Why did Venom keep spider thread after separating from Peter Parker?
In the 90's Spider-Man animated series Venom bonds with Peter Parker/Spider-Man. After their separation and after bonding with Eddie Brock Venom still creates spider webbing. Since Venom is an alien and this has nothing to do with spiders how is he able to shoot webbing? The webbing isn't even a power, it's created by Spider-Man's webshooters.
marvel spider-man venom
add a comment |
In the 90's Spider-Man animated series Venom bonds with Peter Parker/Spider-Man. After their separation and after bonding with Eddie Brock Venom still creates spider webbing. Since Venom is an alien and this has nothing to do with spiders how is he able to shoot webbing? The webbing isn't even a power, it's created by Spider-Man's webshooters.
marvel spider-man venom
1
So only for the animated series, or comics as well? (although I'd wager a guess they used the same explanation in the series)
– Jenayah
Dec 17 '18 at 12:37
7
You have it the other way around - Peter was amazed that he didn't need his shooters anymore when he bonded with the alien symbiont.
– Renan
Dec 17 '18 at 13:07
add a comment |
In the 90's Spider-Man animated series Venom bonds with Peter Parker/Spider-Man. After their separation and after bonding with Eddie Brock Venom still creates spider webbing. Since Venom is an alien and this has nothing to do with spiders how is he able to shoot webbing? The webbing isn't even a power, it's created by Spider-Man's webshooters.
marvel spider-man venom
In the 90's Spider-Man animated series Venom bonds with Peter Parker/Spider-Man. After their separation and after bonding with Eddie Brock Venom still creates spider webbing. Since Venom is an alien and this has nothing to do with spiders how is he able to shoot webbing? The webbing isn't even a power, it's created by Spider-Man's webshooters.
marvel spider-man venom
marvel spider-man venom
edited Dec 17 '18 at 12:36
Mat Cauthon
17.7k486135
17.7k486135
asked Dec 17 '18 at 12:24
KasperKasper
8414
8414
1
So only for the animated series, or comics as well? (although I'd wager a guess they used the same explanation in the series)
– Jenayah
Dec 17 '18 at 12:37
7
You have it the other way around - Peter was amazed that he didn't need his shooters anymore when he bonded with the alien symbiont.
– Renan
Dec 17 '18 at 13:07
add a comment |
1
So only for the animated series, or comics as well? (although I'd wager a guess they used the same explanation in the series)
– Jenayah
Dec 17 '18 at 12:37
7
You have it the other way around - Peter was amazed that he didn't need his shooters anymore when he bonded with the alien symbiont.
– Renan
Dec 17 '18 at 13:07
1
1
So only for the animated series, or comics as well? (although I'd wager a guess they used the same explanation in the series)
– Jenayah
Dec 17 '18 at 12:37
So only for the animated series, or comics as well? (although I'd wager a guess they used the same explanation in the series)
– Jenayah
Dec 17 '18 at 12:37
7
7
You have it the other way around - Peter was amazed that he didn't need his shooters anymore when he bonded with the alien symbiont.
– Renan
Dec 17 '18 at 13:07
You have it the other way around - Peter was amazed that he didn't need his shooters anymore when he bonded with the alien symbiont.
– Renan
Dec 17 '18 at 13:07
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
When he first acquired the "suit" (as he initially thought it) it produced webbing for him without any need for his web-shooters.
He presumed it was some sort of high tech alien fabric that molded to his form & the form he wanted through some sort of inbuilt empathy tech & the production of webbing was part of that.
I recall that in the original comic version it appeared in he was involved in a super-hero / super-villain mass-battle orchestrated by one of the mega powerful types in the marvel universe, they'd been kidnapped to an alien planet to fight in a battle-royal. As mentioned by FuzzyBoots in comments this was the Secret Wars arc.
But the long & short is the suit symbiote produced webbing for him without his web-guns.
Something that as it eventually turned out was the venom symbiote forming its own substance to fulfill the desires of its host to the best of its ability.
