Most of the fans dont like how Zeb Wells regressed characters and the characters are just too cartoonish. Why is Black Cat acting like a mean high school girl? Why is Mockingbird flirting with Peter Parker when they broke up? Why is MJ not in this story, this is the 900th issue and she's Peter's soul-mate. why is Anna Maria suddenly caring for Doc Ock? Why is Peter acting like a jerk to Flash? Why is the Sinister Six acting evil in a cliche way?
Amazing Spider-Man #6
| Writer | Zeb Wells |
| Artist | Ed McGuinness, David Lopez |
| Cover Price | $9.99 |
LANDMARK ISSUE #900!
•  The nine-hundredth issue of AMAZING SPIDER-MAN comes out the month of Spider-Man's 60th Anniversary, and we are pulling out ALL THE STOPS!
•  Someone from Spider-Man's past has captured the Sinister Six and used them to create the truly terrifying SINISTER ADAPTOID!
•  This is one of the biggest adventures in Spider-History and you will not believe the ending!
RATED T+
CRITIC REVIEWS
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10
The Comicbook Dispatch - Dispatchdcu
Jul 27, 2022The Amazing Spider-Man #6 (Legacy #900) is an amazing anniversary issue. The stories within are well written and paired with art teams perfectly. The $9.99 price tag is a little steep but at roughly 90 pages, its a good deal and definitely worth picking up. Read Full Review
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10
Henchman-4-Hire - Sean Ian Mills
Jul 30, 2022This super-sized anniversary issue is a real Spider-Man treat, as a bunch of creative teams come together for some really great Spidey stories. The main story by Wells and McGuinness is pure, perfect Spider-Man, with tons of callbacks, great guest stars and an overall fun adventure. Quality issue all around. Read Full Review
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9.8
Comic Watch - Jimmy Hayes
Jul 27, 2022You really need to buy this book. It's an excellent summer-fun, oversized read that you'll love. This is truly the way to celebrate 60 years of Spider-Man!! Read Full Review
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9.0
AIPT - David Brooke
Jul 27, 2022It's a big year for Spider-Man, and Marvel has done him a solid with this fun and lengthy milestone issue. It's hard to believe the character has reached 900 issues, but once you put this book down, you'll be daydreaming about what Marvel could be planning with only 100 issues until the groundbreaking 1,000th issue. Read Full Review
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9.0
The Super Powered Fancast - Deron Generally
Jul 27, 2022McGuinness delivers some beautifully detailed and vibrant art throughout the story. The art is visually thrilling and filled with great energy. Read Full Review
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9.0
ComicBook.com - Chase Magnett
Jul 27, 2022All in all, The Amazing Spider-Man #6 (or #900) provides readers with a story that reminds readers why Spider-Man is such an iconic character, even as it celebrates their history, and should leave new and long-time fans alike anticipating the road to issue #1000. Read Full Review
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9.0
COMICON - Tony Thornley
Aug 02, 2022Marvel celebrates Spider-Man's 60th with an extra-sized anniversary. It's exactly the celebration Peter Parker deserved. Read Full Review
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8.0
But Why Tho? - Collier "CJ" Jennings
Jul 27, 2022Amazing Spider-Man #900 doubles as an action-packed adventure and an introspective look into what makes Peter Parker a great character. Wells and McGuiness delivered some great work here, and the end of the book teases them coming together to work on future Spidey stories. As far as anniversary stories go, this one's worth a read. Read Full Review
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7.5
Weird Science Marvel Comics - mrgabehernandez
Jul 28, 2022Amazing Spider-Man #6 is a triple-sized one-shot that celebrates Peter Parker's birthday with a visit from the Living Brain and the OG Sinister Six. The pacing and art are all excellent, but the corny humor overpowers the weighty message behind the Living Brain's quest, and the lack of continuity with issue #5 makes this a #6 issue in name only. Read Full Review
USER REVIEWS
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10
This was next level; the throwback and moments made my jaw drop :O Great work team!
