For his part, Spidey weaves and ventures throughout the fight, and finally uses the oldest trick in town to defeat. He renders Doc blind for a moment with his webbing and punches him out cold. And before he leaves, he wraps up Doc in webbing, so the authorities don't have problems from the fallen scientist.
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Discussion:
So, flying thieves gone, aliens gone, and Spiderman seems to be becoming famous with the kids. So, what do the storywriters do? Well, they decide to portray the issues that the kids back then faced. While ridicule and light ragging were concept that Stan Lee confronted right from issue one, this is the issue where he portrays aspects like ego and attitude.
And the storywriters tell us that both the antagonist and protagonist can experience these emotions. At one point, Spiderman is wondering whether all this is worth it and Doctor Octopus is proud of his work, so proud that when he is stopped from doing it, he decides to escape, thinking that they don't want him to work because they are jealous of him.
This issue is also interesting, because it tells us about the worst case scenario electronics going bad - creating enemies out of humans. In the second issue, The Vulture just had mechanised wings, but here, the mechanical arms are fused into Doc Octopus' body.So, The Vulture in the first story and The Tinkerer in the second, the Spiderman series was going great guns in its second issue. With the backstory firmly created in the first issue, Stan Lee and party decided to pencil in some supervillains for Spiderman.
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