news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

news

best lists Archives - Game News https://rb88betting.com/tag/best-lists/ Video Games Reviews & News Thu, 14 Apr 2022 00:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 The best game covers of all time https://rb88betting.com/best-game-covers-of-all-time/ https://rb88betting.com/best-game-covers-of-all-time/#respond Thu, 14 Apr 2022 00:00:00 +0000 https://rb88betting.com/best-game-covers-of-all-time/ Once upon a time, videogame box artists carried a huge amount of responsibility. In the very earliest days of the medium, when even magazines didn’t feature game screenshots, the cover art was your window into a different world – your best chance to understand the themes and gameplay concepts before you took the plunge and …

The post The best game covers of all time appeared first on Game News.

]]>
Once upon a time, videogame box artists carried a huge amount of responsibility. In the very earliest days of the medium, when even magazines didn’t feature game screenshots, the cover art was your window into a different world – your best chance to understand the themes and gameplay concepts before you took the plunge and paid out your hard-earned money. If an artist could get this right, they’d often find repeat employment with one or more publishers. If they got it wrong, well, they probably still found repeat employment drawing the covers to Sega Master System games. Seriously, what was going on with those?

These days, with abundant video content available and the rise of digital game sales, box art isn’t quite as important as it used to be. Still, we like to be positive people here at GamesRadar+ so we’ve decided to focus on 25 of the greatest game covers of all time. Sometimes these are purely for artistic merit, sometimes there are cool concepts or clever tricks that were only possible with printed paper, but all of them are fantastic. To save any arguments, we’ve listed these in roughly chronological order and remember – if you don’t find your favorite here, it’s still perfectly valid. Art is subjective, after all.

Defender

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Atari)

Back in the days of the Atari 2600, box art had to do a lot of heavy lifting. Given the primitive graphical capabilities of the console, most games relied on the packaging to convey the concept of a game, so Atari had artists producing some truly fantastic pieces for its games. This one might slightly oversell the idea though, as Defender’s art looks like the poster for a cult Seventies sci-fi film with a real downer of an ending. It was actually a conversion of the arcade game designed by Eugene Jarvis, which was a fantastic but decidedly uncomplicated shoot-’em-up.

Super Mario Bros

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Nintendo)

When the NES was introduced, Nintendo’s iconic black boxes provided the most accurate representation of actual game content yet seen on front covers. For better or worse, nobody could accuse the company of being dishonest about the experience players would have, and in taking that approach it really created the first covers to truly celebrate in-game artwork. Many covers followed the template, but Super Mario Bros is naturally the most famous. We know this one will sharply divide opinions, but ask yourself one question: would it really have been imitated so often if it wasn’t a classic piece of design?

Gradius

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Konami)

Japan has, via the anime industry, given us some truly iconic images of space battles. We’re pretty sure that Konami’s Gradius cover could hold up pretty well against any of them, as this is a highly detailed piece of art that really sells the scale of the forces that the Vic Viper is up against. The huge mothership provides a brilliant contrast to the smaller craft which are directly attacking, while the floating Moai heads provide some recognizable series iconography. This piece of artwork also appeared on a variety of other home versions of Gradius, including the NES and MSX.

Castlevania

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Konami)

How often does a horror-themed videogame have artwork that looks quite so colorful? Looking out towards Dracula’s castle and the dangers that lie ahead, Simon Belmont sees just about every shade of the rainbow. From the green mountain to the deep blue sky, where a visage of Dracula himself lurks, this somehow manages to defy the genre convention of relying on dark colors. The cover also manages to highlight one of Simon’s key traits, with his trusty whip extending into the foreground, ensuring that he’s ready to strike at any time. This art was used for various versions of the game.

The Legend Of Zelda

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Nintendo)

For a game as special and unique as Zelda, the artwork really had to be up to scratch. Nintendo delivered with a special gold box, prominently featuring a silver shield bearing three mysterious symbols. The presence of a missing piece in the shield not only created a sense of mystery but also allowed the player to peek through the box and see the special gold cartridge within. Breaking from the traditional look and feel of an NES game was a bold move, but it paid off handsomely for Nintendo, doubtless influencing the look of future Zelda covers as a result.

