIRL #1, in a possible future, Spider-Man's daughter runs afoul of the Hobogoblin.
7. DOCTOR OCTOPUS First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #3 (1963) Find Out His Deal… Here Why He Makes The List: For Peter Parker, Otto Octavius represents his journey to becoming Spider-Man gone horribly wrong. Like Peter, the man who would be Dr. Octopus grew up as an outcast, fascinated by science and eventually gaining fantastic abilities as a result, but without the support and example of a loving family, Doc Ock went down the road Spidey must constantly steer himself away from. Vilest Villainy: During a particularly wild rampage in New York City,
Doc Ock found himself in combat with Spider-Man once more and rather than engage his foe directly, lashed out with his tentacles, hurling debris at innocent bystanders. Captain George Stacy, heroic police chief and father of Peter Parker's girlfriend Gwen, put himself in the line of fire in order to save the life of a young boy at the expense of his own, making the Spidey-Ock feud more personal than ever. Spotlight Comic: SPIDER-MAN/DOCTOR OCTOPUS: YEAR ONE #1 reveals the origin of Doctor Octopus told from his own perspective.
6. THE KINGPIN First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #50 (1967) Find Out His Deal… Here Why He Makes The List: Though his chief rivalry through the years has been with Daredevil, Wilson Fisk considers New York City the base of his vast crime empire as the Kingpin, meaning he and Spider-Man inevitably clash time and again. As a proud resident of the Big Apple, Peter Parker takes deep and personal offense at the Kingpin's ongoing attempts to corrupt the streets he loves. Vilest Villainy: In the wake of Civil War, the Kingpin becomes the first to take full advantage of Peter Parker revealing his secret identity to the world. For no reason other than because Spider-Man has proven an on-again, off-again nuisance to him
over the years, from behind bars, Kingpin ordered a sniper to target Peter and his family, with his elderly Aunt May eventually taking the bullet, sending her into a coma. (AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #538-539—2007) Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #51, Spider-Man's first confrontation with the Kingpin concludes
5. KRAVEN First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #15 (1964) Find Out His Deal… Here Height:6' Weight:235 lbs Eyes:Brown Hair:Black Why He Makes The List: Sergei Kravinoff began his lengthy war with Spider-Man stalking his prey with professional precision, but numerous defeats at the Wall Crawler's hands snapped Kraven the Hunter into a downward spiral that made him more desperate with each encounter between the two. By the end, Kraven saw his trials against Spider-Man not as coincidence or misfortune, but destiny. His utter belief in his mission coupled with the deadly skills at his disposal made Kraven one of Spidey's deadliest foes. Vilest Villainy: Kraven succeeds where no other foe of Spider-Man ever has, defeating the Wall Crawler in gruesome and extreme fashion by drugging him and then burying him alive. As Peter Parker rots beneath the ground, the Hunter dons his own black Spider-Man costume and savagely beats Vermin, determined to prove
himself his rival's superior. When the true Spider-Man returns, Kraven denies him revenge by taking his own life. (WEB OF SPIDER-MAN #31-32, AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #293-294, SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN v1 #131-132—1987) Spotlight Comic: WEB OF SPIDER-MAN #32, as Peter Parker lies buried alive, Kraven assumes his role as Spider-Man
4. VENOMIIl First Appearance: MARVEL KNIGHTS: SPIDER-MAN #9 (2005) Height:6'4"-7'6" Weight:278 lbs-895 lbs Eyes:Black Hair:Brown (Shaved head) Learn More About Him… here Why He Makes the List: " Mac Gargan, the most villainous host of the Venom symbiote May not be The First Venom but he has proved himself to be a a-list Villain as Venom Gargan has proved himself as a deadliest foe replacing Eddie Brock as the new Venom to deadlyist yet no knows who he is and has all of his powers and he is more Stronger than him Making him the deadlist foe ever. Vilest Villainy: joined the Thunderbolts during Civil War and rose to fame hunting unregistered heroes.
