May as well repost what I wrote in the other topic:
I thought SCARLET SPIDER #1 was very good - good enough that I made it the "Book Of The Week" for the weekly reviews I do on a column at Examiner.com :
http://www.examiner.com/comic-books-...-winter-review
I was critical of what purpose the book could serve, but I do see where Yost is going with it. This is basically a redemption story - Kaine has a new lease on life and now that he isn't dying anymore, he has to face the fact that he used to be really crazy and killed people. That he's paranoid and had no real goals or plans because he expected to die. Some have argued that Kaine has been made very similar to Reilly, but I don't think a revived Reilly would have had much to "redeem". I like the fact that Kaine still acts very much like an antagonist - he yells at the old lady he saved, and he grabs cops by the head and lifts them up. It would be too easy if Kaine simply becomes a superhero due to "genes" or "guilt", so I do like how he is having trials by fire here. The POINT ONE #1 story had Kaine sort of stop a robbery due to Parker's memory plaguing him, but this seems more interesting. He only stopped the trafficking shipment because he needed cash money (which the criminals had). He only saved the girl because he happened to get curious about the cargo. And his attempt to be a "hero" by saving the old lady went wrong, as he was so powerful he injured the driver instead. Therefore, his struggle is whether he becomes a superhero even if it goes against his best interests - leading a happy, indulgent life.
Stegman's artwork is very good; I've missed his work since seeing him on INCREDIBLE HERCULES and it's good to see him get a solid gig again. Marvel has issued a reprint of the first issue, which at the very least implies it sold above expectations. Hard figures won't be known until the middle of next month. However, ASM usually averages 52k-58k per issue, so if it managed to top that for a debut like AVENGING SPIDER-MAN did, that'd be keen. Of course, VENOM didn't but it has proven to be rock solid in terms of sales, thus far. I like that Stegman, unlike Humberto Ramos, seems to remember that while Kaine is a clone of Parker, he isn't EXACTLY the same and is supposed to be taller and bulkier. Kaine does have the same fingerprints, and that got Parker in legal trouble once before; one wonders if that may come up again.
In the end it seems Yost wants to do a redemption of Kaine in a new setting with a new cast and villains, with the title SCARLET SPIDER attached pretty much for attention and to maintain a trademark. So long as it is executed properly, there's nothing wrong with that. The anti-venom "cure" is being used as an excuse to fiddle with Kaine's powers (no spider-sense/ESP, but he can control spiders and has night-vision), but it's as good an excuse as any. Him having his own powers is essential.
Ironically, Kaine/Scarlet Spider is one of the first superheroes based in Texas who isn't based on a cliche such as a cowboy, a Native American, or an armadillo.