So having learned to do it for Pete of course it could repeat the trick for any new host.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiote_(comics) things have moved on somewhat more than apace since I last read any of these comics it seems, back then it was just Venom & Carnage, now they're all over the shop in their thousands it seems.
2
Secret Wars is the arc you're thinking of.
– FuzzyBoots
Dec 17 '18 at 13:18
@FuzzyBoots : Yes I think your right, thanks :)
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 13:31
1
I corrected "suite" (a room or collection of them) to "suit" (something you wear). If that is incorrect, please revert. ;)
– Yakk
Dec 17 '18 at 16:17
7
I know this answer has already been accepted, but it would be greatly improved if you could tighten it up a bit with some more certainty (rather than "iirc" etc) or references to support your claims. Usually, we prefer to have well-supported answers that are clearly/verifiably correct rather than based on vague recollections.
– Rand al'Thor♦
Dec 17 '18 at 20:47
@Randal'Thor : Ok I can accept that, does it look any better to you now?
– Pelinore
Dec 20 '18 at 11:25
|
show 2 more comments
The Venom symbiote (actually a member of the alien Klyntar race) bonded with Spider-Man on Battleworld (during the Secret Wars arc as stated in comments & other answers).
While the symbiote appeared to be producing 'webbing' for Spider-Man that he controlled by his thoughts, what it was actually doing was extending tendrils of its own mass and then disconnecting them from itself. The use of the symbiote in this way was purely because that is what Spider-Man wanted to do with it.
Once the symbiote was disconnected from Peter, it bonded with Eddy Brock, who being very familiar with Spider-Man, used the symbiote in the same way as a mode of transport to swing around New York (he also had access to the symbiotes memories of doing this for Spider-Man).
So the ability to shoot webs (or appear to), is not actually a power gained from bonding with Spider-Man, but just an expression of the symbiote's inate ability of manipulating and disconnecting it's own mass.
This ability has been used by different symbiote/host combinations in different ways, e.g. the Carnage/Cletus Cassidy pairing would throw spears, knives, axes, etc. made up of the symbiote's mass.
Once disconnected from the symbiote's main mass, these extensions will disintegrate after a period of time, much like Spider-Man's webbing, but not because it was something 'learned' from Spider-Man.
I actually meant learned in the sense of learned to do for rather than learned from.
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 14:45
@Pelinore - I wasn't using 'learned' in context to your answer. Just trying to point out that webbing from symbiotes is an expression of the abilities they already possess as opposed to something gained by bonding with Spider-Man
– K Mo
Dec 17 '18 at 15:05
add a comment |
Symbiotes adapt to their host's powers, and since Peter was the suit's first host, it stayed like him even after it bonded with Eddie. (Hence the spider symbol still being on Venom's chest.)
Since Spider-Man had the suit sling 'webs', it continues to do that to this day even without Peter in the suit.
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
When he first acquired the "suit" (as he initially thought it) it produced webbing for him without any need for his web-shooters.
He presumed it was some sort of high tech alien fabric that molded to his form & the form he wanted through some sort of inbuilt empathy tech & the production of webbing was part of that.
I recall that in the original comic version it appeared in he was involved in a super-hero / super-villain mass-battle orchestrated by one of the mega powerful types in the marvel universe, they'd been kidnapped to an alien planet to fight in a battle-royal. As mentioned by FuzzyBoots in comments this was the Secret Wars arc.
But the long & short is the suit symbiote produced webbing for him without his web-guns.
Something that as it eventually turned out was the venom symbiote forming its own substance to fulfill the desires of its host to the best of its ability.
So having learned to do it for Pete of course it could repeat the trick for any new host.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiote_(comics) things have moved on somewhat more than apace since I last read any of these comics it seems, back then it was just Venom & Carnage, now they're all over the shop in their thousands it seems.
2
Secret Wars is the arc you're thinking of.
