The Gauntlet isn't one giant story arc, but actually several smaller ones that connect together to tell one enormous tale. We're taking our cue from the way Marvel has done things like Dark Reign or The Initiative storyline, which spun out of 'Civil War,' where you give a sort of an über-arc name to all the stories that come out, Steve Wacker told CBR News. From Peter's point of view, all these villains are coming back, one after the other. Is there a connection and where does that question takes Spider-Man is what 'The Gauntlet' is all about.
In The Gauntlet, Spider-Man's foes will wage war on him, but readers won't see straight up battles with all of Spidey's foes attacking at once. In this storyline, Spider-Man's rogues are fighting a war of attrition. The emphasis is on reintroducing the 'classic' Spidey villains at a constant pace that will wear Peter down to a nub, Mark Waid told CBR News. Spidey's enemies, when they work in concert, have a bad tendency to rush him all at once, forgetting how hard it is for a human rhino to not accidentally trip over metal octopus limbs (or whatever). Not that I'm confirming they're working in concert, but if they were, hmm, who'd be arranging that...?
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What connects all these stories, apart from the toll they take on Peter and Spider-Man, is the fact that we're building up to the next big arc, added Guggenheim. I have to be vague out fear of spoiling the other writers' work, but you'll see that all of this is laying the foundation for an even bigger more ambitious arc to come. Speaking as someone who's been in the meetings, knows where we're headed, and knows what the arc is after 'The Gauntlet', I think people are going to be very excited.