About
As a character lineup, this is strong, covering headline heroes like Miles Morales, Gwen Stacy, Miguel O’Hara 2099, Spider-Punk, Pavitr Prabhakar and deeper-cut variants such as Sun-Spider, Cyborg Spider-Woman, Web-Slinger, Werewolf Spider-Man, plus Miles G. Morales as the Prowler and Peter B. Parker with Mayday. Printing quality is consistently high with frequent arm and leg prints, lots of alternate heads and hair, and several new or revised elements. Notable standouts include Spider-Punk’s spiked hair and guitar, Spider-Byte’s new molded mask, Miguel’s semi-transparent plastic cape with printed pattern, and Sun-Spider’s crutches. The series also introduces trans-orange display bases, a bold color that pops on shelves. On the downside, a few surprising absences remain, notably Jessica Drew and Peni Parker, and some color choices, like bright light blue hands on Miles, divide opinion. Overall, it is a detailed, display-ready wave with genuine variety inside a single theme.
Minifigure review
The twelve figures cover the film’s tone from clean suits to wild variants. Miles Morales arrives with lightning detailing and alt head, though the hand color is contentious. Gwen gains upgraded printing and a new hairpiece with an alt head. Spider-Punk captures the jagged graphic style, complete with a rubber mohawk and guitar. Spider-Man 2099 looks imposing, the transparent plastic cape selling the on-screen effect and LYLA printed on a translucent statuette. Pavitr reads vibrantly and packs Spider-Cat as an extra character beat. Miles G. Morales, the Prowler introduces new hair options and a cloak element, plus a vinyl record. Spider-Byte’s new helmet mold and circuitry print land well, Sun-Spider includes crutches that have only just entered the parts ecosystem, and Werewolf Spider-Man uses dual-molded limbs to good effect. Web-Slinger and Cyborg Spider-Woman round out the selection, pushing variety beyond just costume swaps.












