Footage of Insomniac's seemingly cancelled live-service Spider-Man: The Great Web appears online
Footage of a purportedly cancelled co-operative live-service Spider-Man game from developer Insomniac - titled Spider-Man: The Great Web - has appeared online following last year's ransomware attack targeting the developer and its employees. The trailer (narrated by Yuri Lowenthal, the voice of Insomniac's Peter Parker) points to a five-player co-op Spider-Man game featuring various multiverse incarnations of the character - including Gwen Stacy, Spider-Man 2099, and Scarlet Spider, alongside Peter Parker and Miles Morales - who would go up against the Sinister Six in an open-world Manhattan. Spider-Man: The Great Web first came to light following last year's ransomware attack on Insomniac, and would seemingly have been part of Sony's ambitious but floundering live-service plans (announced under the watch of departing PlayStation boss Jim Ryan in 2021), of which Naughty Dog's The Last of Us multiplayer project has been the most high-profile casualty. Read more
![Footage of Insomniac's seemingly cancelled live-service Spider-Man: The Great Web appears online](https://assetsio.gnwcdn.com/marvels-spider-man-2_2ThHJol.jpg?width=1920&height=1920&fit=bounds&quality=80&format=jpg&auto=webp#)
![](https://assetsio.gnwcdn.com/marvels-spider-man-2_2ThHJol.jpg?width=1920&height=1920&fit=bounds&quality=80&format=jpg&auto=webp)
Footage of a purportedly cancelled co-operative live-service Spider-Man game from developer Insomniac - titled Spider-Man: The Great Web - has appeared online following last year's ransomware attack targeting the developer and its employees.
The trailer (narrated by Yuri Lowenthal, the voice of Insomniac's Peter Parker) points to a five-player co-op Spider-Man game featuring various multiverse incarnations of the character - including Gwen Stacy, Spider-Man 2099, and Scarlet Spider, alongside Peter Parker and Miles Morales - who would go up against the Sinister Six in an open-world Manhattan.
Spider-Man: The Great Web first came to light following last year's ransomware attack on Insomniac, and would seemingly have been part of Sony's ambitious but floundering live-service plans (announced under the watch of departing PlayStation boss Jim Ryan in 2021), of which Naughty Dog's The Last of Us multiplayer project has been the most high-profile casualty.
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