If the idea of Venom as a hero makes you queasy, you can relax. The 'hero' perception comes from very clever PR and nanobots threaten to electrocute Venom if he attempts to eat civilians. Gargan doesn't always see eye-to-eye with the symbiote, and the two struggle for control over their shared existence. If they ever settle that question, or if those nanobots fail, well, things should get interesting." Thought to kill Spider-Man (Beyond #2 2005),Fought jack flag (Thunderbolts #115 2006) Swore revenge against jamson (AmAZING SPIDer-Man #20 1965) Spotlight Comic: THUNDERBOLTS #116—Thunderbolts Mountain is on lockdown and Venom is getting hungry
3. THE GREEN GOBLIN II First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #31 (1965) Find Out His Deal… Here Why He Makes The List: Harry Osborn's transformation into the Green Goblin represented not just another tragedy in the life of Peter Parker, but shattered his ability to trust those around him. If his best friend could become his greatest enemy, who wouldn't turn against him? While Harry never reached quite the vicious heights of his father Norman—the original Goblin—his closer personal connection to Peter Parker made his feud with Spider-Man all the more difficult for our hero. Vilest Villainy: Shortly before he met his apparent demise, Harry as the Green Goblin, set into motion a chain of events that seemingly brought
Peter Parker's long-thought-dead parents back into his life, only for him to discover months later their actual status as robots programmed to turn on him upon learning his secret identity. Trailing the Chameleon back to the mastermind behind the scheme, Spider-Man dropped to his knees in devastation upon discovering a looped video tape of Harry laughing at him. (AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #389—1994) Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #136, Harry becomes the new Green Goblin
2. VENOM First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #299 (1988) Find Out His Deal… Here Height:6'4"-7'6" Weight:277 lbs-795 lbs Eyes:Blue Hair:Reddish Blond Why He Makes The List: It's not necessarily his potent abilities or knack for extreme violence that make Venom so terrifying, it's the way he takes everything Spider-Man stands for and perverts it in the most disgusting of ways, a true dark mirror of the heroic Wall Crawler in every way. Where Peter Parker lives by the coda of "with great power comes great responsibility," Eddie Brock and his alien symbiote see their own power as a means to dispense their brand of "justice" and take revenge without any regard for the consequences. Venom's most frightening quality will always be that he truly believes he's the good guy. Vilest Villainy: Though he has violated it countless times, Venom
still prides himself on a twisted sense of morality, believing he does not allow "innocents" to come to any harm, even as a result of his war with Spider-Man. Never did Eddie Brock prove his vows more hollow than in his first escape from the super villain interment center the Vault, where he used the camouflage function of his living costume to trick Hugh Taylor into seeing him as a fallen Guardsmen, and then suffocating the young guard. (AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #315—1989) Spotlight Comic: VENOM VS CARNAGE #1, Eddie Brock clashes with his murderous "offspring," Carnage
1. THE GREEN GOBLIN First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #14 (1964) Find Out His Deal… Here Height:5'11"-6'4" armored Weight:185 lbs-385 lbs armored Eyes:Blue Hair:Reddish Brown Why He Makes The List: Norman Osborn made things personal from the minute he learned Spider-Man's mask hid the face of his son Harry' best friend, Peter Parker, and nobody has caused more tragedy in Spidey's life since. While many other villains seek power, money and revenge for past defeats when they go against Spider-Man, more often than not for Norman, it comes down to simply wanting to make Peter's life hell because he can and because, frankly, he just doesn't like him. In another world, Norman could have been the father Peter never knew, and in some ways before he became the Green Goblin full time he did serve that function, but instead he serves as the eternal evil in Spider-Man's life that simply won't die. Vilest Villainy: For all the grief and pain both physical and mental
Norman Osborn has caused Peter Parker over the years, no single deed comes close in terms of devastating his nemesis to the Goblin's murder of Gwen Stacy, love of Spider-Man's life. When Norman hurled Gwen from a bridge high above New York City, he tossed away the final vestiges of Peter Parker's innocence, hurting him as much if not more than that nameless burglar had years before. (AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #121—1973) Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #39, the Goblin's identity revealed
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11. VENOM First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #19 (1964) Opposite Number: Spider-Man Height:6'4"-7'6" Weight:278 lbs-895 lbs Eyes:Black Hair:Brown (Shaved head) Learn More About Him… here Why He Makes the List: " Mac Gargan, the most villainous host of the Venom symbiote May not be The First Spider-Man twin Venom but he has proved himself to be a a-list Villain, joined the Thunderbolts during Civil War and rose to fame hunting unregistered heroes. If the idea of Venom as a hero makes you queasy, you can relax. The 'hero' perception comes from very clever PR and nanobots threaten to electrocute Venom if he attempts to eat civilians. Gargan doesn't always see eye-to-eye with the symbiote, and the two struggle for control over their shared existence. If they ever settle that question, or if those nanobots fail, well, things should get interesting." –Secret Cabal member LiterateNitz18 Spotlight Comic: THUNDERBOLTS #116—Thunderbolts Mountain is on lockdown and Venom is getting hungry!
