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Spider-Woman — first appearance cover
MarvelFemaleGod/Eternal

Spider-Woman

Jessica Miriam Drew

First Appearance

Marvel Spotlight #32 (1977)

Powers & Abilities

FlightSuper StrengthSuper SpeedAgilityStaminaIntellectForce FieldBlast PowerWeapon MasterSuper HearingPower SuitUnarmed CombatGadgetsElectricity ControlWall ClingerEscape ArtistSwordsmanshipPheromone ControlChemical SecretionStealthLongevity

Teams

A-ForceAvengersAvengers West CoastHeroes For HireHunt SquadHYDRALady LiberatorsNew AvengersProtectorsS.H.I.E.L.D.S.W.O.R.D.Secret AvengersSpider PeopleSpider SocietySpider-ForceStrikeforceThe Daughters of LibertyThe Marvels The OrderX-Men

Also Known As

Jessica Drew, Arachne, Ariadne Hyde, Hunter, Sybil Dvorak, Redback, Agent 77, Jesse Drew, Dark Angel, Porcupine, Hestia-3

About Spider-Woman

Jessica Drew — the original Spider-Woman — made her stunning debut in Marvel Spotlight #32 (1977), a landmark issue that every serious Marvel collector keeps on their radar. Created to secure a trademark on the Spider-Woman name, Jessica quickly transcended her origins to become one of Marvel's most compelling and layered characters. With a backstory rooted in HYDRA manipulation, Wundagore Mountain, and Cold War espionage, she brought a moral complexity to the Marvel Universe that set her apart from nearly every hero of her era.

Over the decades, Jessica has worn many hats — and many aliases. As a HYDRA sleeper agent turned S.H.I.E.L.D. operative, her history is a tangled web of loyalty, deception, and reinvention. Her powers are a unique cocktail: venom blasts, pheromone manipulation, wall-crawling, and even limited flight via her signature glider wings, making her one of the most versatile operatives in any superteam. She has served with the Avengers, New Avengers, S.W.O.R.D., and the Daughters of Liberty, proving her worth in virtually every corner of the Marvel Universe. The Secret Invasion storyline gave her one of comics' most jaw-dropping twists — the revelation that she had been replaced by the Skrull Queen Veranke — cementing her as a character whose presence reshapes entire event narratives.

Collectors should pay close attention to her solo series runs, including the 1978 Spider-Woman ongoing — her first headlining title — and the well-regarded 2014 and 2015 solo series that introduced a fresh visual identity and cemented her modern fanbase. Her role in the Spider-Verse crossover events and her membership in A-Force and Strikeforce further expanded her footprint across the hobby. Key issues like Marvel Spotlight #32, Marvel Two-In-One #29, and her first solo series debut are perennial targets for grade-conscious collectors.

With decades of history, a rotating cast of iconic costumes, and pivotal roles in some of Marvel's biggest storylines, Spider-Woman's back catalog offers something for every type of collector — from silver age hunters chasing her earliest appearances to modern readers building complete runs of her solo titles. Her books have demonstrated consistent demand, and with Marvel continuing to feature her prominently in crossover events and team rosters, the floor on her key issues only seems to be rising. If you haven't started building your Spider-Woman collection, now is the time.

Comics Featuring Spider-Woman

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