– FuzzyBoots
Dec 17 '18 at 13:18
@FuzzyBoots : Yes I think your right, thanks :)
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 13:31
1
I corrected "suite" (a room or collection of them) to "suit" (something you wear). If that is incorrect, please revert. ;)
– Yakk
Dec 17 '18 at 16:17
7
I know this answer has already been accepted, but it would be greatly improved if you could tighten it up a bit with some more certainty (rather than "iirc" etc) or references to support your claims. Usually, we prefer to have well-supported answers that are clearly/verifiably correct rather than based on vague recollections.
– Rand al'Thor♦
Dec 17 '18 at 20:47
@Randal'Thor : Ok I can accept that, does it look any better to you now?
– Pelinore
Dec 20 '18 at 11:25
|
show 2 more comments
When he first acquired the "suit" (as he initially thought it) it produced webbing for him without any need for his web-shooters.
He presumed it was some sort of high tech alien fabric that molded to his form & the form he wanted through some sort of inbuilt empathy tech & the production of webbing was part of that.
I recall that in the original comic version it appeared in he was involved in a super-hero / super-villain mass-battle orchestrated by one of the mega powerful types in the marvel universe, they'd been kidnapped to an alien planet to fight in a battle-royal. As mentioned by FuzzyBoots in comments this was the Secret Wars arc.
But the long & short is the suit symbiote produced webbing for him without his web-guns.
Something that as it eventually turned out was the venom symbiote forming its own substance to fulfill the desires of its host to the best of its ability.
So having learned to do it for Pete of course it could repeat the trick for any new host.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiote_(comics) things have moved on somewhat more than apace since I last read any of these comics it seems, back then it was just Venom & Carnage, now they're all over the shop in their thousands it seems.
2
Secret Wars is the arc you're thinking of.
– FuzzyBoots
Dec 17 '18 at 13:18
@FuzzyBoots : Yes I think your right, thanks :)
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 13:31
1
I corrected "suite" (a room or collection of them) to "suit" (something you wear). If that is incorrect, please revert. ;)
– Yakk
Dec 17 '18 at 16:17
7
I know this answer has already been accepted, but it would be greatly improved if you could tighten it up a bit with some more certainty (rather than "iirc" etc) or references to support your claims. Usually, we prefer to have well-supported answers that are clearly/verifiably correct rather than based on vague recollections.
– Rand al'Thor♦
Dec 17 '18 at 20:47
@Randal'Thor : Ok I can accept that, does it look any better to you now?
– Pelinore
Dec 20 '18 at 11:25
|
show 2 more comments
When he first acquired the "suit" (as he initially thought it) it produced webbing for him without any need for his web-shooters.
He presumed it was some sort of high tech alien fabric that molded to his form & the form he wanted through some sort of inbuilt empathy tech & the production of webbing was part of that.
I recall that in the original comic version it appeared in he was involved in a super-hero / super-villain mass-battle orchestrated by one of the mega powerful types in the marvel universe, they'd been kidnapped to an alien planet to fight in a battle-royal. As mentioned by FuzzyBoots in comments this was the Secret Wars arc.
But the long & short is the suit symbiote produced webbing for him without his web-guns.
Something that as it eventually turned out was the venom symbiote forming its own substance to fulfill the desires of its host to the best of its ability.
So having learned to do it for Pete of course it could repeat the trick for any new host.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiote_(comics) things have moved on somewhat more than apace since I last read any of these comics it seems, back then it was just Venom & Carnage, now they're all over the shop in their thousands it seems.
When he first acquired the "suit" (as he initially thought it) it produced webbing for him without any need for his web-shooters.
He presumed it was some sort of high tech alien fabric that molded to his form & the form he wanted through some sort of inbuilt empathy tech & the production of webbing was part of that.
I recall that in the original comic version it appeared in he was involved in a super-hero / super-villain mass-battle orchestrated by one of the mega powerful types in the marvel universe, they'd been kidnapped to an alien planet to fight in a battle-royal. As mentioned by FuzzyBoots in comments this was the Secret Wars arc.
But the long & short is the suit symbiote produced webbing for him without his web-guns.
Something that as it eventually turned out was the venom symbiote forming its own substance to fulfill the desires of its host to the best of its ability.