Batman: The Caped Crusader

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Ocean)

Bob Wakelin was a prolific artist for home computer games during the Eighties and Nineties, illustrating covers for everything from macho run-and-guns to cutesy arcade conversions like Rainbow Islands and The New Zealand Story. It’s this piece that we’re really taken with though, with Batman battling the Penguin as Joker cards suggest the looming threat of the Caped Crusader’s greatest enemy. It perfectly captures the look and feel of Batman in that era – if it weren’t for the publisher’s logo, we’re pretty sure you could convince most people that the art had come from a classic comic cover rather than a videogame.

The Secret Of Monkey Island

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Lucasfilm Games)

There’s nothing like a classic LucasArts point and click adventure, and Guybrush Threepwood’s outings are some of the very best the developer ever put out. The cover art here really sets the scene for a swashbuckling adventure, featuring classic pirate iconography with the central skull and crossbones flanked by a moonlit ship and a mysterious island cavern. Then you have the cast down below, with Elaine and Guybrush leading the way. The whole piece looks gorgeous as it is, but when printed on one of those classic big boxes that PC games used to come in, it gives you the urge to collect floppy disks.

F-Zero

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Nintendo)

Nintendo’s futuristic racer was specifically designed to impress, highlighting the console’s Mode 7 background scaling and rotation capabilities from launch. The Japanese cover also made it look like the best comic you’d never read, with pilot heads superimposed over a dramatic scene in which Captain Falcon clashes with Pico. In fact, if you flip over to the back of the box you’ll see a portion of that comic, which runs in full in the game manual. It instantly sells you on not only the high-speed racing action but the idea of the wider context in which F-Zero takes place.

Contra 3: The Alien Wars

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Konami)

In a game as action-packed as Konami’s classic run-and-gun, it can sometimes feel like the designers are throwing everything they have at you, all in one go. In this piece of cover art, Tom DuBois effectively conveys what that would actually feel like by including a wide variety of the game’s most memorable moments in one piece of art. You can see the spinning rotors that you have to hang off of, the boss that tears open the walls, a tank, and all manner of regular enemies. It’s totally over the top, in the way that all the best action movies of the era were.

Alien Breed

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Team17)

Team17’s highly regarded top-down shooter Alien Breed was an action-packed affair, featuring plenty of opportunities to blast marauding extraterrestrials as you explored its maze-like stages. With that in mind, you’d expect a cover much like the Contra III one, but instead, we got an exercise in minimalism – apart from essential details like the format and memory requirements, it just features the title of the game and a menacing alien face on a black background. Where Contra III’s cover creates a sense of overwhelming force to sell its challenge, Alien Breed puts all of its focus on a single terrifying threat.

Prince Of Persia

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Broderbund)

The SNES version of Prince Of Persia is a substantial update of the original game, so it was sad to see the American box art stick so closely to the original. By contrast, the box art for the Japanese Super Famicom release makes a major impression. The magnificently colorful piece puts the hero front and center but also incorporates the princess, Jaffar, and various enemies. Fans of videogame cover art will know just from a glance that this is the work of Katsuya Terada, whose distinctive style has also graced games including Virtua Fighter Remix and the Zelda series.

Ecco The Dolphin

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sega)

Renowned artist Boris Vallejo did plenty of videogame cover art in his time, often in the fantasy genre for which he is best known – you can see examples of this in Golden Axe II, Phantasy Star 4, and Might And Magic 7. However, one of his very greatest pieces was actually the painting used for Ecco The Dolphin’s cover. The cloudless blue sky, clear water, and abundant fish give the impression of unspoiled nature, while the menacing shark and submerged pillar hint at the dangers and mysteries Ecco will face during the game. It certainly does plenty to entice potential players.

