The kid was able to lie and cover for Spider-Man while simultaneously making it so his parents don’t hate Spider-Man anymore. All while comforting Spider-Man and reassuring him it wasn’t his fault. Incredible.
@@draconicdemigod9696people you know can sometimes hurt you more than any stranger cause they know you or in peters case think. To most of his close friends he looks like a flakey asshole even though he goes through a lot. Me saying that though he’s sometimes tortured to a cartoonish degree for shit.
Back when I was a young firefighter it was a quote from cap America that was similar to that that helped me cope with my first on duty fatality people don't realize hoe much these stories truly helps people
Really ? I personally think this is sadder. Because, yeah he was late but he didn't directly affect the situation, causing the death of the girl. While this, he was actively fighting the criminals, and some could even say he was being careless during the fight.
I will always love this line because it came from the “comedic relief” of Into the Spider-Verse. The entire time Spider-Ham was cracking jokes, having a laugh, and all around being true to the Spider-Ham of the comics, but not in that moment. It cut to the heart of the core for Spider-Man in general, not just Peter Porker.
Luke: “well I did have my entire life, accomplishments, and family retroactively erased by greedy corporates who thought me not being a miserable failure of a man is too “boring” and “unrelatable” Spider-Man: “you too huh?”
@@PikachuLittleNothing was retroactively erased. Him messing up in the future is perfectly human. I don't know what to tell you people. It doesn't suddenly erase him bringing the good in his dad back out, or blowing up the death star or being there to train leia, or freeing sl4ves, etc.. All of those things still happened. Even in the media you're referencing he still chooses to do the right thing in the end and sacrifice himself even if he knows Ben will likely never forgive; he still tries once he gets over his nihilism/pessimism. It's significantly more than I can expect from people in real life who very often never take accountability for anything. I could mention how the devices weren't typing on are powered by batteries made via sl4ve labor but we tolerate sh*tty things when its us doing it; suddenly we're not so indignant about it when it's our mistake that we have to take accountability for.
@@sarjocole2626 “nothing was retroactively erased”, you know, aside from pretty much everything in Legends. Which I get is technically a “different” continuity but as far as I’m concerned removing the New Jedi Order because your writing staff is too lazy to do anything that isn’t just “Empire Strikes Back but worse” is effectively a retcon. If your staff can’t figure out any way to make your new main character look “good” other than by making a previous beloved character look bad then you’re a bad writer. And if you have Mark Hammel himself tell you to your face “I fundamentally disagree with everything you are doing with the character of Luke Skywalker” then you have failed on such a level that being fired on the spot is too light of a punishment. But I digress For the sake of arguing with someone on the internet (truly a worthwhile endeavor) I’m going to compare Luke’s character arc in The Last Jedi to another Disney storyline, specifically the show Obi-Wan. Both are effectively the same story, a once great hero broken down by loss gets called back into action, gets their mojo back, and manages to save the day. The difference is that Luke’s angst is completely unearned. When we last saw him (chronologically) Obi-Wan had just lost everything he ever cared about, had to abandon his way of life and even his own name to hide from the monster that he helped create and failed to stop. It is entirely reasonable for him to be a PTSD riddled wreck who is only still alive because of inertia. Meanwhile last time we saw Luke he was partying with Ewoks after effectively winning the war. There is no logical connection between the young Luke of RotJ, tempered by conflict but still full of hope, to the bitter old man from TLJ. It’s extremely apparent that the only reason he’s in that situation is because the writers wanted him to be like that. And you know what? That miiiiiight have been forgivable, if it was Luke’s story. But it’s not, it’s Rey’s. Luke isn’t broken down so he can rise from the ashes, he’s just there to make Rey look good. It’s an incredibly cheap writing tool and deserved all the ill will it garnered
Bro forgot to mention that the kid dove in front of a bullet that was aimed at spidey (who could've dodged it btw) because he wanted to be his sidekick
“Saddest Spider-Man Moment Ever” Do you realize how little that narrows it down? But in all seriousness it’s kinda disturbing how much writers like putting Spider-man through the worse possible situations
NGL on the one hand I hate it too. On the other you have to imagine that if you were an irl superhero you'd probably see far worse on a regular basis I just wish they'd torture other superheroes the way they do spiderman if gritty realism was the goal
@@screenname6829 the problem I have with some writers is their view of “realistic” means that everyone’s selfish and an a-hole when in reality there are more good people than bad, and that even the bad sometimes have their reasons (Which doesn’t make them right, just more complex)
Personally my vote for saddest moment, is the homeless child who dies in spideys arms from exposure to cold. As he tries to rush her to help. All the while beliving everything was ok because her hero was there with her.
