Tag: Spider-Man PS4

  • Spider-Man: Return to the Spider-Verse Episode 4: Be Greater

    Spider-Man: Return to the Spider-Verse Episode 4: Be Greater

    The next chapter in Spidey’s adventure back into the Spider-Verse has arrived! After Gwen comes upon an encrypted file in the Super Collider schematics, Spidey must team up with the Advanced Spider-Man to face down against one of his oldest and fiercest foes: The Kingpin. It’s time to Be Greater!

    Bringing the Game to Life

    When adapting Advanced’s world, I wanted to bring the look and feel of the game to life. That includes a title screen and loading screens that imitate what’s seen in the game. The title screen was a fun new way to drop the “Return to the Spider-Verse” title card. And the loading screens add just the right amount of anxious anticipation that we all felt when we popped the game in our PS4’s for the first time!

    I also wanted to display the two main mission types from the game, stealth and combat. I knew immediately I needed an HUD, which I created from scratch. Monitoring health and web gadgets was a vital part of playing the game, and I really wanted to make sure it came across here!

    The one other element I was sure I wanted in there was the gadget wheel! Creating that from scratch was a daunting task that I wasn’t sure I could pull off, so I took some in-game photos with the gadgets I needed highlighted, and cut it out! A nice little shortcut for a feature that added a little more authenticity to the mix.

    Speaking of in-game photos, the scenes where we’re panning by the city were all shot by me! Using the PlayStation 5 capture feature, I loaded up Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered and got some epic 4K shots of Advanced’s world! I was sure to include iconic locations, like Oscorp, F.E.A.S.T., and Avengers Tower!

    Easter Eggs!

    Of course, this being a Face Front video, I’m gonna fill it to the brim with Easter eggs! Let me list a few you might have missed:

    Fisk is Back

    -When Advanced looks up Wilson Fisk, he finds a newspaper article that says he’s back out of prison! This article was actually on the official website for the PS4 game!

    Just the Facts

    -The controversial podcast by J. Jonah Jameson makes an appearance in the video! I created the rant to be something Jameson would probably say if he found out that the amount of Spider-Men in the world literally multiplied overnight! They were so much fun in the game, it would be criminal to exclude from my video!

    Another Miles

    -Advanced mentions that he has a Miles in his world, who we all know was the star of last year’s hit PS5 game Spider-Man: Miles Morales. When he mentions that he was undercover at Fisk Tower, this is a direct reference to the level in the game where Miles convinces Phin to take him to the Underground’s HQ, which is a… redecorated Fisk Tower!

    Yuri Watanabe

    -A charter from the comics that made her way into the game, Yuri Watanabe was Spider-Man’s main contact on the NYPD. But during the City That Never Sleeps DLC missions, she went rogue and started taking out bad guys with prejudiced, which is what Advanced meant when he says “She’s been a little off the rails lately”.

    Hostile Takeover

    -JJ does flat out say the words “Hostile Takeover”, which for those who don’t know is the official prequel novel to the game. When Advanced references Maya Lopez’s father, that’s a direct pull from the book, where Fisk murdered her father, framed Spider-Man for it, and raised her to be the deadly assassin Echo. In fact, you can check out Face Front’s review of the book right here!

    Marvel’s Avengers

    -When Spidey figures out that Advanced knows the Avengers, he gets excited only to learn that they’re often never around, which is a line from the game. He says that they’re on the West Coast fighting AIM, which is a direct reference to the plot of the Marvel’s Avengers video game! When the Avengers actually turn out to be there, Iron Man gets some strange quantum readings which Cap guesses is AIM’s Scientist Supreme Monica Rappaccini and her Cosmic Cube. Maybe it is. Then again, maybe it isn’t.

    Goon Conversations

    -Goons like to talk a lot during stealth missions. Listen closely to their conversations in the video! You’ll hear them reference events and villains from the games, like Mr. Negative and the Tinkerer! FYI, the goon says working for Tinkerer was terrible, and when the original Tinkerer was introduced in the comics, he was known as the Terrible Tinkerer!

    The Score

    Of course I used John Paesano’s soundtrack for the game! I’ve used songs from this album before, but I made sure to entirely score this video with it! The only exception being the scene with The Avengers, where we briefly hear the Every Hero Has to Start Somewhere track from that game. Other than that, I matched scenes from the video to songs from the game. The stealth mission overlaid with Webbed from the Shadows, the combat mission featuring All the King’s Men, and of course the Kingpin fight with Eight Years in the Making! Check out the soundtrack, it really is the best!

    And that wraps up this Face Front Original! I really hope you guys liked this one, I did my best to make sure it captured the spirit of the game and advanced the overarching plot of Spider-Man: Return to the Spider-Verse! Who is the Master Planner? Does Spectacular Spider-Man really know? Find out in the next video when he and Spidey team up, Episode 5: Living on the Edge! Thank you guys so much for your support, I only make these videos because you love them so much. Face Front True Believers, and I’ll see you in the Spider-Verse!