The Super Shinobi 2

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sega)

We typically don’t associate stealth with immaculate white clothing, but perhaps that just goes to show just how good a ninja Joe Musashi is. That character design quibble aside, this is a great piece of art showing the heroic ninja creeping in the darkness against the backdrop of a moonlit sky, ready to strike at the first sign of danger. The art actually extends beyond the front of the box too, continuing on the back cover. This game is better known as Shinobi 3: Revenge Of The Ninja Master in North America and Europe, where it used a completely different piece of cover art.

Sonic & Knuckles

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sega)

It’s well known that Sonic 3 and Sonic & Knuckles were originally meant to be a single game, but the decision to split the game in two actually worked wonders. By introducing Knuckles as a rival to Sonic, Sega created the opportunity to promote the two characters teaming up as a big deal. The result was an absolutely iconic logo featuring the silhouettes of the two characters, and this was good enough alone to be the cover art for the game in all regions of the world. It’s proof that a videogame cover doesn’t have to be tremendously elaborate to be memorable.

Panzer Dragoon

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sega)

The works of the French artist Jean Giraud, known as Moebius, were a major influence on the visual design of Panzer Dragoon, from the creatures and machines to the very world they inhabit. With that inspiration in mind, it only made sense for Sega to commission the man himself to create illustrations for the game, and his distinctive interpretation of the game’s iconic blue dragon ultimately became used as the cover art. Or at least, it did in Japan – for some reason, Sega of America and Sega Europe both used different 3D renders for their releases, which aren’t nearly as nice.

Wipeout

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sony)

When the PlayStation arrived in the mid-Nineties, nothing seemed more cutting edge than Wipeout. The futuristic racer had fast and detailed 3D graphics, music from The Chemical Brothers and Orbital, and a look crafted by The Designers Republic. That was most evident from the amazing cover art, which bombards you with icons, logos, stylized text, and a wireframe image of one of the game’s anti-gravity racing vehicles. The metallic silver ink set everything off nicely, too. A quick glance at this cover doesn’t tell you a whole lot about what Wipeout is – you need to read the text to clock that it’s a racing game – but it definitely makes you want to find out.

Final Fantasy 7

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Square)

The minimalist approach of Sonic & Knuckles was one thing, utilizing the recognizable silhouettes of famous characters to provide a recognisability factor. Final Fantasy 7 had nothing like that at all – just a plain white background, black text, and an image of a meteor that players couldn’t yet know the significance of. The cover stands out for how stark it is, and it’s a clear sign of just how much confidence was behind this game. After all, this was the cover art for Europe, which had never even received a main line Final Fantasy game before, so it’s not as if Square was coasting on name value.

The King Of Fighters 98: Dream Match Never Ends

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: SNK)

During the Nineties, SNK was famous for its ability to produce a variety of high-quality 2D fighting games, from Fatal Fury and Samurai Shodown to Art Of Fighting and The Last Blade. This could potentially lead to bored art staff – after all, there are only so many ways to draw an aggressive confrontation. Thankfully, SNK’s artist Shinkiro had the kind of creativity that could through those kinds of concerns. Rather than opting for a conventional combat scene or fighting pose, he instead showed us the King Of Fighters crew looking sharp and enjoying the more relaxed environment of a poolside party.

Virtual On: Oratorio Tangram

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sega)

Unfortunately, we can’t really do this one justice by showing it to you on a screen. The sketch-style image of Temjin is certainly striking, and Sega even moved the Dreamcast logo to ensure that it wouldn’t be obstructed. It’s the tangible qualities of the cover that elevate it, though – not only does it use metallic ink, but Temjin and the game’s logo are also embossed to really make them pop. While digital game purchases certainly can be convenient, we can’t help but feel that we’d be losing something without this kind of artistic approach to the physical packaging of games.