They blaming Spidey for what? They didn’t do anything to save the child, Spidey trying his best and bring him to the hospital, they do nothing and then blame him for what happened
They blame spiderman because him existing it's what inspired him to be a hero in the moment and that lead him to taking the bullets. If he haven't been so fan of spiderman he would have probably just flee from danger and nothing would have happen to him. So it's not spiderman fault directly but him being there indirectly cause this tragedy. So yeah it's pretty far fetched to blame it all on spiderman but that parents dealing with their son being in critical condition they cope in any way they can and using spiderman as a scapegoat is the way they have to let their anger and stress out that why after a few time has passed and they have a chance to calm down and deal with that tragedy they end up not holding grudges against spiderman.
@@ub-4630Many cases of this tbh. Victim-blaming seems almost hard-wired for some. Maybe it's a side effect of people subconsciously accepting that they can't change the perpatrator but they feel like since they had influence on the victim, but don't want to blame themselves, they project the blame onto the victim or other people who tried to help. Then again, a lot of people are just pieces of sh*t and like to blame victims, usually due to some form of bigotry or bias.
Spider man may be the ultimate tragedy but what people fail to Notice is that Spider-Man has a multi verse of other Spider-Man who know exactly what he's going through cause. They all went through it at some point
To have power comes great responsibility. You can help everyone, but you can't save everyone. A hero knows this but trying is always better than doing nothing at all.
Every hero has to deal with the fact that they can't save everyone. But sometimes, they need to realize that even if they can't save them physically, they _can_ save them mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. Which is what Spider-Man did for the kid. Thanks Tommy. For reminding Peter of that. He needs that reminder every once in a while.
As humans we tend to blame others out of anger when a loved one or someone we know is critically injured or dying. I’m glad to see that Tommy’s father saw that he looked up to Spider Man and realized it wasn’t his fault.
Smart kid. "You're here for a reason, are you? To make sure I'm okay after you tried to save me? You aren't just any man, you're Spider Man and you did your best. You always do."
There is one which might be just a bit sadder from the 80s where Peter reveals he is Spider-Man to a kid with childhood leukemia, knowing the boy will die soon. It broke my heart then and is breaking it again now.
This is actually beautiful. Most of these spiderman comic videos seem to be about needless suffering, but this is something that feels depressing but also feels like it renews hope.
People don't understand how lucky they are to have spidy as a hero. If any how he choose to be villian then whole MC Universe won't be able to stop him.
Peter existing is the worst thing to happen to him. Not meaning that he's the worst I mean how the writers don't ever give this man a happy ending, even though Stan made him to have personal problems behind the mask
The kid was able to lie and cover for Spider-Man while simultaneously making it so his parents don’t hate Spider-Man anymore. All while comforting Spider-Man and reassuring him it wasn’t his fault. Incredible.
Reassuring
COMFORTING NOT CONFRONTING
LOL. Thanks man.
Why are random strangers a better friends then Peter's own damn love ones
@@draconicdemigod9696people you know can sometimes hurt you more than any stranger cause they know you or in peters case think.
To most of his close friends he looks like a flakey asshole even though he goes through a lot.
Me saying that though he’s sometimes tortured to a cartoonish degree for shit.
This story might be depressing, but it is still better written than everything going on with the current amazing spideman issues
Yeah man
God bless you and Jesus loves you so much
@@reignellwalker9755ok I am a Christian but what’d that have to do with the comment
Exactly although it is also uplifting since it shows that being spider man isn’t meaningless
Shut up please and thank you
The hardest part of being Spider-Man is realizing he can’t save everyone
This is the same for all heroes.
And yet you try anywaya
@@ComicPhreakOther heroes are trash
"With great power comes great responsibility"
and put responsibility in this😔
Back when I was a young firefighter it was a quote from cap America that was similar to that that helped me cope with my first on duty fatality people don't realize hoe much these stories truly helps people
Writers can't give spiderman a break 😭
fr 😞
I'm not crying someone's just chopping onions
It's a rule. They can't.
What do you mean? It’s Stan lees comics
Even fanfiction authors bro.
Also mentioning that in the comic the boy portrays himself as Spider-Man's crime fighting companion
Awwww that’s beyond adorable and truly heartbreaking
That was so cute
Being Spider-Man must be so depressing
😢😢
That's nothing compared to Hulk or Daredevil.
I have no idea how Peter hasn't broken down yet.
nahh @@sonicsucks20
@@sonicsucks20no spiderman has it more rough than those 2 and most other superheroes
The hardest one for me was Peter finding the homeless little girl in the middle of winter.
