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Spider-Man

5,164 appearances · Silver Age · 1962–2026 · 191 key issues
Who is Spider-Man?

Created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, Peter Benjamin Parker debuted in Amazing Fantasy #15 (1962) as Marvel's wall-crawling hero Spider-Man — a Silver Age icon who went on to become one of comics' most beloved and enduring characters.

Few characters in the history of American comics have left a mark as indelible as Peter Parker, who burst onto the scene in Amazing Fantasy #15 in 1962, conjured by the legendary team of Stan Lee and Steve Ditko at the dawn of Marvel's Silver Age revolution. Over an extraordinary 64-year publishing history — one of the longest and most celebrated in the medium — he has anchored flagship titles like The Amazing Spider-Man and Ultimate Spider-Man, accumulating more than 5,000 catalog appearances and a staggering 191 key issues that collectors have chased for decades. He runs in rarefied company, sharing pages with titans like Captain America, Tony Stark, and Wolverine, which speaks volumes about his place at the very center of the Marvel universe. Whether you're a first-time reader or a seasoned longbox diver, Peter Parker is simply essential comics — the character who helped prove that heroes could be complicated, relatable, and utterly unforgettable.

Identity

Real name. Peter Benjamin Parker

Powers. Wall-crawling, superhuman strength and agility, precognitive "spider-sense," and his self-made web-shooters.

Universe. Earth-616

Affiliations. Avengers; Daily Bugle; formerly the Future Foundation.

★ First appearance
Amazing Fantasy #15
Sep 1962

Part of the Spider-Man legacy

Spider-Man is one of 4 heroes to carry the Spider-Man mantle. See the whole Spider-Man family ▸

Trivia

  • Spider-Man's marriage to Mary Jane Watson in 1987 stands as one of Marvel's most consequential editorial experiments — a bold legitimization of the relationship fans had championed for years, only for the union to be controversially wiped from existence via the deeply divisive 'One More Day' storyline.marvel.fandom.com
  • Beyond his classic wall-crawling toolkit, Peter Parker has undergone radical biological overhauls that pushed him well past his original power set, most notably gaining organic web-shooters and enhanced sensory adaptations following transformative story arcs that fundamentally reshuffled his status quo.marvel.fandom.com
  • Spider-Man's runaway success rewrote the superhero playbook entirely, demonstrating that a wisecracking, perpetually struggling teenager could carry a flagship franchise on his own merits rather than riding shotgun to an established adult hero — a template that reshaped how publishers approached young leads for decades to come.marvel.fandom.com
  • Brian Michael Bendis has written more of Peter Parker's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 278 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years — 1962–2023

Amazing Fantasy #15 1962
Amazing Fantasy #15
The Amazing Spider-Man #46 1967
The Amazing Spider-Man #46
Marvel Team-Up #1 1972
Marvel Team-Up #1
The Avengers #144 1976
The Avengers #144
Spider-Woman #37 1981
Spider-Woman #37
The Uncanny X-Men #191 1985
The Uncanny X-Men #191
X-Men Annual #14 1990
X-Men Annual #14
Spider-Man Maximum Clonage: Omega #1 1995
Spider-Man Maximum Clonage: Omega #1
Daredevil #9 1999
Daredevil #9
Astonishing X-Men #1 2004
Astonishing X-Men #1
Spider-Man: Kraven's First Hunt #[nn] 2008
Spider-Man: Kraven's First Hunt #[nn]
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn] 2013
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn]
Amazing Spider-Man: Worldwide #4 2017
Amazing Spider-Man: Worldwide #4
X-Men #24 2023
X-Men #24

Appearances (601–750 of 5,164, oldest first)

Captain America (1968)
The Incredible Hulk (1968)
Marvel Superheroes [Marvel Super-Heroes] (1979)
Marvel Super Action (1977)
#21
Spider-Woman (1978)
Marvel Two-in-One (1974)
The X-Men (1963)
Daredevil (1964)
The Spectacular Spider-Man (1976)
Marvel's Greatest Comics (1969)
#91
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964)
Marvel Team-Up Annual (1976)
Spidey Super Stories (1974)
#49
The Comics Journal (1977)
#60
Hembeck: The Best of Dateline: @!!?# [Hembeck Series] (1980)
#1
The Spectacular Spider-Man Annual (1979)
#3
Tales to Astonish (1979)
#14
Captain Britain Summer Special (1980)
Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk (1981)
Archie (1959)
Laugh Comics / Laugh (1946)
Marvel Treasury Edition (1974)
#28
Archie Giant Series Magazine (1954)
[Marvel Hostess Ads] (1975)
#57
Power Man and Iron Fist (1981)
#68
The Defenders (1972)
Rom (1979)
Visions (1979)
#3
Micronauts (1979)
#31
The Avengers (1963)
Jimmy Olsen's Pal, Fred Hembeck [Hembeck Series] (1981)
#6
Look-In (1971)
Marvel Tales (1966)
Life with Archie (1958)
Stan Lee Presents the Marvel Comics Illustrated Version of Spider-Man His Greatest Team-Up Battles (1981)
Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends (1981)
#1
Crazy Magazine (1973)
#82
Spider-Man Annual (1979)
Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk [Kansas City Star] (1982)
Thor (1966)
Super Spider-Man TV Comic (1981)
Marvel Fanfare (1982)
Moon Knight (1980)
#18
Marvel Graphic Novel (1982)
Marvel Super Hero Contest of Champions (1982)
Fantastic Four (1961)
G.I. Joe, a Real American Hero (1982)
Team America (1982)
Graphic Fantasy (1982)
#2
The Marvel No-Prize Book (1983)
#1
The Daredevils (1982)
Hardee's 3-D Adventures Weekly (1983)
Dazzler (1981)
#24
What If? (1977)
#37
Ghost Rider (1973)
#77
Conan the Barbarian (1970)