Ico

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sony)

Ico’s cover art was directly inspired by The Nostalgia of the Infinite, a painting by the Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico, whose work was a major influence on the Surrealist movement. It was actually created by the game director Fumito Ueda himself and depicts Ico leading Yorda across a seemingly deserted area, with a strong contrast between light and shadow. This art was only used in Japan and Europe, as the North American release got a generic character render – a considerably more conventional approach. The game originally failed to generate much consumer interest in any region but is thankfully now recognized as a classic.

Katamari Damacy

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Namco)

Namco’s roll-’em-up (hush you, it’s a real genre) is unashamedly weird, silly, colorful, and just plain fun. During the PS2 era, that sort of game tended to make publishers come over all funny. They were often tempted to be either too abstract or weird – see Super Bust-A-Move for an unfortunate example of that – or they’d be very direct and end up with a dull cover. Katamari Damacy avoids this trap, with a very clean look, simple colors, and an amusing juxtaposition of the gigantic ball against a serene foreground. It perfectly captures the odd, friendly nature of the game itself.

Resident Evil 4

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Capcom)

Prior to the series’ incredible GameCube reinvention, most Resident Evil games had featured rather unsubtle cover art – and indeed, in Japan and North America, Resident Evil 4 did just the same. This European cover is far more effective in creating a sense of foreboding, with a dense forest silhouetted against a red sky, and birds flying away. Why? Because of that distant human figure, with what looks like a bag on its head and a chainsaw in its hand. You don’t know what it is yet, but you’re pretty sure it’s out to get you, and it won’t be long before it does

Every Extend Extra

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Buena Vista Games)

If you’ve ever played this game, which was adapted from an indie PC game called Every Extend, you’ll know that this game is about causing chain reactions of explosions. You’ll also know that an accurate representation of a game screen won’t do much to clue players in as to what the game’s about. Seemingly aware of this, the cover artist decided to just create something as eye-catching as possible in the hope of making potential buyers curious. If absolutely nothing else, it’s a lovely-looking piece of art and represents the colorful nature of the game well.

Catherine

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Atlus)

Plenty of games have used cheap sex appeal to sell, but Catherine isn’t playing up a secondary theme here – the art relates to the core plot of the game. Your protagonist Vincent Brooks is caught in a dilemma after cheating on his long-term girlfriend Katherine with the Catherine you see on the cover here.  There are differing opinions on how well that plot plays out, but Shigenori Soejima’s art at least manages to tread a fine line, being provocative enough to capture the game’s theme without becoming inappropriate for store displays. Vincent’s vulnerability is well represented in his tiny size, and the tumbling sheep add some mystery.

Until Dawn

Best Game Covers

(Image credit: Sony)

In this modern era of humdrum character renders, interesting concepts are few and far between, but Until Dawn is one of the more creative covers of recent times. The main image that catches your attention is that of the skull-topped hourglass, which provides a clear signal that this is going to be a horror game. What’s nice to see is that the bottom of the glass is more of a snowglobe, as flakes fall from the top onto the cabin in which the game’s events take place. The choice to highlight the setting and the stakes over the characters isn’t common these days.

The post The best game covers of all time appeared first on Game News.

]]>
https://rb88betting.com/best-game-covers-of-all-time/feed/ 0
Best Spider-Man movies ranked, from No Way Home to Spider-Verse https://rb88betting.com/best-spider-man-movies/ https://rb88betting.com/best-spider-man-movies/#respond Wed, 15 Dec 2021 00:00:00 +0000 https://rb88betting.com/best-spider-man-movies/ Spider-Man has been brought to the big screen many, many times by now, so it can be hard to figure out which are the best Spider-Man movies and which should be lower down on your (re)watch list. We’re willing to bet you already have Spider-Man 2, starring Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker, and Spider-Man: Into …

The post Best Spider-Man movies ranked, from No Way Home to Spider-Verse appeared first on Game News.

]]>
Spider-Man has been brought to the big screen many, many times by now, so it can be hard to figure out which are the best Spider-Man movies and which should be lower down on your (re)watch list. We’re willing to bet you already have Spider-Man 2, starring Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker, and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse as your top two choices – but what about the others?

