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The Kingpin's Shadowland hideout is attacked by the Superior Spider-Man to which the Kingpin claims that the Superior Spider-Man is much different from the nemesis he had fought. While escaping, the Kingpin kills his doppelgänger Smedley Kornfeld (who was hired for events like this) to fool the Superior Spider-Man. [58]
Still under Silvermane's employment, he worked with Harry Osborn, the second Green Goblin, who had Smythe build an army of Goblin Warriors to attack Peter Parker and the clone of Mary Jane Watson's wedding, while Smythe also helped Scorpion with other activities. Harry's plan failed in the end thanks to Spider-Man, the Kingpin and the Black Cat.
Prowler - Aaron Davis is a career criminal and the uncle of Miles Morales, who became the second Spider-Man in this reality. Punisher - Frank Castle became the vigilante known as the Punisher to wage his own personal war against the criminal underworld. He comes into conflict with many heroes, most commonly Daredevil.
The Spider-Man villain called Mister Negative plotted to target the Maggia Families, perhaps hoping to take the Kingpin's place. The supervillain Hood has also formed a supervillain crime syndicate which enlists various costumed criminals in an attempt to gain control of the underworld.
The Kingpin (Matthew Michael Murdock) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.He was created by Jason Latour and Robbi Rodriguez. The character debuted in Edge of Spider-Verse issue #2 as part of the 2014–15 "Spider-Verse" comic book storyline as the archenemy of Gwen Stacy/Spider-Woman, continuing into the ongoing series Spider-Gwen that began in 2015.
The Kingpin places a nuclear bomb within New York City and frames Spider-Man as the perpetrator. The keys to deactivate the bomb have been dispersed to many of Spider-Man's rogue gallery including Doctor Octopus, Sandman, The Lizard, Hobgoblin, Vulture, Mysterio, Electro and Venom. Eventually, Venom kidnaps Mary Jane Parker.
The Enforcers first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #10 (March 1964), and were created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter Steve Ditko. [1] [2]The Enforcers appear often in the early issues of The Amazing Spider-Man, debuting in #10, [3] and returning in #14 and 19, in the latter issue teaming with the supervillain the Sandman.
An Ultimate Marvel equivalent of Rose is a maskless associate of the Kingpin. He was present in the Ultimate Knights storyline where he auditioned Ronin to be a part of the Kingpin's organization and was ordered by the Kingpin to blow up Midtown High, but was arrested by the cops. [15]