So having learned to do it for Pete of course it could repeat the trick for any new host.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiote_(comics) things have moved on somewhat more than apace since I last read any of these comics it seems, back then it was just Venom & Carnage, now they're all over the shop in their thousands it seems.
edited Dec 20 '18 at 14:06
answered Dec 17 '18 at 13:12
PelinorePelinore
68113
68113
2
Secret Wars is the arc you're thinking of.
– FuzzyBoots
Dec 17 '18 at 13:18
@FuzzyBoots : Yes I think your right, thanks :)
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 13:31
1
I corrected "suite" (a room or collection of them) to "suit" (something you wear). If that is incorrect, please revert. ;)
– Yakk
Dec 17 '18 at 16:17
7
I know this answer has already been accepted, but it would be greatly improved if you could tighten it up a bit with some more certainty (rather than "iirc" etc) or references to support your claims. Usually, we prefer to have well-supported answers that are clearly/verifiably correct rather than based on vague recollections.
– Rand al'Thor♦
Dec 17 '18 at 20:47
@Randal'Thor : Ok I can accept that, does it look any better to you now?
– Pelinore
Dec 20 '18 at 11:25
|
show 2 more comments
2
Secret Wars is the arc you're thinking of.
– FuzzyBoots
Dec 17 '18 at 13:18
@FuzzyBoots : Yes I think your right, thanks :)
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 13:31
1
I corrected "suite" (a room or collection of them) to "suit" (something you wear). If that is incorrect, please revert. ;)
– Yakk
Dec 17 '18 at 16:17
7
I know this answer has already been accepted, but it would be greatly improved if you could tighten it up a bit with some more certainty (rather than "iirc" etc) or references to support your claims. Usually, we prefer to have well-supported answers that are clearly/verifiably correct rather than based on vague recollections.
– Rand al'Thor♦
Dec 17 '18 at 20:47
@Randal'Thor : Ok I can accept that, does it look any better to you now?
– Pelinore
Dec 20 '18 at 11:25
2
2
Secret Wars is the arc you're thinking of.
– FuzzyBoots
Dec 17 '18 at 13:18
Secret Wars is the arc you're thinking of.
– FuzzyBoots
Dec 17 '18 at 13:18
@FuzzyBoots : Yes I think your right, thanks :)
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 13:31
@FuzzyBoots : Yes I think your right, thanks :)
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 13:31
1
1
I corrected "suite" (a room or collection of them) to "suit" (something you wear). If that is incorrect, please revert. ;)
– Yakk
Dec 17 '18 at 16:17
I corrected "suite" (a room or collection of them) to "suit" (something you wear). If that is incorrect, please revert. ;)
– Yakk
Dec 17 '18 at 16:17
7
7
I know this answer has already been accepted, but it would be greatly improved if you could tighten it up a bit with some more certainty (rather than "iirc" etc) or references to support your claims. Usually, we prefer to have well-supported answers that are clearly/verifiably correct rather than based on vague recollections.
– Rand al'Thor♦
Dec 17 '18 at 20:47
I know this answer has already been accepted, but it would be greatly improved if you could tighten it up a bit with some more certainty (rather than "iirc" etc) or references to support your claims. Usually, we prefer to have well-supported answers that are clearly/verifiably correct rather than based on vague recollections.
– Rand al'Thor♦
Dec 17 '18 at 20:47
@Randal'Thor : Ok I can accept that, does it look any better to you now?
– Pelinore
Dec 20 '18 at 11:25
@Randal'Thor : Ok I can accept that, does it look any better to you now?
– Pelinore
Dec 20 '18 at 11:25
|
show 2 more comments
The Venom symbiote (actually a member of the alien Klyntar race) bonded with Spider-Man on Battleworld (during the Secret Wars arc as stated in comments & other answers).
While the symbiote appeared to be producing 'webbing' for Spider-Man that he controlled by his thoughts, what it was actually doing was extending tendrils of its own mass and then disconnecting them from itself. The use of the symbiote in this way was purely because that is what Spider-Man wanted to do with it.