We’ve rounded up all of Spidey’s big-screen adventures below to bring you the best Spider-Man movies ever, ranked from the worst to the greatest. That means we’ve got the Maguire, Andrew Garfield, and Tom Holland movies below, though we’re still waiting for Spider-Man: No Way Home to arrive…

To be clear, we’ve only included movies that are solely about Spider-Man on our list, so the likes of Civil War and Endgame are disqualified (even if they are very good). So, scroll on to check out the very best Spider-Man movies ever.

9. Amazing Spider-Man 2

best spider-man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

Scraping the bottom of the Spidey barrel is Amazing Spider-Man 2, a movie that takes a solid (if unspectacular) prior movie and undoes all the goodwill built towards the rebooted series by making a flurry of baffling character choices.

Jamie Foxx’s Electro is played for laughs and, as such, never quite stacks up against Andrew Garfield’s webhead. Their showdown ultimately fizzles out into nothing more than an anti-climactic power struggle. 

The inclusion of the Green Goblin, meanwhile, does lead to Gwen Stacy’s heart-wrenching death. Yet Spidey’s nemesis never quite earns his place as a top-tier villain thanks to some rushed storytelling and a tendency for the script to skip over most of his motivations. Amazing Spider-Man 2 is instead content with a general hand-wave towards the Raimi trilogy, which made far better use of the source material.

8. Spider-Man 3

Best Spider-Man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

Where did it all go wrong? Spider-Man 3 (opens in new tab) should have seen Sam Raimi’s trilogy go out in a blaze of symbiotic glory. Instead, it reads a case study into how too many supervillains can spoil a previously finely-poised Big Apple broth.

Sandman, Venom, and James Franco’s Green Goblin all lack their own spotlight with the movie being far more concerned with hammering home Peter Parker’s internal conflict and dark suited shenanigans instead.

Yes, Tobey Maguire’s ill-fated emo phase on-screen is now played for laughs, but it’s proof that Spider-Man 3 doesn’t know what tone it should strike: it aims to be a goofball comedy, a character study about the fine line between good or evil, and an explosive end to a fantastic trilogy. It succeeds at none of those things.

7. Amazing Spider-Man

best Spider-Man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

Despite Andrew Garfield’s best-in-class portrayal of Peter Parker, the first Amazing Spider-Man never quite soars to the heights of two-thirds of Rami’s trilogy. Garfield’s Parker fizzes with teenage angst opposite Emma Stone’s Gwen Stacy, making for a refreshing change of pace after the MJ/Pete drama that muddled its way through all three of Raimi’s movie. Yet, it’s mired by an utterly forgettable villain in the shape of Rhys Ifans, who plays Curt Connors/The Lizard.

It’s not bad, but it’s not particularly good either. Amazing Spider-Man is about as much of a cookie-cutter, middle-of-the-road offering as you can get from Spidey. Understandably safe given the backlash to Spider-Man 3, though it’s far outclassed by the vast majority of its more stylish, swaggering peers.

6. Spider-Man: Far From Home

best spider-man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

We’re getting into the good stuff. Spider-Man: Far From Home excels thanks to fresh new surroundings, plus Jake Gyllenhaal’s terrific performance as Mysterio. Director Jon Watts manages to stealthily introduce a genuinely funny European vacation movie into the MCU and have it masquerade as a superhero movie. It shouldn’t work, but it absolutely does. You end up caring more about certain periphery characters and, therefore, Peter’s duty to protect them. There’s even scope for some of the best use of CGI in the series. 

It doesn’t quite break free of the specter of RDJ, who still casts a long shadow over this movie post-Avengers: Endgame. Still, it’s a genuinely thrilling affair – and one that comes bundled with the best cliffhanger in MCU history.

5. Spider-Man: No Way Home

Spider-Man: No Way Home brings together three generations of Spider-Man movies, bringing villains from both Garfield’s and Maguire’s universes into the MCU through the power of the multiverse. The result is a movie that has incredible highs for Spider-Man fans, there being plenty of Spider-Man: No Way Home Easter eggs throughout, and while the plot is slightly ropey in places, the sheer charisma of Tom Holland holds everything together. 

