Spoilers: Miles Morales Spider-Man #3 A New Villain

Miles Morales #3 is in stores tomorrow. It is available in a regular cover and there is a 1:50 Dan Panosian Variant available as well. Last issue, people were speculating there would be a new villain, there wasn’t. But we do get him this week. Check out the spoilers below:

So let’s jump right into it.. We know both Rhino and Miles are missing family members. So someone must be snatching up all the kids.Well, very convenient name. He looks kind of like a Dreadnok knock off.
So is this the guy taking all the kids? His name would suggest so, maybe someone should ask him.

Thanks Cap.

So why would he take innocent children, surely there must be some agenda, right?

Well, thankfully his powers only affect kids.

Oh, well what happens with the children?

So… Of course, the Snatcher “snatches” Miles, Rhino, and Cap, but….

And then Miles steps in to save the day.

Surely this is the end for the Snatcher

Oh… Guess not.

 

23 thoughts on “Spoilers: Miles Morales Spider-Man #3 A New Villain”

      1. Just using the spoilers here as context, he’s basically suggesting that anyone who wants border security is comparable to the villain in this issue. Why do that? That’s pretty much half the audience, right? I mean he’s certainly not alone, but he does it a lot. In Abbott (Boom Studios), it made sense. He was shining light on a dark period in Detroit, so it was necessary, unavoidable and it worked. I thought it was an awesome series and I really enjoyed it. Just keep it out of Spider-Man, you know what I mean?

        1. More like 1/3 of the voting audience. 1/10 if you count the whole population with the non voters.

          1. Don’t agree with your numbers, but even if it was only 1/5 of the audience, it doesn’t make it right. There are so many issues worth mentioning, so when he chooses to bring *only* his own political views into a comic book, he’s abusing his position. Also, kids read these books and this is basically like political propaganda when it comes to their young minds.

            1. Comic books are political. Whether you like it or not. Be happy that he shows his true colors, that way you can decide if you want to buy it or not. Don’t trust people who say they are apolitical those are the more dangerous one…

        2. If you are basing that argument on the one line of “dirt that ignores our borders”, you must be a professional mental gymnast. Just because a villain preys on illegal immigrants, drug users, and homeless, that doesn’t suggest in any possible way that everybody who supports border security is a villain.
          I award you one gold medal for mental gymnastics, and one last place ribbon for taking offense to your own imagined politics.

  1. Amd about 5 other polls spanning from 2017 to this current week that I posted that aren’t showing up because the site doesn’t allow you to spam more than a couple links without them being approved.

    1. Polls? Yeah, like most of them aren’t self serving and biassed. We also found out last election the majority were beyond wrong. Regardless, I invite you to move to a sanctuary city within a border state. See for yourself the amount of crime and entitlement that those here illegally bring. I can be called the bad guy in all this, I don’t care. There is far more crime than anyone should have to put up with and the pc environment we live in today is literally getting innocent people hurt, even killed.

  2. The Comic Book Medium is an art and thus it’s principles are based in communication and expression.

    I have no problem with an artist expressing his beliefs and communicating it through his art form.

    Art and Politics have been synergistic since their inceptions essentially. The Egyptian Hieroglyphics, the Greek epic poems such as the Odyssey and the Iliad, the epic of Beowulf, Shakespeare, the painter David, Michelangelo’s work commissioned by the Vatican, can’t tell me they weren’t trying to spread the message…the list goes on and on, heck even the Wizard of Oz was a political tool used to illustrate the Populism of the country.

    Comic books are sources of stories and stories are often used as political allegories to communicate a message. I mean, it’s stating the obvious in many respects but there really shouldn’t be any restrictions to artistic freedom outside of the conventional reprehensible taboos established by society that break moral and ethical norms.

    Freedom of Expression is our primary right. Yes, it’s meant to protect us from a corrupt government and not a private enterprise such as Marvel, but the work passed the editorial department at Marvel so they’re allowing it to run. And why shouldn’t they? We’re talking about the company who created the X-Men in the 60s, clearly it was political, it was going against the status quo and embracing the changing culture of the country.

    It’s also about power constructs. This writer has the means and the vehicle to deliver a message and so why not use that to philosophically oppose policy you disagree with? It’s just like the NFL and kneeling during the National Anthem. Being an NFL player gives you the financial means and the audience to communicate a message that you deeply care about and causes great concern.

    Why should a citizen not use the power he or she has earned to express themselves given the powers that we’re up against? It’s a national issue, a national crisis affecting an entire American cultural community, why not act?

    What’s with this American Insecurity and love affair with Nationalism? Can you imagine living in a country where you get fired or sent to prison for not standing during the national anthem? LMAO…oh wait…btw…as a side note for any cheerleading Nationalists out there…did you know that the Pledge of Allegiance was written by a Socialist?…lol…that one should spin some heads…

    I’d rather see people burning the flag than burning the Constitution by restricting expression or enforcing censorship.

    And the beautiful part to all this is that no one has to agree here. One person may like this approach from the artist and another may find it completely distasteful and tacky, offensive even and that’s cool. As long as we can all behave civil and appreciate each other’s opinions.

    1. You said ‘given the powers we’re up against’… ‘a national crisis’…

      could you explain what you mean by that?

  3. Alana what exactly is the point of arguing the percentage? Isn’t that besides the point? Like Daniel said, it doesn’t make it right.

    Also, is the book talking about border security or specifically the wall, because those polls are specifically talking about the wall…

    1. Not arguing I was specifically asked where I get my numbers from. I live on an island sure we have a few S. Americans that get busted by immigration. But our #1 immigration problem here is Canadians and Israelis over staying their visas and because they are white they rarely have to fear immigration officers and stay here for decades if not the rest of their life. The wall and border security do nothing to help immigration in my state our line of defense is the Coast Guard which is usually a couple 20 year olds on a fast rubber boat not here to combat immigration but to help tour boats in distress. I’m also from southern California and lived in Arizona as well and I’ve seen first hand the Hispanic population explode in both states. They are great hard working people and sure there’s some bad apples but there’s bad people of every color and nationality.

        1. It was a good life choice for Chris Pratt living on the beach here, he was working as a server at Bubba Gumps in Lahaina and got his break from a table he served.

  4. Want to solve illegal immigration huh? Can you afford your comic hobby after you pay more for food (pickers and packers), housing (drywallers, roofers and landscapers), restaurant meals (bussers and diswashers), hotel rooms (housekeeping laundry and kitchen staff), etc. get the point yet? Look yourself in a mirror and repeat after me….I cause illegal immigration!

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