10. THE STEEL SERPENT Opposite Number: Iron Fist Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: IRON FIST #4 (1976) Why He Makes the List: "Unlike some of the others you'll find on this list, Davos—aka the Steel Serpent, aka the Steel Phoenix—actually had a shot at being the good member of his twin set, but his selfishness and aggressive streak thwarted him then as it has time and again. Davos has tried to claim the Iron Fist he feels to be his birthright many times from Danny Rand, but he has never proven his rival's equal. At the moment, the former Serpent has apparently reformed and resigned himself to aiding Rand and the city of K'un-L'un, but you never know when jealousy will once again strike." – Secret Cabal member Annihilator882 Spotlight Comic: IMMORTAL IRON FIST #4—Davos goes one-on-two with Iron Fists Danny Rand and Orson Randall!
9. HAWKEYE III (aka BULLSEYE) Opposite Number: Hawkeye Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: DAREDEVIL #131 (1976) Height:6' Weight:200 lbs Eyes:Brown Hair:Brown(shaved head) Why He Makes the List: "If anybody in the Marvel Universe is less qualified to be a hero than Bullseye, we'd like to know who. Even though he's got a sweet gig posing as Hawkeye in Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers, this lunatic is still sneaking off to put arrows through the eye sockets of muggers and innocent victims alike. Bullseye as an Avenger is just fundamentally wrong—and that's what makes it so sinfully delightful. We feel Clint Barton's frustration at his role as Masked Marksman being usurped by this nutjob and can't wait for the comeuppance." – Annihilator882 Spotlight Comic: BULLSEYE: GREATEST HITS #1—The origin of Bullseye!
8. DARK BEAST Opposite Number: Beast Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: X-MEN ALPHA #1 (1995) Height:5'11" Weight:400 lbs Eyes:Brown Hair:Black Why He Makes the List: "Without a doubt, Henry McCoy, aka the Beast, is one of the most beloved characters in Marvel history, what with his playful nature and charming intellect. How could any version of this true blue hero not be a guy you'd want to grab a drink with? The Age of Apocalypse answered that question, providing a McCoy who went down a dark path along with the rest of the world and replaced scientific curiosity with sadism, using his wit to cruelly taunt his victims rather than banter. Since coming to our world, the Dark Beast has replaced our own furry friend, trapping him behind a brick wall, and committed further atrocities in the name of science." – Annihilator882 Spotlight Comic: EXCALIBUR #9 (2004)—Dark Beast shakes things up for Professor X and Magneto in Genosha!
7. CARNAGE Opposite Number: Spider-Man Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #344 (1991) Height:6'1"-6'8" Weight:190 lbs-680 lbs Eyes:Blue Hair:Red Why He Makes the List: "If anyone ever lived up to their name it's this guy. Spidey thought he had it bad when jilted photojournalist Eddie Brock and the symbiote met over drinks and became Venom, but nobody was prepared for the spawn of said symbiote to merge with a literal serial killer. Carnage didn't waste time with motivations like revenge or stolen life-envy—he just wanted to have fun. Unfortunately, 'fun' for Carnage was killing. A lot. Mayhem wasn't enough, it was all about the body count." – Secret Cabal member RunawayJ Spotlight Comic: VENOM VS CARNAGE #1—Carnage takes on his "father" in a symbiote showdown!