Once the symbiote was disconnected from Peter, it bonded with Eddy Brock, who being very familiar with Spider-Man, used the symbiote in the same way as a mode of transport to swing around New York (he also had access to the symbiotes memories of doing this for Spider-Man).
So the ability to shoot webs (or appear to), is not actually a power gained from bonding with Spider-Man, but just an expression of the symbiote's inate ability of manipulating and disconnecting it's own mass.
This ability has been used by different symbiote/host combinations in different ways, e.g. the Carnage/Cletus Cassidy pairing would throw spears, knives, axes, etc. made up of the symbiote's mass.
Once disconnected from the symbiote's main mass, these extensions will disintegrate after a period of time, much like Spider-Man's webbing, but not because it was something 'learned' from Spider-Man.
I actually meant learned in the sense of learned to do for rather than learned from.
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 14:45
@Pelinore - I wasn't using 'learned' in context to your answer. Just trying to point out that webbing from symbiotes is an expression of the abilities they already possess as opposed to something gained by bonding with Spider-Man
– K Mo
Dec 17 '18 at 15:05
add a comment |
The Venom symbiote (actually a member of the alien Klyntar race) bonded with Spider-Man on Battleworld (during the Secret Wars arc as stated in comments & other answers).
While the symbiote appeared to be producing 'webbing' for Spider-Man that he controlled by his thoughts, what it was actually doing was extending tendrils of its own mass and then disconnecting them from itself. The use of the symbiote in this way was purely because that is what Spider-Man wanted to do with it.
Once the symbiote was disconnected from Peter, it bonded with Eddy Brock, who being very familiar with Spider-Man, used the symbiote in the same way as a mode of transport to swing around New York (he also had access to the symbiotes memories of doing this for Spider-Man).
So the ability to shoot webs (or appear to), is not actually a power gained from bonding with Spider-Man, but just an expression of the symbiote's inate ability of manipulating and disconnecting it's own mass.
This ability has been used by different symbiote/host combinations in different ways, e.g. the Carnage/Cletus Cassidy pairing would throw spears, knives, axes, etc. made up of the symbiote's mass.
Once disconnected from the symbiote's main mass, these extensions will disintegrate after a period of time, much like Spider-Man's webbing, but not because it was something 'learned' from Spider-Man.
I actually meant learned in the sense of learned to do for rather than learned from.
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 14:45
@Pelinore - I wasn't using 'learned' in context to your answer. Just trying to point out that webbing from symbiotes is an expression of the abilities they already possess as opposed to something gained by bonding with Spider-Man
– K Mo
Dec 17 '18 at 15:05
add a comment |
The Venom symbiote (actually a member of the alien Klyntar race) bonded with Spider-Man on Battleworld (during the Secret Wars arc as stated in comments & other answers).
While the symbiote appeared to be producing 'webbing' for Spider-Man that he controlled by his thoughts, what it was actually doing was extending tendrils of its own mass and then disconnecting them from itself. The use of the symbiote in this way was purely because that is what Spider-Man wanted to do with it.
Once the symbiote was disconnected from Peter, it bonded with Eddy Brock, who being very familiar with Spider-Man, used the symbiote in the same way as a mode of transport to swing around New York (he also had access to the symbiotes memories of doing this for Spider-Man).
So the ability to shoot webs (or appear to), is not actually a power gained from bonding with Spider-Man, but just an expression of the symbiote's inate ability of manipulating and disconnecting it's own mass.
This ability has been used by different symbiote/host combinations in different ways, e.g. the Carnage/Cletus Cassidy pairing would throw spears, knives, axes, etc. made up of the symbiote's mass.
Once disconnected from the symbiote's main mass, these extensions will disintegrate after a period of time, much like Spider-Man's webbing, but not because it was something 'learned' from Spider-Man.
The Venom symbiote (actually a member of the alien Klyntar race) bonded with Spider-Man on Battleworld (during the Secret Wars arc as stated in comments & other answers).
