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Ultimate Marvel has had a fall lately, and unfortunately that has affected Ultimate Endgame. The book itself feels remarkably stake-less, and this latest death doesn’t really help at all. Big deaths have always been a part of the event book; it honestly doesn’t feel like an event unless there’s the death of at least one major character. However, there’s something about this one that just feels especially hollow. Another factor in deaths in events is knowing they are never going to stick and there’s a good chance this one will, but that honestly works against it. There are several factors to this whole situation that rob this death of any meaning.
SPOILER ALERT: MAJOR SPOILERS FOR ULTIMATE ENDGAME #3
Marvel’s Latest Death Is Ironically DOA

The Ultimate Spider-Man is a perfect example of the Ultimate fall. When it started, it was the most beloved book in the comic industry, with Spider-Man fans celebrating the return of a mature, older Peter Parker married with children to Mary Jane. The book was on fire for the first year, but stalled in the second year. Its ending was fine, but fans had lost faith in it months before. Spider-Man and the Parkers showing up in Ultimate Endgame isn’t surprising, since it was the bestselling Ultimate book, but some readers felt they knew that one of them was going to die.
Peter Parker is killed in the latest issue of the book, and it honestly feels completely anti-climactic. For one thing, Peter has been calling his death since the beginning of the story, so seeing him eat it in an attack by the Maker, who uses his picotech suit against him (he transforms it into Carnage and kills him, hinting at what the future could have held), just never really feels surprising. It just sort of happens and then we move past it, picking up with the Parkers in an extremely emotionally manipulative sequence that doesn’t really land for a big reason: the death doesn’t matter in the slightest.