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9.5
Huh, I mostly don't see what all y'all are mad about; I thought this story was all kinds of fun! McGuinness delivers some gorgeous art, the main plot is charming and a lovely old-school-style restatement of (some of) what makes Peter special, I loved the subplot with Peter's relationship with the arms, and if there's anything this book was missing before now, it's Jonah. (Also, I always liked Anna Maria and I'm glad to see her pop her head back in.) The backups by Kibblesmith/Lopez and Slott/Martin were pleasant little hors d'ouvres. In fact, I'd have considered this issue an easy 10 if I didn't have 2 complaints about it. One, the subplot where Felicia and Bobbi meet and spend the whole issue bickering about a guy neither of them is ev en dating is a wildly outdated trope, sexist, and cheapens a character who's otherwise having a career high under McKay. Two, I appreciate that Marvel is nostalgic for all the money they made off the Obama issue 14 years ago (that's right, 2008 was 14 years ago — my fellow middle-aged nerds, we are old as balls) and I've no doubt there's pressure from Disney to make it happen again, but it's time to let it go. Real life guest stars' presence in comics is without exception cheap and they're always drawn in a way that makes them visibly out of place with the fictional characters around them in an uncanny valley way. Still, I really enjoyed this issue, and this run continues to be the best Spider-Man run since Zdarsky. more
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9.5
This issue is great. Anyone saying otherwise is for BS ship reasons, there's nothing wrong with this book. Always like her as a love interest anyway. Great art, great action. Splash page with him teamed up with the 6 is an all timer.
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9.5
I've been reading some very negative review on this issue, but also on this new run in general. I really do not understand why. This issue was great (not just its doubled (?) size). I enjoyed a lot while I was reading, it was full of humor (thing that I did not feel much in the previous 5 issues). I do not know all the story of 'The Living Brain" and when Spidey first met him, but I could follow all the story present in the issue. Moreover, a great battle is present in the comic, and also that one will make you laugh more than once. Lastly, you have a very cute/fun relationship between Spidey and Octavius tentacles. One very thing I loved about LGY 900 was the art. The first 5 issues felt a bit weird, specially some questionable Spidey drawing from JRJR (Parker beaten face, big splash of blood on the mask). But here, oh boy, really enjoyed looking all the panels. Great read until now! more
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9.0
It was a very enjoyable issue that felt like a side story off from the main one we had in the arc that just closed so it makes complete sense to me. Yes it is very old school and feels like a story pricked from different eras and mixed in here but somehow it still works for me. Zeb Wells and Mark Waid are the two writers I trust with these stories. The art has never looked better! Ed McGuiness is welcome anytime he feels like it. The guy draws a great Spider-Man and delivered some wonderful pages that still looked consistent even with 3 other inkers and 3 colorists. I like when the team jells together. I can't say I like the back up stories that much. I wish they just do 70 page story and move on but no we gotta get $10 instead of $6.
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9.0
Wow, this issue ruffled a lot of feathers, huh? I think we can all agree nobody wanted to see Jimmy Kimmel, even for 4 pages. The other backup strips were good, though; Pete's library books were hilarious. As to the main event, well, it *does* oblige you to buy a ticket for the "Silver Age nostalgia express" if you want to enjoy it. This is exactly the way Marvel did annuals and the first round of #100s in the 60s. I bought the ticket and had a blast; this is hilarious. But it's best taken as a standalone. I see the low raters' point: It's not a particularly good fit with present Marvel continuity or even with the last 5 issues. Jeff Plaza hits the nail on the head down in the red dots when he says all the characters are in "factory r eset mode." I agree, but it's just not a big problem for me. This is hardly the first or last time a Marvel writer chucks continuity under the bus for the sake of comedy. Although maybe it's telling that in the lettercol interviews, when asked to identify the "epitome of Spider-Man," most of the creators (and Kevin Feige) give the correct answer, i.e. "If This Be My Destiny." But those with other, wronger answers include this volume's writer and most of its primary artists. Not a good sign, right? more
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8.5
People are gonna get mad about this issue and that's so funny. For me, is a very strong read, with good moments, and besides what everyone's going to say, I like the last page
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8.5
This was fun. It just felt like an annual. Low stakes to no stakes for the overall plot but who really cares. It definitely felt like a milestone issue. Not in the aspect of it having sweeping repercussions going forward but that it was a fun look back at all of Spidey's earliest villains in a tight story that gets to the heart of who Spider-Man is. I hope we get to see more of the Ultra Living Brain. And Felicia is better. Always has been.