No Way Home is also one of the more emotional Spider-Man movies – not always a blast of fun, but takes time to deliver some sadder moments that really see Peter Parker at his lowest. Plus, the ending sets Spider-Man on a new path, and one that could be incredibly exciting – read more about our spoiler-filled thoughts on the Spider-Man: No Way Home ending here.

4. Spider-Man: Homecoming

best spider-man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures/Marvel Studios)

Tom Holland’s debut MCU standalone flick does away from the past ills of Garfield’s movies – it’s got an actually entertaining villain in Michael Keaton’s Vulture, for one thing – and delivers a breezy affair that easily convinced audiences that the franchise was in safe hands with Holland behind the mask.

Tony Stark makes for a meaningful surrogate Uncle Ben figure, and the high-school shenanigans of Peter, Ned, and MJ are fun, making Spider-Man: Homecoming a truly confident, assured effort. The highlight? It has to be Pete’s skin-crawlingly awkward night with Liz, all while her supervillain daddy tries to uncover her doting date’s secret identity.

3. Spider-Man

best spider-man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

To understand the quality of Spider-Man, you have to take stock of what came before it. Prior to Tobey Maguire putting on the webbed suit, only X-Men and the original Batman could stake a claim to having put out a worthwhile superhero movie. Spider-Man blows them all out of the water.

It’s at once both funny and heartfelt, while also a gripping origin story. Plus, any movie that can feasibly introduce Randy Savage as a larger-than-life character (he played Spidey’s wrestling opponent Bonesaw McGraw) gets two big thumbs up. 

It set the template for years to come and, whisper it, the MCU still hasn’t created a dynamic as compelling as the ones between Maguire’s Peter Parker, Kirsten Dunst’s MJ, and the outstandingly cheesy Willem Dafoe as Norman Osborn/The Green Goblin.

2. Spider-Man 2

best spider-man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

For the longest time, Spider-Man 2 (opens in new tab) was the cream of the Spidey crop. And it’s easy to see why. The movie’s breakneck pace never slows, even when it has to factor in a Doc Ock origin story. Alfred Molina glowers and menaces his way through a thrilling final act that ranks right up there among the very best in action cinema.

It also features scenes that are still timeless today, such as when Peter loses his mask and is carried through a crowd or New Yorkers. Spider-Man 2 effectively juggles Parker’s own self-doubts, a brooding Harry Osborn, and a will they/won’t they relationship tug-of-war with MJ in a way that Spider-Man 3 could only dream of – all without missing a beat.

1. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

best spider-man movies

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (opens in new tab) isn’t just the best Spider-Man movie. It’s cool. It’s daring. It’s essential. It’s a fashion statement for those who were told superhero movies were for sad acts and shut outs. It flaunts its minority status and wears it as a badge of pride like no other movie that has come before. And all while weaving in a wonderful story about what it means to grow up as an outsider.

Miles Morales has done the impossible and potentially usurped Peter Parker as the friendly neighbourhood Spider-Man. He’s delightfully awkward, but still carries with him a charm that makes him bounce off the other Spiders with complete ease. It helps that each Spider-Man from the multiverse gets a chance to shine – even Nic Cage – and the kinetic ground-breaking animation lends itself to an energetic, ensemble-led affair that never once lets up.

When the dust finally settles on the superhero craze, Into the Spider-Verse will be held up as one of the genre’s shining beacons. It’s a movie that has you smiling all the way through. That is if you’re not too busy bopping along to its tune-laden soundtrack and effortless sense of style.


Spidey isn’t the only show in town. Here are some of the best superhero movies (opens in new tab) to ever swing from the rooftops and leap tall buildings in a single bound.

The post Best Spider-Man movies ranked, from No Way Home to Spider-Verse appeared first on Game News.

]]>
https://rb88betting.com/best-spider-man-movies/feed/ 0