  • Face Front Update

    Hey there True Believers! Now I know what you’re all wondering: Why has the greatest Marvel blog on the internet been quiet these past few weeks? Well, there’s a good reason for that! Sort of… Let me explain.

    So as you can probably imagine, while running Face Front is an honor beyond words, it doesn’t exactly pay the bills. So I got a new job, the downside is, it’s very demanding in terms of free time. I’ve also been playing Marvel’s Spider-Man on PS4… but it’s mostly the job. Since it’s fairly new, I’ve still got to find that work-life balance, but I’m working on it!

    So in the meantime, I just wanted to give you guys an update as to what’s coming soon on the Face Front Blog:

    • Spider-Man PS4 Pro Unboxing

    • Top 10 Moments from Iron Fist Season 2

    • Oscorp Conspiracy Part 4

    • Face Front Podcast Episode 9: Captain Marvel

    • Marvel Problems

    I also wanted to mention some things I’m working on:

    • Sam Says Episode 3

    • Face Front Music Video

    • Marvel Corner (Working Title)

    • New YouTube Series

    • Exclusive Face Front User Benefit (Trust me, you’ll love this!)

    • Amazing Fantasy: A Face Front Fan Fiction

    And don’t forget that there’s still plenty you can do on the blog! Check out our Videos section, read my review on the prequel book to the Spider-Man game, listen to the latest podcast episode, play Oscorp Conspiracy Part 3! There’s never a dull moment on the Face Front Blog! Either way, thank you all for being patient with me as I adjust to this new job, and I promise, more great Marvel content is coming! Face Front True Believers, I’ll see you in the Multiverse!

    -Joshua Westbrook

  • Marvel’s Spider-Man: Hostile Takeover

    Marvel’s Spider-Man: Hostile Takeover by David Liss is the story of Spider-Man trying to stop Wilson Fisk, aka the Kingpin, from initiating, well, a hostile takeover of the city. Along the way he has to contend with a spider-imposter, a deaf girl that thinks he killed her father, and the usual Peter Parker wheel of excuses when it comes to his friends and family. Here are my general thoughts about the book, the characters, and what it means for the game. SPOILERS FOR THE BOOK FOLLOW!

    Why a Novel

    My first thought when I heard that there was going to be a prequel novel to the Spider-Man game was: “Um, shouldn’t it be a prequel comic?” Seeing as how Spider-Man got his roots from the comics, it only seemed right. I found it odd that Marvel would decide to go with a novel instead of paying homage to where the character originated. After reading Marvel’s Spider-Man: Hostile Takeover, I now know why they had no choice but to use a novel format, and that has to do with the main antagonist: The Kingpin.

    Let’s look at it this way: Marvel’s Spider-Man PS4 is going to be a AAA blockbuster videogame. There’s going to be action, high energy fight sequences, adrenaline pumping gameplay! So, in a prequel comic, you’d expect some of the same. But the thing is, you can’t tell that kind of story with a villain like Kingpin in comic format. I mean, you can, and you’d get something along the lines of Frank Millar’s Man Without Fear. Great story, good character drama into Daredevil’s psyche and the criminal underworld, run by none other than Kingpin. But if you’re doing a prequel comic to the game I described above, you’ve gotta have costumes and explosions. This story was more of a Law and Order episode guest starring Spider-Man, not so many costumes, not so many explosions.

    This kind of story would be disappointing in a comic that’s supposed to be a precursor to the best Spider-Man game ever of all time. But as a novel, you have time to slow down, and focus on the politics of Fisk and Osborn, and delve into the backstories of characters that might not even be in the game. Since the game opens with Spider-Man taking down the Kingpin, this was the logical story to tell, and a novel was the best way to do it. Maybe a better comic would be how he busted all the villains that are currently in the Raft. Yeah, actually, I’d like that comic now.

    Spider-Man

    Hostile Takeover did Peter justice. They nailed his personality, cracking jokes in combat, caring about people he hardly knew when they died, struggling with the balance between Peter Parker and Spider-Man. It’s tried and true, the web-slinger we all love. Which is why I think we didn’t spend a ton of time with him. We all know who Peter is, what he’s about. We all know he can’t make a date to save his life and has to constantly bail on the people he cares about when he hears sirens. But we didn’t need a story about Peter, because that’s all been covered, and will be more so in the game. We spent a surprising amount of time focusing on Mary Jane, and the villains.