Issue?
That was sad
Really ? I personally think this is sadder. Because, yeah he was late but he didn't directly affect the situation, causing the death of the girl. While this, he was actively fighting the criminals, and some could even say he was being careless during the fight.
@@Dean123123100 I’m high rn I can’t give a decent response
@@huh7640 i dont think he was even responding to you lmaoooo
I'd say most melancholy moment in Spidermam history, rather than sad. It had a very wholesome ending to it, after all.
The kid knew that spiderman wasn’t at fault, he also covered for him. That is a hero we didn’t know we deserved and needed
The hardest part about this job is that you can't save everybody.
-spider ham
I will always love this line because it came from the “comedic relief” of Into the Spider-Verse. The entire time Spider-Ham was cracking jokes, having a laugh, and all around being true to the Spider-Ham of the comics, but not in that moment. It cut to the heart of the core for Spider-Man in general, not just Peter Porker.
The fact that this quote came from Spider-Ham, a literal TOON, hits so much harder. 😢
The fact that even in his cartoonish world that even serious stuff like that happens cuts deep. No amount of toon force could save everyone.
“What would Spiderman do?” he would happily die if it meant saving 1 life
Spidey does really suffer from success
Too much success 😢
They say the more you succeed the more you
are delicate to the pain of failure 😞
There's nothing wrong with success but never failing is a path of pain and depression.
"The hardest part about this job is that you can't save everybody" - Spider-Ham
Edit: oops I copied
Interesting that one of the deepest quotes in marvel came from a cartoon pig
Copied
@@-1Snake-Lover1- oh mb
Luke Skywalker: I know what you're going through Peter.
Peter Parker: Are you really sure?
Spiderman: thanks That's an Decent Monday for Me 🗿
👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀
Luke: “well I did have my entire life, accomplishments, and family retroactively erased by greedy corporates who thought me not being a miserable failure of a man is too “boring” and “unrelatable”
Spider-Man: “you too huh?”
@@PikachuLittlepleaaaaaaseeeee
@@PikachuLittleNothing was retroactively erased. Him messing up in the future is perfectly human. I don't know what to tell you people. It doesn't suddenly erase him bringing the good in his dad back out, or blowing up the death star or being there to train leia, or freeing sl4ves, etc.. All of those things still happened. Even in the media you're referencing he still chooses to do the right thing in the end and sacrifice himself even if he knows Ben will likely never forgive; he still tries once he gets over his nihilism/pessimism. It's significantly more than I can expect from people in real life who very often never take accountability for anything. I could mention how the devices weren't typing on are powered by batteries made via sl4ve labor but we tolerate sh*tty things when its us doing it; suddenly we're not so indignant about it when it's our mistake that we have to take accountability for.
@@sarjocole2626 “nothing was retroactively erased”, you know, aside from pretty much everything in Legends. Which I get is technically a “different” continuity but as far as I’m concerned removing the New Jedi Order because your writing staff is too lazy to do anything that isn’t just “Empire Strikes Back but worse” is effectively a retcon. If your staff can’t figure out any way to make your new main character look “good” other than by making a previous beloved character look bad then you’re a bad writer. And if you have Mark Hammel himself tell you to your face “I fundamentally disagree with everything you are doing with the character of Luke Skywalker” then you have failed on such a level that being fired on the spot is too light of a punishment. But I digress
For the sake of arguing with someone on the internet (truly a worthwhile endeavor) I’m going to compare Luke’s character arc in The Last Jedi to another Disney storyline, specifically the show Obi-Wan. Both are effectively the same story, a once great hero broken down by loss gets called back into action, gets their mojo back, and manages to save the day. The difference is that Luke’s angst is completely unearned. When we last saw him (chronologically) Obi-Wan had just lost everything he ever cared about, had to abandon his way of life and even his own name to hide from the monster that he helped create and failed to stop. It is entirely reasonable for him to be a PTSD riddled wreck who is only still alive because of inertia. Meanwhile last time we saw Luke he was partying with Ewoks after effectively winning the war. There is no logical connection between the young Luke of RotJ, tempered by conflict but still full of hope, to the bitter old man from TLJ. It’s extremely apparent that the only reason he’s in that situation is because the writers wanted him to be like that. And you know what? That miiiiiight have been forgivable, if it was Luke’s story. But it’s not, it’s Rey’s. Luke isn’t broken down so he can rise from the ashes, he’s just there to make Rey look good. It’s an incredibly cheap writing tool and deserved all the ill will it garnered
Bro I remember reading this comic I literally cried for an hour straight 😭😭😭😭😭😭
woa
Which one is it?