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8.0
The problem with this issue is... the backups. I don't know what possessed Marvel to put a Jimmy Kimmel guest starring story in this anniversary issue, but I don't like it and I don't want it. The other backups are fine, yet completely unnecessary. I don't like paying for mediocre fluff. Give me excellent fluff like Nightwing does every month. With that out of the way, the main story has its ups and downs. The overall premise of this story is great. The idea of *who* Spider-Man is beyond his identity is great fodder for an anniversary story. I really enjoyed that. The idea of Peter ruining his own party by doing the exactly right thing of showing up on time is peak Spider-Man. I love it. His team up with the Sinister Six was fun and I wi sh it wasn't confusingly spoiled on the cover. I saw some hate for the characterization of the Six and their lack of development, but from how I read it, Wells seems perfectly aware of their development, as am I, and I didn't see anything to egregious, characterization-wise. The Sinister Adaptoid is a ton of fun. Using quotes from the Lee/Ditko era was so effective. Those early issues are burned into my brain, so it made my mind bring me back to reading those old issues again and again. That is great for an anniversary issue. It gives the reader a sense of nostalgia and growth. Making Ock's arms into a dog-like creature is really, really funny, and I have no doubt someone's upset about it. The use of The Living Brain was actually pretty neat. I'm not what you'd call a fan of his. Check out my review of ASM #8 if you want to know more, but I do applaud Wells for attempting to do something with that super wacky story. Ed McGuinness kills it dead on art. Everything looks so pretty. As for the downsides, the interaction with Flash at the party comes across as a legitimate case of characterization being ignored. It's written more as Flash being unaware than purposefully rude, but it stands out. Luckily, later in the story, his character is redeemed a bit. The other big issue for me is Felicia and Bobby being catty assholes to each other for no good reason. As someone else pointed out, that's really just a sexist trope. It doesn't work and it's unnecessary. It's not even fun. I can handle fun sexism. Oh and Anna Maria should not be okay with Ock coming around. The second Superior run softened their relationship a bit (no one read that so they think it's probably much worse than it is), but it still wasn't approaching cordial like it does here. Those are my issues. They aren't giant problems, but they did hinder my experience. Oh, and the ending? I'm totally fine with it. I support it even. Felicia is great. more
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8.0
Rating goes for the main story only.
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8.0
It was enjoyable, but very steep at $9.99. I've always been a fan of Ed McGuinness's art but he really needs Dexter Vines as his inker to deliver the goods. Murky watercolour effects suit many independent comics in the crime and horror genre but it doesn't really work in the superhero world. Backups were pointless, although I'm always happy to see the master of minimalism, Marcos Martin, even if it's only a mere two pages.
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8.0
A fun milestone issue here that, in my opinion, is dragged down a little bit by the backup stories. Quickly speaking about the main story, it was an entertaining one that does a great job of showcasing Peter's wit and just how fun Spider-Man is in general. The villains arguing amongst themselves was inevitable, but it was still enjoyable and I liked that it was the reason the Sinister Adaptoid went crazy and lost. Moving to the backups, they weren't necessarily BAD stories, but they were just a little unnecessary. The first story is nice for what it is and I don't have much to say about it. As for the second story, I don't really know why we needed a Jimmy Kimmel story. It was fine, but not my favorite. Lastly, the third story was just kind of there on the last page. It was a neat concept, but there wasn't enough there for me to enjoy it that much. Nonetheless, this was still an entertaining book overall. more
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7.0
I appreciate that this was a self contained story and not some introduction to something to come. I also like that this felt like Spiderman, something I have not thought Wells was good at doing in the previous issues. Also, when did I miss Flash coming back to life?? Where did that happen?? The sinister 6 were not written well. It felt like they were written as though they were a parody of the sinister 6. Otto was particularly poorly done. Had this occurred prior to the superior Spiderman it may not have bothered me, but this ignored all character development from Otto from the past decade. Dr octopus was not very interesting in his pre-superior days. He may be a classic villain but he was boring until the superior stuff happene d, and since then Dr octopus has been a delight to read. This was not that guy. It was to the point where Otto wanted to kill Spiderman here. That felt so out of character to where he has come from. That complaint aside, the overall plot was okay. Felt like it dragged a bit for the sake of filling the extra pages. The extra stories were completely forgettable but that is usually the case on these oversized issues. Overall, 7 for just okay. Spiderman written well, Otto written poorly, decent one off story that could have been cut down a few pages. more
+ Like • Comments (1)
DDJamesB - Jul 27, 2022 (edited)To answer two of your questions, Flash came back to life during the Venom King in Black storyline. Also, The last series of Superior Spider-Man reverted Otto back to his previous ways so while I am still upset they did that, this issue is only keeping continuity in all reality.