6. THE MAGUS Opposite Number: Adam Warlock Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: STRANGE TALES #178 (1975) Why He Makes the List: "If you were an anomalous cosmic accident/alternate reality version of an Adam Warlock transported 5,000 years into the past, set down on the planet Sirus X and endlessly bombarded with philosophies and 'dark secrets' by Lord Chaos and Master Order, you'd be loony-bin material as well. Mr. Crazy-Pants spent the next five centuries ascending to near-godhood, forming his own church and biding his time until he could take down Adam Warlock. The twinsies have battled back and forth over the years and while the Magus is gone now, there's always the chance he and his evil afro will return one day!" – Secret Cabal member Agent_M Spotlight Comic: INFINITY WAR #1—The Magus emerges and declares war on the entire Marvel Universe!
5. CASSANDRA NOVA Opposite Number: Professor X Learn More About Her… here First Appearance: NEW X-MEN #121 (2002) Why She Makes the List: "Living emotional energy given corporeal form, Cassandra Nova's original physical body was actually killed by Professor X. In the womb! That they shared! Ew. Anyway, being a little different from mutants or even anything resembling a human, Cassandra survived, slowly rebuilding its body, only to attack decades later! The creepy, extra-evil, super-powerful baddie's been defeated, but she'll surely return, complete with prune-like features and icky, creepy powers." – Agent_M Spotlight Comic: NEW X-MEN #126 (2001)—In Professor X's body, Cassandra Nova makes her last stand against the X-Men!
4. ULTRON Opposite Number: Hank Pym Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: AVENGERS #54 (1968) Why He Makes the List: "Daddy issues? Check. Patterned after the brainwaves of a hero who was already conflicted and emotionally unstable? Check. Extremely powerful and keeps coming back for more? Check times 20! Ultron is the evil twin that won't go away and, unfortunately, gets more dangerous with each incarnation. And, is not afraid to show a little skin, as seen when he—er, it--became a 'she.' From the moment he was created, he's been one of, if not the, greatest enemies the Avengers have ever faced. And there is no denying that he brings out the best in the Earth's Mightiest. 'Ultron, we would have words with thee.' Indeed!" – RunawayJ Spotlight Comic: AVENGERS #67 (1969)—Ultron's back and he's deadlier than ever!
3. STRYFE Opposite Number: Cable Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: NEW MUTANTS #86 (1990) Why He Makes the List: "When a deranged clone of one of the world's most powerful mutants—who happens to be wearing body armor adorned with spikes and blades aplenty—yells, 'Stab your eyes!' you better believe he's gonna do it. Stryfe's an interesting 'evil twin,' as he's often come out on top when stacked up against Cable, the mutant he's cloned from. So Stryfe has Cable's good looks and mutant brain powers, no techno-organic virus crap and a heaping helping of insanity? I'd call that one a winner!" – Agent_M Spotlight Comic: CABLE #1 (1993)—In the far future, Stryfe forces Cable to make one of the most difficult decisions of his life!
2. DARK PHOENIX Opposite Number: Jean Grey Learn More About Her… here First Appearance: UNCANNY X-MEN #134 (1980) Why She Makes the List: "Doesn't get much more 'evil twin' than this, does it? I mean, a cosmic entity posing as Jean Grey freaks out, eats a planet, then almost gets the X-Men killed by the Hellfire Cluband the Shi'Ar. And what's great about Dark Phoenix is that she has the possibility of returning again! After she has a shake for breakfast, a shake for lunch, and a sensible planet-sized dinner." – RunawayJ Spotlight Comic: UNCANNY X-MEN #135—Dark Phoenix crosses the line!
1. ANTI-VENOM Opposite Number: Spider-Man Learn More About Him… here First Appearance: WEB OF SPIDER-MAN #18 (1986) Height:6'4"-7'6" Weight:277 lbs-795 lbs Eyes:Blue Hair:Reddish Blond Why He Makes the List: "Eddie Brock may not have been the first 'evil twin' in comics, but he has remained one of the most popular and well-known for two decades now. Whereas Spider-Man learned early on the lesson that with great power comes great responsibility, Eddie never held himself responsible for anything, and once he became Venom, he used his newfound power to take his revenge on all he felt did him wrong. Over the years, Venom—not Anti-Venom—has waffled the line between outright psychotic murderer and a deranged but well-intentioned defender of the innocent, but even on his best days, Brock represents a twisted mirror of all Peter Parker's efforts to redeem his youthful mistakes." – Annihilator882 Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #316—Bouncing back from his defeat at Spider-Man's hands in their first encounter, Venom returns!
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