Daredevil was the first Marvel series to release on Netflix, with three seasons streaming between 2015 and 2018, before they were removed after the license was regained by Disney and moved to its streaming platform. However, Marvel fans got more than a glimpse of Daredevil recently in the latest Spider-Man movie No Way Home.
Actor Charlie Cox's brief appearance as the blind lawyer and vigilante Matt Murdock/Daredevil, in the Tom Holland-helmed MCU film fueled speculation whether we were seeing the same character as featured in the original Netflix series or perhaps a new Daredevil variant that's specific to the MCU universe. But courtesy of Marvel's official website, this has been cleared up and we now know that the series is canon to the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
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The biography of Murdock's live-action timeline has been updated and it closes the gap between Daredevil season three and Spider-Man: No Way Home. While the biography summarises the end of the show's final season, such as Murdock making up with his friends Franklin "Foggy" Nelson and Karen Page, and Father Lantom's funeral, a new paragraph has been added to sum up the blind lawyer's cameo near the start of No Way Home. The paragraph reads:
Sometime later, Matt was hired as an attorney to defend Peter Parker, as Peter had been publicly outed as Spider-Man and accused of Mysterio's murder. Though Peter was legally cleared of any wrongdoing, Matt warned him he'd still have to face the court of public opinion and advised Harold "Happy" Hogan to hire a good lawyer. As if on cue, a protestor threw a brick through the window of the Parkers' apartment in support of Mysterio. Fortunately, due to his
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