I love the difference between a Batman identity reveal and a Spider-Man identity reveal.
With Batman it’s an actual dramatic “no way!” moment, because that’s Bruce Wayne! Famous billionaire playboy who’s also… the Batman? The Dark Knight of Gotham? And suddenly Bruce is ruined because he’s not the Batman, now he’s Bruce Wayne, playing the Batman, and he loses all That (tm). He loses both identities, he can’t be Batman in the same way, and he loses Brucie Wayne. The reveal is dramatic and impactful and shocking to many.
But if Spidey’s identity is revealed… it’s a “uh who’s this kid?” at best, and a “Peter Parker? That kid I kinda know?” at worst, like yes, there are the consequences of loved ones in danger, possibly a lack of respect for Spidey, but he didn’t have much respect to begin with, and his family and friends dies left and right either way. What’s fun about a Spider-Man reveal, is that “oh. I’ve been fighting my hardest… against some 15 year old? And I haven’t even won? What the hell?” And if a villain reveals Spidey’s identity but the doesn’t know Peter Parker, that’s all they get. The knowledge a (somewhat) normal kid is the Friendly Neighbourhood Spider-Man. If anything, it’s more difficult for the villain, who might have mixed feelings on fighting a child. The reveal is personal and could be nothing depending on circumstances.
Sidekicks.
Those Dadwing fics where Peter's, his son:
Peter: I'm 17, that's like practically an adult, and I've been a vigilante since I was like 14. I can take care of myself.
What Richard sees when looking at Peter:
The more they change...
The more they stay the same
Spideyhood🕷️🦇
sigh... spiderfist
the robins referenced from random pictures of my siblings with no context
Before the Mystery Shack
Design by:
Ian Worrel, Sun Jae Lee, Alex Chechik, Janine Chang,
Paint by: Jeffrey Thompson, Matthias Bauer, Samantha Kallis
Art Directed by Ian Worrel
i'm back on this train babey :) alreadying having thoughts of what i wanna draw next~