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7.0
Well... it's not #500, #600 or #700 and #800, these issues closed cycles or previously planned arcs and opened story to new horizons, good or bad, that's something else. Here we have something more self-contained, that does not close big plots and in theory does not leave big questions open (I say in theory because I hope that at some point certain elements raised here will be taken up again that highlight the importance that a issue like this should have). While it is true the issue does not seem too bad to me, it is not as attractive as it is supposed to be, the art is good in general and an artist like EM would be good for the character, if they let him work at his pace. The last page doesn't bother me, although with everything Spencer has done and the semi-stable relationship with MJ it does seem a bit strange, even in the context narrated by Wells at the beginning of this run. What at this point is a bit tiring for me, subject to what happens in the future and what the story prepared by Wells has in store for us, is that after more than 10 years of OMD there are still certain traumas, demons or fears with giving Peter a partner and not changing her around the corner or pretending to revive old relationships that are going nowhere, I'm not asking him to marry again or undo the "mephistazo" I just ask that in the sentimental aspect of the character, Marvel follow a basic direction without changes right off the bat that don't transcend. For me it is an OK issue close to the "meh" more
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7.0
I don't think it was bad. It's just there's been better issues, that answer "who is spider-man?", better than this one. It's just a fun story and nothing more.
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6.5
A great standalone, but not a special edition for the volume. So Spider-Man arrived in his 900th issue and after all these adventures, Spider-Man remains the same, as do his villains. This spider story works very well as a standalone, but I don't believe it works so well for a special edition. It is expected that these editions will have large participations and even some twists and revelations for the heroes, but it does not add much. In fact, it seems that it could have occurred at any time-space of the hero, as we see no influence from the adventures and mysteries of this volume or advances in the story. Everyone who participated is cool and interesting, including the villains, but the lack of MJ was a mistake. We know how importan t she is to the hero's story and not having her participate in such an important edition greatly diminishes its grandeur. The return of the sinister sextet seems to have been a success, but in the end it was more of the same as what these villains already do. I think this issue would do much better as a Spider-Man anniversary special than a 900-issue commemorative issue. more
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6.0
damn, this issue is gonna divide people. And honestly, I agree. This issue is fine, but it undoes a lot of stuff, especially Peter, Black Cat, and Mary Jane. I like the overall message but as the 900th issue anniversary and the 60th anniversary of Spider-Man, this was a huge let down.
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6.0
I really digged the first 5 issues but this is a huge setback. dumb issue
+ Like • Comments (1)• Likes (3) -
6.0
First major disapointment in this new run, it doesn't even feel like it was written by the same guy who gave us those first 5 issues.
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5.5
Forgettable issue with some awful short stories at the end. Waste of paper and ink.
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5.0
I dunno why Wells’ run just isn’t clicking but it’s not. JJJ can be legitimately funny. In this comic, he’s written like a character in a children’s cartoon. So are the Sinister Six. The only thing that could make it worse would be an appearance by that crying c*nt, Jimmy Kimmel, but don’t worry — he gets his own story after the main one. Maybe he’ll show up in subsequent issues and gargle Pete’s balls like he does when he sits in on Stern. “Hey Howard, remember that time we made omelets at Justin Theroux’s house in Mexico?†God, I hate that talentless f*ck. If not for Ed McG’s art in the main story, I’d have rated this even lower.
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4.5
I check in on ASM for every new run and centennial issue and this is one of the roughest issues I’ve read from ASM for a long time. Ed McGuinness’ art felt rushed and inconsistent due to multiple inkers. And the storytelling was very uninteresting with some very outdated dialogue. This is possibly the weakest centennial issue I’ve read from ASM and this new run seems incredibly unfocused and uninspired.
