I’ve got a soft spot for Insomniac’s Spider-Man games. I can’t help it. He’s been my favorite hero since I was a kid and my whole life has been dominated by him. I grew up with the Sam Raimi flicks, watched the Sony-produced Amazing Spider-Man movies as a teenager, and by the time Tom Holland took over the role in the MCU, I was a young adult who’d spent a lifetime admiring the friendly neighborhood superhero. I love that he’s just a kid from New York—whether it’s Peter in Queens or Miles in Harlem—and that he lives like the rest of us and has to pay rent by slinging pizza and taking crappy jobs around town. Dropping me into his shoes is always going to go over pretty well, and the Spider-Man games are respectable blockbusters with a lot of heart and some of the breeziest storytelling and gameplay in the AAA space.
It is so easy to enjoy the fantasy of swinging around the city as either Peter or Miles and it never fails to produce a grin or a boost to my mood to zip around and do things Spider-Man would do. Both are also easy heroes to root for, and Insomniac’s version of Peter might be the most personable and down-to-earth take on the guy ever. Watching him websling across the city while engaging in a tense text conversation with MJ is still one of the high points of the entire generation of games and shows that Insomniac really understood what this character was about and why we love him so much.
Miles Morales, a sort of sequel to the first game, establishes Peter’s successor and centers a hero who is much closer to my heart. We may be from opposite sides of the same city, but our heritage takes us back to a pretty similar place, and I love that boricua king with all that I can muster. He’s the blueprint for the heroes I never grew up with: ones who kind of look and sound like me. I would protect him and his bodega cat with my life. Do yourself a favor and pick up Spider-Man Remastered and Miles Morales on Steam or Humble for $36 and $30, respectively.