[UPDATE 7/28/22: Yuri Lowenthal voiced Peter Parker in the iOS mobile version of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014), not the main console port starring Sam Riegel. The original story follows, with sources added.]

Superhero comic books have been a mainstay of popular culture since Action Comics introduced Superman in 1938. The popularity of these characters has waxed and waned over the decades thanks to moral panics and organizations such as the Comics Code Authority, but modern society is more saturated with superhero media than ever. Marvel's MCU film and television series is a big contributor, but individual characters like Spider-Man have received various live-action iterations well before Marvel Studios' Iron Man teased the Avenger Initiative in 2008.

DC Comics' Caped Crusader, Batman, is one of the clearest examples of how successful different takes on a comic book character can be. Fans have long debated the merits of Bruce Wayne performances, from Adam West's campiness in the 1960s to Robert Pattinson's more serious turn in 2022's The Batman. However, merely voiced takes on the character are just as often part of the discussion, with many expressing love for Kevin Conroy in Batman: The Animated Series and Rocksteady's Arkham games.

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Similarly, voice actor Yuri Lowenthal is becoming as recognizable for playing Spider-Man as the character's live-action counterparts. Lowenthal's experience covers a huge range; from games like Titanfall 2, Injustice, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate to TV shows like Young Justice, Ben 10, and Arcane. But as of Marvel's Spider-Man 2's release in 2023 he will have reprised his role as Peter Parker in six different games, with no signs of slowing down anytime soon.

The Long History of Spider-Man Performances

Spider-Man No Way Home Tom Holland Tobey Maguire Andrew Garfield

Though Spider-Man was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko some 30 years after DC Comics' golden boy Superman, introduced in 1962's Amazing Fantasy no. 15, he has received about as many adaptations. While Adam West and Burt Ward portrayed Batman and Robin in live-action, a Spider-Man animated series debuted in 1967 that starred the late Paul Soles. This low-budget iteration has become known for memes like Spider-Man pointing at himself, and the Japanese "tokusatsu" series from the late 1970s is just as recognized for its humorous potential - starring Shinji Todo as Takuya Yamashiro, who uses the Leopardon mech.

In the late 1990s, Marvel faced bankruptcy and began selling the rights to various characters. This led to popular film franchises in the 2000s, such as Fox's X-Men headlined by Hugh Jackman and Sony's take on Spider-Man starring Tobey Maguire. Director Sam Raimi got to work on three Spider-Man films between 2002 and 2007, bringing the superhero a unique style fostered by his work on projects like the Evil Dead series. Though Spider-Man 3 went out with a whimper, partially thanks to studio interference according to Raimi, the highs of Spider-Man 2 left audiences excited for his return to Marvel with Doctor Strange: Multiverse of Madness.

Once the MCU hit its stride, Sony tried again with the Amazing Spider-Man film series starring Andrew Garfield. Marc Webb only got to direct two films for this, released in 2012 and 2014, as they were not nearly as well-received as Raimi's trilogy. Just two years later, a third live-action Spider-Man hit the silver screen when Tom Holland debuted in Captain America: Civil War. Holland would receive a series of MCU films joint-produced by Sony, leading to messy negotiations between the conglomerates in 2019 that resulted in Marvel receiving more revenue.

That renewed deal made way for 2021's Spider-Man: No Way Home, a movie centered around multiversal shenanigans in which Maguire and Garfield return alongside a handful of villains like Willem Dafoe's Green Goblin and Jamie Foxx's Electro. Though the prominance of Sony's Spider-Man films have made Maguire, Garfield, and Holland key representatives of the character, plenty of others have put on the mask. For example, Jake Johnson plays an older Peter Parker in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse alongside Shameik Moore's Miles Morales, and there have been multiple animated TV shows with Peter voiced by Neil Patrick Harris, Josh Keaton, Robbie Daymond, and more.

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Yuri Lowenthal's Ongoing Run as Spider-Man

spider-man with the sinister six

Among this pantheon of Spider-Men, Lowenthal is best known for bringing the character to life in Marvel's Spider-Man - developed by Insomniac Games and released in 2018. However, this isn't the first time Lowenthal took on the role. According to the Internet Movie Database (IMDb), the voice actor also portrayed Garfield's Peter Parker in the 2014 video game adaptation of The Amazing Spider-Man 2.

It's the Insomniac title that really matters, though, as Marvel's Spider-Man became one of the PlayStation 4's biggest first-party releases. This put Peter Parker alongside icons of the era like God of War (2018)'s Kratos, Horizon Zero Dawn's Aloy, and The Last of Us 2's Ellie, all of whom have benefitted from Sony's marketing power going into the PS5 generation. Lowenthal returned for Spider-Man's DLC, and in a tertiary role as the mentor for Nadji Jeter's Miles in Spider-Man: Miles Morales, though the remastered original game included with some versions of Miles Morales was controversial for recasting Peter Parker's face model to better reflect Lowenthal's performance.

The fact that Insomniac decided to rebuild its lead character in an ongoing franchise based on the voice actor is telling, and Lowenthal's performance was immediately iconic enough to garner him appearances in other games. Lowenthal reprises the role in Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order and Marvel Future Revolution, according to IMDb, and Firaxis Games made headlines when it announced Lowenthal would play Spider-Man in Marvel's Midnight Suns. He will also return alongside Jeter in the PS5-exclusive Spider-Man 2, and there's undoubtedly more to come for this branch of the Marvel universe given Insomniac is developing a Wolverine game.

All that being said, Lowenthal is not the de facto Spider-Man in all projects off the silver screen. Sean Chiplock, known for video game roles like Revali in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, took the mantle in Crystal Dynamics' PlayStation-exclusive Marvel's Avengers DLC. Still, it's not hard to see Lowenthal garnering a reputation akin to Conroy's Batman in non-live-action projects. If Conroy can stand out among the likes of Christian Bale and Michael Keaton, Lowenthal can similarly stand the test of time alongside Maguire, Garfield, and Holland.

Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 is scheduled to release in 2023 for PS5.

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Sources: IMDb, Behind the Voice Actors