    Kingpin

    I really feel like Liss fashioned his version of Kingpin on the one we see in Netflix’s Daredevil. There’s even a point in the book where it says he’d bash someone’s head in for even thinking about embarrassing him in front of Vanessa. Ring any bells? But yes, even the game developers referenced the Netflix show a lot, so it’s no surprise that this universe’s version of Fisk resembles him a bit. Except this time, he’s trying to keep a lid on his temper to line up with this new public image as a saint here to save New York. It actually lines up with the Daily Bugle newspaper articles posted on the PlayStation website (CLICK HERE), as do other things in the book, but I’ll get there later.

    However, they do balance out that version of Fisk with the one from the comics, being unnaturally large, unbelievably strong, and faster than you’d expect a guy his size to move. Kingpin is a character that always seems to be in control, but this novel showed how when he has his hands in too many pies, things can start to unravel around him. His trust in Maya Lopez and reliance on Michael Bingham, the other two antagonists, added up to the inevitable downfall we’ll see when we boot up the game.

     

    Bad Guys

    Blood Spider and Echo. A lot of you just said “Who?”. A lot of you just said “Psh, I know who they are” when in actuality you’ve maybe heard the names once in some random comic. I don’t blame you. When it came to villains, I guess all the good ones were reserved for the game, so Liss had to dig through a grab bag of obscure Marvel villains (a bag I’m sure Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and the Netflix shows have done a great deal of digging through) and pull out these two. But it’s not who they are already that matters, it’s who you make them to be in your story.

    Michael Bingham was mentally unstable, left to the streets as a teenager, and taken by Oscorp to be experimented on. He came out with spider powers, and the delusion that he was the real Spider-Man. Fisk hired him to smear Spidey’s good name, but Bingham ran out with it, racking up a body count and causing Fisk a lot of headaches, donning the moniker of Blood Spider. He gave Peter a run for his money.

    Maya Lopez was orphaned when Spider-Man apparently killed her father, but was taken in by Wilson Fisk (who actually killed her father!). She was deaf, but learned to mimic people. She could make her voice sound as if she had perfect hearing, and she could take down men twice her size, often able to copy moves perfectly she’d only seen once. All in a focused goal of taking down one man: Spider-Man. Armed with her father’s spear, and a handprint over her eye, she became Echo, and set out to just that. But she was bound to the will of Fisk, the man to whom she believed she owed everything.

    The way their stories unfolded over the course of the book was fascinating. Each character had clear motivations, and their relationships with Fisk really drove the urgency for Spider-Man to stop them. And while Maya eventually became sort of a hero, Bingham was a chaotic force that needed to be stopped at any cost. I liked how the novel allows us to get a fresh take on some pretty obscure villains, and create new, challenging threats for Spider-Man. It is a tad disappointing, however, given how much time we spent with them that neither character appears to be in the game. Their stories wrapped up here, Bingham headed to Ravencroft and Maya headed back home. But who knows? They might have a lasting impact on the game’s narrative.

    Allies

    We did spend a lot of time with Mary Jane. We know that the game starts with her not having seen Peter for 6 months, where the book leaves them, but here we see her get her job at the Bugle working for Robbie. The game developers stressed that MJ is more of a partner in crime-fighting than a damsel in this game, and I really got that sense in this book. MJ dug up information and leads getting close to Fisk and Maya that helped Peter do his thing. But it was her constant putting herself in danger that made Peter worry too much, and get protective to the point where MJ said he was smothering her, and that’s why they broke it off. But based on what I’ve read in this book, I have no doubt the ‘play as Mary Jane’ levels in the game will be interesting to say the least.

    Then we move to Yuri Watanabe, the Slott era police captain who’s only a lieutenant in this book. We get her first interaction with Spider-Man here, and learn how their partnership develops to the point where he’s calling her for tips and help in the game. Though it was strained at times, Spider-Man’s relationship with Yuri was a huge step forward in taking down Fisk, and she’s a genuinely good cop.

    Others were less referenced in the novel, such as Harry, Aunt May, Martin Li, and J. Jonah Jameson. For these guys, the book was more of an informational guide as to why the characters are where they are when the game picks up. Harry’s going to Europe to distance himself from Norman, though Peter’s said that he seemed more on edge. JJJ got his Just the Facts podcast, and Peter was introduced to Li through Aunt May. They weren’t crucial to the story, but I am grateful that we got some context to the roles they’ll be playing in the game.

    Secrets

    You guys know I love my bullet points, so let me divvy up some secrets I’ve discovered that, using years of Spider-Man knowledge and context clues, I’m pretty sure will come to pass in the game. However, if you wish to remain spoiler free, even though I’m not 100% in any of these, skip this part.

    • Insomniac refused to state who Peter’s working for in his lab, and the book played coy as well, simply referring to his place of employment as ‘the lab’ and his boss as ‘the boss’ of ‘Peter’s mentor’. Well, I’m telling you, it’s Dr. Connors. Peter’s working on neural interfaces for making prosthetic limbs that react like real body parts, and the Lizard was name dropped twice. The book was careful to only mention villains that have been revealed (a Tombstone namedrop aside), so this makes me 99.99% certain that Peter is employed by Curt Connors.