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4.5
Unfortunately this didn't work for me. It just wasn't my type of story. I felt like it had the same feel as a comic from the '60's. It was kind of a basic superhero story with little depth. Those types of stories don't do much for me however some people like them. I hope others enjoy it more than I did
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4.0
EDIT: After reading this again, this just felt even worse than before. It's Spidey's 60th anniversary and 900th issue and this is what we get??? Well this was a very odd read. I'm perplexed by this issue. And very mixed. Like, this story feels very filler(-ish). It really doesn't move the main story forward (except with "development" which is very... interesting?). But at least this doesn't annoy me nearly as much like #875 did with it's 10 dollar asking price (I will always hate Spencer's What Cost Victory). The story itself is... fine? Like there is nothing bad about it. But it just feels so random. There wasn't really buildup on it (besides that small tease in #1), nor does it include any big moments. Like Spidey teaming up with Sinister Six fighting a Sinister Adaptoid? Cool I guess. But this just doesn't feel like a big milestone issue, like #400, #500, #600, #700 and #800 did. I prefer all of those before this. It's not that bad, but it's not any in way a meaningful or an interesting read. Just a... fun story. And maybe that's enough for you. But not enough for me. And no, it doesn't reveal anything about Spidey's current status quo, so there's that. It just... exists. There is also a big problem with characterization here. Anna drooling over Otto? What? Most of the Sinister Six just being cartoonish bad guys? Vin Gonzales??? Peter sees Flash returning from the dead and is like "cool"? Most is Felicia. After Nick set her up as a friend and Jed made such wonders with her character in her book, this hook-up feels... just unnecesessary. And since it doesn't really end any big story (like 400, 500, 700, 800 did), or tease anything new (like #600 did), or have anything in it really, it just exists. It's not... that bad, like I said. But certainly not worth this milestone number. And to be clear, I did not expect this to "reverse OMD" or "reveal everything about what happened in 6 months", but I did expect something more. Not just a... Spidey vs. Sinister Six. Like after Sinister War and it's Sinister Thirty-Six, I didn't really need to see them as a team again. It just felt very random. Like this story. Art is great in all of the stories. Backups are... okay? (except the Kimmel one, I did not care). In closing, Wells writes this series like a Brand New Day -comics 14-15 years ago. And this issue would be a lot better, if we were living in that era. But we are not. more
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4.0
Man, this is terrible!
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3.5
Stupid story, cartoonish art, nothing ever feels real or at stake. PP's alienation from everyone is nowhere to be found, dialogue is all "cute," boring several page "origin" story of villain, and Sinister Six never feel menacing. Aside from the interminable length, there was nothing "anniversary" about this issue.
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3.5
Why does everyone act like their in factory settings mode? Flash being back from the dead should be a big deal to Peter but its treated as if nothing happened. Man what a waste of 900. For me, 200, 300, 400, 800 were the top centennial issues. This is the worst for how it seems less like a next step in Peter's journey and more like a repeat of status quo?
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CrazyforRAMU - Jan 2, 2023The weird characterization wasn't a dealbreaker for me, but "factory settings mode" is definitely the perfect way to describe it.
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3.5
Most lame milestone issue
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2.0
I am speechless. I don't really know what to say. I'm just sad about the state of Spider-Man right now. This is awful. Worse, it's embarassing to read. Every character acts like it's a parody. The Birthday scene is terrible, it isn't funny and it feels completely out of place. Felicia being mad at Bobbi makes no sense considering the last 10 years of stories. Flash acts like a jerk for no reason. The Sinister Six are directly taken from the '60s, as if the characters never aged or evolved. The whole "Living Brain" thing is laughable. Spidey's monologue about "responsibility" is so didactic and explicit it sounds ridiculous. And his final kiss with Felicia is pointless, out of context and pathetic considering Spencer's run and the MJ sit uation. I have never felt so downcast and embittered by a Spider-Man comic (ok, Sins Past and One More Day take the cake). This is terrible. It looks like something a 14 years old with no knowledge of continuity would write. I am lost for words. more
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