REAL
Bro forgot to mention that the kid dove in front of a bullet that was aimed at spidey (who could've dodged it btw) because he wanted to be his sidekick
“Saddest Spider-Man Moment Ever”
Do you realize how little that narrows it down?
But in all seriousness it’s kinda disturbing how much writers like putting Spider-man through the worse possible situations
NGL on the one hand I hate it too. On the other you have to imagine that if you were an irl superhero you'd probably see far worse on a regular basis
I just wish they'd torture other superheroes the way they do spiderman if gritty realism was the goal
@@screenname6829 the problem I have with some writers is their view of “realistic” means that everyone’s selfish and an a-hole when in reality there are more good people than bad, and that even the bad sometimes have their reasons (Which doesn’t make them right, just more complex)
Even hero's lose hope sometimes that's why it's important to remind our hero's what they were fighting for and why.
Btw bro was a better comic book artist than a sidekick
I think this story was more uplifting than sad. The boy comforted him and he even ended up with a gift from him that gives him hope
Id say its more bitter sweet because of the ending
Personally my vote for saddest moment, is the homeless child who dies in spideys arms from exposure to cold. As he tries to rush her to help.
All the while beliving everything was ok because her hero was there with her.
Man...
After seeing so many misused words, I didn't know sad could mean... Sad...
Yet also wholesome... 😢
This is an Aspect of Spider-Man that makes him a great character
Yep
If we get Sam Rami Spider-Man 4, 5 and 6 than I want this scene to be in one of them because it's too perfect.
As Spider-Ham once said in Into the Spiderverse: "...the hardest thing about this job is that you can't save everybody."
Ridiculous; The shooter is responsible for the kid’s injury. Not Spider-Man.
You don’t blame a Firefighter for the arson.
This is why spider man is one of the best hero,he would felt very depressed not being able to save someone even though it has nothing to do with him
They blaming Spidey for what? They didn’t do anything to save the child, Spidey trying his best and bring him to the hospital, they do nothing and then blame him for what happened
They blame spiderman because him existing it's what inspired him to be a hero in the moment and that lead him to taking the bullets.
If he haven't been so fan of spiderman he would have probably just flee from danger and nothing would have happen to him.
So it's not spiderman fault directly but him being there indirectly cause this tragedy.
So yeah it's pretty far fetched to blame it all on spiderman but that parents dealing with their son being in critical condition they cope in any way they can and using spiderman as a scapegoat is the way they have to let their anger and stress out that why after a few time has passed and they have a chance to calm down and deal with that tragedy they end up not holding grudges against spiderman.
It was mostly the Dad that did, but sure
Blaming the guy who did the right thing and not the guy who hurt their boy. Hm.
@@ub-4630Many cases of this tbh. Victim-blaming seems almost hard-wired for some. Maybe it's a side effect of people subconsciously accepting that they can't change the perpatrator but they feel like since they had influence on the victim, but don't want to blame themselves, they project the blame onto the victim or other people who tried to help. Then again, a lot of people are just pieces of sh*t and like to blame victims, usually due to some form of bigotry or bias.
I know the answer btw, the writers don’t want a happy spidey
Spiderman is the best Superhero, Flash would be Second. They truly are what embodies a hero while still being relatable.
How, sad but such a good story. What issue is this?
ASM700.5 I believe. Short story near the back of the issue
God bless you and Jesus loves you so much
Sadder than the abomination that is Spiderman writers?
Me: Wait, it's all cuckold fetish?
Spider-Man writers: Always has been.
Spiderman sure had a messed up journey. Gf died, Uncle dies, aunt dies, Stark dies. And yet Spiderman still keeps pushing forward.
Stark ?
Peter practically hates Tony in every universe outside of the MCU.
One of the few times I've cried while reading a comic
Spider man may be the ultimate tragedy but what people fail to Notice is that Spider-Man has a multi verse of other Spider-Man who know exactly what he's going through cause. They all went through it at some point
To have power comes great responsibility.
You can help everyone, but you can't save everyone. A hero knows this but trying is always better than doing nothing at all.
"it's you and me, Spidey-- til the day I die"
... That shit hurt my heart..😿
Writer: "And then the comic flies out of Peter's hand and falls down a sewer."
NO 😢
Every hero has to deal with the fact that they can't save everyone. But sometimes, they need to realize that even if they can't save them physically, they _can_ save them mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. Which is what Spider-Man did for the kid.
