Spider-Man’s run in the Marvel Cinematic Universe has followed a very specific trend in its title and overall theme, but after the events of Spider-Man: No Way Home, Spider-Man 4 has to break this trend. As one of the most popular characters from Marvel Comics, Spider-Man was one superhero that the audience wanted to see joining the MCU, and after a deal between Sony and Marvel, Spider-Man made his MCU debut in Captain America: Civil War when he was recruited by Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr) to join his team.
After fighting with the biggest MCU heroes at the time, Spider-Man (Tom Holland) returned to star in his first solo movie in this universe. Spider-Man: Homecoming skipped the origin story of the web-slinger and instead caught up with him after the events of Civil War, as Peter did his best to juggle life in high school and his new superhero duties. Spider-Man joined the rest of the MCU’s heroes in Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame before going on a second solo adventure in Spider-Man: Far From Home, where he came across Quentin Beck/Mysterio (Jake Gyllenhaal), who at the end framed him for his murder and revealed his identity to the whole world.
Related: Spider-Man 4's Black Cat Debut Solves A No Way Home Problem
This big twist led Peter to ask Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) to cast a spell that would make everyone forget he’s Spider-Man in Spider-Man: No Way Home, but the spell was botched, and instead it opened the gates to the multiverse, letting villains from past Spider-Man movies into the MCU. In order to fix this, Spider-Man asked Strange to cast one final spell that would make the world forget about Peter Parker, and so by the end of No Way Home, Peter was seen starting a new life without
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