    • Insomniac has also, for two years, refused to comment on the white spider. They’ve said it’s to make their version of Spidey immediately recognizable, which I get, and actually appreciate, but they said there’s also a story-based reason behind it. Bingham, aka Blood Spider, a man who was wearing his suit, blowing up restaurants, and straight up shooting people, has to be that reason. With the help of JJJ, half the city believed that Spider-Man had gone rogue. Also, in another issue of the Daily Bugle (CLICK HERE), it mentions spider-imposters trying to imitate the Wall-Crawler. Spider-Man probably wants to distance himself from the massacres of Blood Spider and protect citizens wearing his suit from super villains that might think they have a shot at the real deal. Hence, he gets the white spider. I’m 90.56% sure of that one.

    • Maya, Fisk, Bingham, and Spidey were all after a flash drive that had some dirt on Norman Osborn. Fisk nearly used it to complete his hostile takeover, but Maya destroyed it. I have no idea what’s on that flash drive, but Insomniac’s said nothing about Osborn except he’s up for re-election and he hired Silver Sable. Even the book was sparse on details, other than the fact that he created Blood Spider. Also, there was no indication that Norman had become the Green Goblin. I think it’s weird that in 8 years, Spider-Man’s never faced his greatest foe. In the Face Front Podcast covering the E3 footage (CLICK HERE), I suggested that the mystery villain at the end was Goblin. I’m 22.37% sure of that, but there is a lot we don’t know about Osborn, and the book makes it clear that he is capable of very, very dangerous things.

    Wrap Up

    So in the end, this is a good read. It serves as both a great Spider-Man story on it’s own, and a prequel to the game we’ll finally get to play in a few days. I loved it, and I’d recommend it to anyone, whether you’re getting the game or not. If you’re a Spidey fan, don’t sleep on this. Marvel’s Spider-Man: Hostile Takeover gets a 10/10 in my book!

  • Marvel Problems #012

    So technically, technically, Spider-Man had the date first. Well, at least they announced it first. Still though, it’s really not a good situation. Both cater to Marvel fans and both demand many hours of our precious time. I mean, what do we do? Stop playing what will probably be the best Spider-Man game ever to watch Iron Fist or vice versa? I don’t think so! And we have to watch Iron Fist because people drop spoilers online! I don’t know, but hey, at least we have something to do while Spider-Man installs…

  • One More Month to Marvel’s Spider-Man PS4

    One month to go until we all can finally get our hands on the Spider-Man game to end all Spider-Man games! I’ve been playing around drawing things for my blog, and I drew up this white spider emblem from the game. Not 100% accurate, and clearly I’m not an artist, but plenty of you are. So, I’m gonna do quick contest!

    Head to the Face Front Facebook or Twitter and leave a comment (on the thread with the picture above) with your best drawing (digital or hand drawn) of the white spider! A random user will be chosen on both platforms for a cool little prize!

    I’ve been waiting on this game for 2 years! We all have! It’s actually a little hard to believe that it’s just within our grasp. I’m a little disappointed I failed you guys with the Spyder-Man Ultimatum, but there’s still a ton of merchandise out there if you didn’t get the Collector’s Edition, including the prequel book, a fig pin, Funko Pops, Marvel Legends, the art book that comes in the dang Collector’s Edition, a Gamestop collector’s box, and, you know, the Spider-Man themed PS4 Pro! So, yeah, I think we’re good!

    What are you most excited about for Marvel’s Spider-Man PS4? Comment down below, and remember to leave a comment on Facebook or Twitter with your white spider drawing to enter the contest!

  • I Challenged Insomniac! Game On!

    If you follow Face Front on Twitter, then you might realize that I have just openly challenged Insomniac Games! Like a lot of you True Believers out there, I missed my chance at a Collector’s Edition for Marvel’s Spider-Man PS4, and Insomniac isn’t planning on making more! So, I issued an… ultimatum of sorts.

    If they agree to make more, I’ll fire up my physical copy of Spyro 2: Ripto’s Rage (which is actually my first ever video game) and it will be the only, I repeat, the ONLY game I play until I complete it 100%! I’m talking Dragon Shores roller coaster and unlimited super breath baby! Will Insomniac accept? The ball is in their court! Stay tuned True Believers, this could get very interesting! Let the Spyder-Man Ultimatum begin!

  • Marvel’s Spider-Man PS4 at PlayStation E3 2018

    I was so excited to see gameplay from Marvel’s Spider-Man at E3! To get my full thoughts, check out the latest episode of the Face Front Podcast RIGHT HERE. This post is for conversation! What did you guys think? Let me know below and we’ll talk. Here’s the video below in case (somehow) you missed it.