• Where Does =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Venom=92s?= Webbing Come From?

    From Ubiquitous@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 20 19:00:11 2017
    XPost: alt.comics.spider-man

    Comic Book Questions Answered – where I answer whatever questions you
    folks might have about comic books (feel free to e-mail questions to me
    at brianc@cbr.com).

    Reader Tim wrote in to ask:

    How was the symbiote able to create a webbing on Brock/Venom
    from Spider-Man?

    I know it’s universally accepted that venom has his abilities
    because Spider-Man was his first host. But how is he able to
    duplicate the webbing? Every other “copy” was part of his
    physiology. But the shooters are mechanical. Even doing a
    quick (and I mean very quick) scan of others he has “infected”
    it always talks about taking over their body and mind.

    My issue is it doesn’t make sense with what the symbiot
    actually is. A living thing that needs a host, also living,
    to survive. But the web cartridges are technological not
    biological. This would mean it could consume a tank and have
    its abilities or a spacecraft. And then once combined with
    another host it could give them a tank arm and the ability to
    fly.

    If you could explain how it’s possible to copy his webshooters
    I would GREATLY appreciate it. Thanks.

    Simply put, Tim, it created the webbing out of its own body so as to
    best replicate Spider-Man’s powers. It is the same basic reason it is
    able to create tendrils and a big tongue and stuff like that.

    This was actually demonstrated in Venom’s very first appearance in
    “Amazing Spider-Man” #300 (by David Michelinie and Todd McFarlane),
    and, in fact, it was how Spider-Man ended up defeating Venom.

    First, Venom used a lot of webbing to web Spider-Man down…

    When Spider-Man was freed, he realized where Venom’s webbing was coming
    from and how Spider-Man could use that to defeat him!

    So there ya go, Tim!

    http://www.cbr.com/venom-webbing-spider-man-todd-mcfarlane/

    --
    The liberal media's agenda is to make Trump as hated and distrusted as
    they are.

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  • From Kenneth M. Lin@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 8 15:38:47 2017
    XPost: alt.comics.spider-man

    Well, Spidey himself initially wasn't aware that the symbiote costume was
    alive and assumed that it was merely responding to his thought. Therefore, when he thought of shooting webs, he assumed that the costume found a way to emulate his web-shooters.

    Nobody ever said that everything must be organic in order for the symbiote
    to emulate. Web-shooters aren't terribly complicated and can be emulated organically if necessary.

    Not sure why the webbing is coming out of back of his hands though.

    And who freed the symbiote when it was initially captured by Fantastic Four?

    And symbiote would not able to emulate a rocket because it cannot synthesize the fuel source and the propulsion unit is too complex. (It may be able to
    if it's allowed to study it carefully.) They used the same argument with
    the liquid Terminator.

    "Ubiquitous" wrote in message news:b-ydnaFtgppaHzbFnZ2dnUU7-TnNnZ2d@giganews.com...

    Comic Book Questions Answered – where I answer whatever questions you
    folks might have about comic books (feel free to e-mail questions to me
    at brianc@cbr.com).

    Reader Tim wrote in to ask:

    How was the symbiote able to create a webbing on Brock/Venom
    from Spider-Man?

    I know it’s universally accepted that venom has his abilities
    because Spider-Man was his first host. But how is he able to
    duplicate the webbing? Every other “copy” was part of his
    physiology. But the shooters are mechanical. Even doing a
    quick (and I mean very quick) scan of others he has “infected”
    it always talks about taking over their body and mind.

    My issue is it doesn’t make sense with what the symbiot
    actually is. A living thing that needs a host, also living,
    to survive. But the web cartridges are technological not
    biological. This would mean it could consume a tank and have
    its abilities or a spacecraft. And then once combined with
    another host it could give them a tank arm and the ability to
    fly.

    If you could explain how it’s possible to copy his webshooters
    I would GREATLY appreciate it. Thanks.

    Simply put, Tim, it created the webbing out of its own body so as to
    best replicate Spider-Man’s powers. It is the same basic reason it is
    able to create tendrils and a big tongue and stuff like that.

    This was actually demonstrated in Venom’s very first appearance in
    “Amazing Spider-Man” #300 (by David Michelinie and Todd McFarlane),
    and, in fact, it was how Spider-Man ended up defeating Venom.

    First, Venom used a lot of webbing to web Spider-Man down…

    When Spider-Man was freed, he realized where Venom’s webbing was coming
    from and how Spider-Man could use that to defeat him!

    So there ya go, Tim!

    http://www.cbr.com/venom-webbing-spider-man-todd-mcfarlane/

    --
    The liberal media's agenda is to make Trump as hated and distrusted as
    they are.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kenneth M. Lin@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jul 13 17:22:15 2017
    XPost: alt.comics.spider-man

    Well, spiders are alive and are able to spin webs. It's the same with symbiote.

    The symbiote requires a host to feed so it's living off the host's perspiration and dead skins, I am guessing. It can then use part of its
    body to construct the webbing. The more web it spins, the more it needs to replenish itself by feeding off the host body. I don't know if the symbiote can consume food directly or such more out of its host when it's excessively hungry.

    So a symbiote can do a lot more than duplicate a web-shooter but is limited
    by its host's imagination. Too bad Peter Parker had to get rid of it before he could understand its potential.

    "Ubiquitous" wrote in message news:b-ydnaFtgppaHzbFnZ2dnUU7-TnNnZ2d@giganews.com...

    Comic Book Questions Answered – where I answer whatever questions you
    folks might have about comic books (feel free to e-mail questions to me
    at brianc@cbr.com).

    Reader Tim wrote in to ask:

    How was the symbiote able to create a webbing on Brock/Venom
    from Spider-Man?

    I know it’s universally accepted that venom has his abilities
    because Spider-Man was his first host. But how is he able to
    duplicate the webbing? Every other “copy” was part of his
    physiology. But the shooters are mechanical. Even doing a
    quick (and I mean very quick) scan of others he has “infected”
    it always talks about taking over their body and mind.

    My issue is it doesn’t make sense with what the symbiot
    actually is. A living thing that needs a host, also living,
    to survive. But the web cartridges are technological not
    biological. This would mean it could consume a tank and have
    its abilities or a spacecraft. And then once combined with
    another host it could give them a tank arm and the ability to
    fly.

    If you could explain how it’s possible to copy his webshooters
    I would GREATLY appreciate it. Thanks.

    Simply put, Tim, it created the webbing out of its own body so as to
    best replicate Spider-Man’s powers. It is the same basic reason it is
    able to create tendrils and a big tongue and stuff like that.

    This was actually demonstrated in Venom’s very first appearance in
    “Amazing Spider-Man” #300 (by David Michelinie and Todd McFarlane),
    and, in fact, it was how Spider-Man ended up defeating Venom.

    First, Venom used a lot of webbing to web Spider-Man down…

    When Spider-Man was freed, he realized where Venom’s webbing was coming
    from and how Spider-Man could use that to defeat him!

    So there ya go, Tim!

    http://www.cbr.com/venom-webbing-spider-man-todd-mcfarlane/

    --
    The liberal media's agenda is to make Trump as hated and distrusted as
    they are.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)