While the symbiote appeared to be producing 'webbing' for Spider-Man that he controlled by his thoughts, what it was actually doing was extending tendrils of its own mass and then disconnecting them from itself. The use of the symbiote in this way was purely because that is what Spider-Man wanted to do with it.
Once the symbiote was disconnected from Peter, it bonded with Eddy Brock, who being very familiar with Spider-Man, used the symbiote in the same way as a mode of transport to swing around New York (he also had access to the symbiotes memories of doing this for Spider-Man).
So the ability to shoot webs (or appear to), is not actually a power gained from bonding with Spider-Man, but just an expression of the symbiote's inate ability of manipulating and disconnecting it's own mass.
This ability has been used by different symbiote/host combinations in different ways, e.g. the Carnage/Cletus Cassidy pairing would throw spears, knives, axes, etc. made up of the symbiote's mass.
Once disconnected from the symbiote's main mass, these extensions will disintegrate after a period of time, much like Spider-Man's webbing, but not because it was something 'learned' from Spider-Man.
edited Dec 17 '18 at 15:12
answered Dec 17 '18 at 14:11
K MoK Mo
1,354413
1,354413
I actually meant learned in the sense of learned to do for rather than learned from.
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 14:45
@Pelinore - I wasn't using 'learned' in context to your answer. Just trying to point out that webbing from symbiotes is an expression of the abilities they already possess as opposed to something gained by bonding with Spider-Man
– K Mo
Dec 17 '18 at 15:05
add a comment |
I actually meant learned in the sense of learned to do for rather than learned from.
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 14:45
@Pelinore - I wasn't using 'learned' in context to your answer. Just trying to point out that webbing from symbiotes is an expression of the abilities they already possess as opposed to something gained by bonding with Spider-Man
– K Mo
Dec 17 '18 at 15:05
I actually meant learned in the sense of learned to do for rather than learned from.
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 14:45
I actually meant learned in the sense of learned to do for rather than learned from.
– Pelinore
Dec 17 '18 at 14:45
@Pelinore - I wasn't using 'learned' in context to your answer. Just trying to point out that webbing from symbiotes is an expression of the abilities they already possess as opposed to something gained by bonding with Spider-Man
– K Mo
Dec 17 '18 at 15:05
@Pelinore - I wasn't using 'learned' in context to your answer. Just trying to point out that webbing from symbiotes is an expression of the abilities they already possess as opposed to something gained by bonding with Spider-Man
– K Mo
Dec 17 '18 at 15:05
add a comment |
Symbiotes adapt to their host's powers, and since Peter was the suit's first host, it stayed like him even after it bonded with Eddie. (Hence the spider symbol still being on Venom's chest.)
Since Spider-Man had the suit sling 'webs', it continues to do that to this day even without Peter in the suit.
add a comment |
Symbiotes adapt to their host's powers, and since Peter was the suit's first host, it stayed like him even after it bonded with Eddie. (Hence the spider symbol still being on Venom's chest.)
Since Spider-Man had the suit sling 'webs', it continues to do that to this day even without Peter in the suit.
add a comment |
Symbiotes adapt to their host's powers, and since Peter was the suit's first host, it stayed like him even after it bonded with Eddie. (Hence the spider symbol still being on Venom's chest.)
Since Spider-Man had the suit sling 'webs', it continues to do that to this day even without Peter in the suit.
Symbiotes adapt to their host's powers, and since Peter was the suit's first host, it stayed like him even after it bonded with Eddie. (Hence the spider symbol still being on Venom's chest.)
Since Spider-Man had the suit sling 'webs', it continues to do that to this day even without Peter in the suit.
edited Dec 20 '18 at 10:33
Longshanks
2,27411830
2,27411830
answered Dec 17 '18 at 16:58
Knox BoydKnox Boyd
2028
2028
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
So only for the animated series, or comics as well? (although I'd wager a guess they used the same explanation in the series)
– Jenayah
Dec 17 '18 at 12:37
7
You have it the other way around - Peter was amazed that he didn't need his shooters anymore when he bonded with the alien symbiont.
– Renan
Dec 17 '18 at 13:07