Thing is robbing things or stealing tech or folks is pretty much the mo for almost all of his rouges.
Well frankly I think a lot of his rogues need more interesting M.Os then. No offense, but I think some fans are so in love with the Silver Age, they seem to want the Marvel Universe to be stuck in the 60s, rather then acknowledging that crime and society has changed a lot in the last 50 years. Bank robbery was probably a bigger issue in the 6os then now and banks were likely more trusted institutions back in the 60s then they are now. Not mention with the comics code in place in the 60s, it was likely hard to have a villain do something worst then petty thievery. But its not the 60s anymore and the comics code is long gone, its time to take these villains out of the box they were created in and give them more compelling stuff to do.
The "simple crook" is not a character, its an archetype and its such simple and bland archetype on its own that its easy to become cartoonish, with villains who have no personality beyond "Mwa, ha, ha! I'm the greedy bank robbing villain, if Spider-Man doesn't stop me, I will escape with easily traceable money and raise the bank's insurance rates! Mwa, ha, ha!" I think the problem with making so many of Spidey's rogues "simple crooks" is they can come off as having interchangeable personalities, what makes one greedy bank robber villain stand out from the other greedy bank robbery villains?
Really if Vulture is supposed to be smart, shouldn't he do things besides rob banks, aren't there several other legal and illegal ways he could make a lot more money then bank robbery?
I mean who cares if the bank robbing villain successfully robs a bank or not, why shouldn't Spidey go on date and let the cops deal with such a minor nuisance, its hard to make the balance of Peter Parker's social life and his crime fighter life interesting, if there are no real stakes in just letting the cops handle these bank robber villains.
That is what I am curious the most on. How will peter daily life issues. The whole hs angle. Play out with villain and the villain plot for film. The one thing I don't want is such deep personal ties between peter and villain. If it's not osborns, brock, connors. They don't really need to know each other.
Well a villain can make things personal with a hero, without having a personal connection to the hero. Joker had no past connection with Batman in the Dark Knight, but things quickly got personal between those two, ditto the rivalry between Fisk and DD in the Netflix show, even Jessica Jones had no past connection to Kilgrave, before Kilgrave came into her life at random and ruined it. Also look at the Master Planner saga from the Silver Age, Doc Ock managed to provide personal stakes for Spidey in that story by accident and that is regarded as one of the best Silver Age Spidey stories.
Frankly this why I suggested Mysterio be a murderous mind breaker who wants to drive Spidey mad, because that makes for a dramatic tale then Mysterio being some idiot who spends 50 million dollars in special effects to steal 100,000 dollars from the bank. The balance between Spidey's crime fighting and personal life is meaningless if the villain doesn't provide real stakes that feel important if Spider-Man chooses to focus entirely on his personal life and ignore crime fighting, if the crime fighting aspect seems irrelevant, then there is no real conflict.
Also Kingpin and Kilgrave were not trying to blow up the city or anything, but they provided higher stakes for the heroes they fought, then common bank robbers would.
Sandman is the exception for Bank Robbing. I mean, what else would he do? Marko isnt a serial killer he's a common street thug.
Oh that's simple, make him a henchman, he can be a merc who serves the agenda of bigger, badder and brighter villains. I actually don't have a problem with Sandman being a bank robber, considering he likely isn't smart enough to come up something more cunning to do with his powers, but smarter villains like Vulture and Mysterio should have bigger and bolder plans. Sandman really isn't Big bad material, see Spider-Man 3, but you could make an potentially interesting henchman, really not every Spidey villain is cut out to be a Big Bad.