Thanks Tommy. For reminding Peter of that. He needs that reminder every once in a while.
This is probably top ten sadest but sadest he'll nah. Writers seem to hate spider man.
I think its pretty obvious that they do considering everything that happens to him!
“This is the saddest moment in Spider-Man history.” Do you have the SLIGHTEST idea how little that narrows it down?
Sometimes, even heros need heros.
This child, was a hero that gave Spider-Man hope.
It would have been sad if the boy said it WAS his fault.
You can’t always save everyone -Spider hog
Depressing, but hopeful.
Truly, beautiful.
As humans we tend to blame others out of anger when a loved one or someone we know is critically injured or dying. I’m glad to see that Tommy’s father saw that he looked up to Spider Man and realized it wasn’t his fault.
Spider-man has always be going through it all and never gives up..... My #1 hero
I love the parents saying “Tell Spider-Man it wasn’t his fault”. Those are some good parents
RIP Tommy the writer we actually need in Marvel.
IM CRYING NOW😢
The hard thing about being Spider-Man is that. You can’t save everybody
I mean "one of" is low-key an overstatement... #justiceforPeterparker
I’ve never understood why so many of Spider-Man’s stories are sad
It’s enough to make a grown man cry
The parents definitely knew that last line.
Smart kid. "You're here for a reason, are you? To make sure I'm okay after you tried to save me? You aren't just any man, you're Spider Man and you did your best. You always do."
There is one which might be just a bit sadder from the 80s where Peter reveals he is Spider-Man to a kid with childhood leukemia, knowing the boy will die soon. It broke my heart then and is breaking it again now.
To quote Spider-Ham, "The hardest thing about this job is, you can't always save everybody".
I could never stop crying 😭
How remarkable, the mind of a child is. -Master Yoda
Finally! A a moment of Spider-Man suffering that doesn't directly involve him or his relatives brutally killed.
The hardest part in being a hero is that you can't save everyone at the same time
Something I didn’t need before I went to sleep was depression, BUT HERE WE ARE
La parte más difícil de ser un superhéroe es darte cuenta qué no siempre puedes salvar a todos.
Spider-Man legend🙏🙏🙏🙏amen
Awwwwww. I'm not normally a spiderman fan but I like this 🥺
You just made a grown man cry
This dude Spider-Man is always suffering he can’t ever catch a break
Spider-cat..... Won't be forgotten...
Sometimes even a super hero can’t save the day on time and when something like that happens it’s shocking.
this is the best break he ever could had
Great find! Didn’t even know about this story but damn is it not exactly a Spider-Man story through and through. Beautiful!
Bro being spider man is one of the worst existences I have ever seen
“Promise me that you will hold onto Hope. Keep it alive. We have to be greater than what we suffer.” - Gwen Stacy, The Amazing Spider-Man 2
It’s starting to feel like every Spiderman story is the saddest ever😂😂
There are sadder ones but this one is very grounded in reality
Bro met his Hero and gave him the one thing he needed at the time.
That boy is a true hero
Spider-Man has a heart
Im actually crying, The kid is really something else, A noble and kind fan. Props to the boy.
Why you making me cry? My day just started!
"This might be one of the saddest moments of Spider-Man history"
So pretty much Peter's average suffering Tuesday (my man just can't get a break)
This is actually beautiful. Most of these spiderman comic videos seem to be about needless suffering, but this is something that feels depressing but also feels like it renews hope.
Holy shit, why did i just find this now?! This is so good!
Ain't no superhero more realistic than Spider-Man, all the consequences of saving others and being selfless, no good deeds go unpunished......
No matter how strong we are, we still have weaknesses
The thing about being Spider Man is that you can’t save everyone even if you try
bro that's so sad😭
The hardest part of being Spider-Man......, is being Spider-Man
Happiest moment of Peter Parker’s existence
and there goes the writers again. fuck yeah
Bro can’t even take a break from the traumas. The writers REALLY have a brief on Pete. 💀
"... I always find a way to get back up."
- Spider-Man, in every universe
you know, this is pretty tame in comparison to other things he had to deal with
People don't understand how lucky they are to have spidy as a hero. If any how he choose to be villian then whole MC Universe won't be able to stop him.
That’s depressing
In some countries even having fake documents is a crime
"The hardest thing about being a hero... is that you can't always save everybody." Peter Porker
"this is the SADDEST moment in spider man history"
oh so its Tuesday then
Peter existing is the worst thing to happen to him. Not meaning that he's the worst I mean how the writers don't ever give this man a happy ending, even though Stan made him to have personal problems behind the mask