On Peter's "Saintly" Personality
I've seen a lot of debate about Peter being "too good." Look, I get it. Comics-Peter is iconic because he's messy—he's a jerk sometimes, he's riddled with self-loathing, and he's heroic in spite of his flaws.
The Peter in this story is a bit different. He's a deliberate "saint" type. That wasn't an accident or a mistake; it was a choice. His idealism is his armor. Also, for those asking why he talks so much during fights: it's for the same reason it's in the comics. He's fifteen and he's absolutely terrified. The non-stop chatter is how he stays functional when he's three seconds away from being flattened by a rogue gauntlet or a falling building. If it feels a bit idealized, I hear you, but this is the version of Peter I'm committed to.
The "Past Life" Memories (Addressing the Transmigrator Debate)
This is the big one. Some of you are treating this like a standard "cheat code" transmigration story. It's not.
Peter isn't some random guy who took over a body. He is 100% Peter Benjamin Parker. The difference is that as he ages, he's started experiencing these "glitches"—fragmented, high-definition memories of his past life. Think of it like a fragmented archive in the back of his brain.
This is why his "foreknowledge" is so hit-or-miss. He recognizes a name like Amadeus Cho or Jessica Drew and gets a "thunderclap" of intuition, but he doesn't have the script for this universe. This world is a new creation; it doesn't follow the 616 or MCU blueprints exactly. He can be wrong. He can miscalculate. And as we saw with the Shocker, he can almost die.
The payoff for these memories really kicks in during the Spider-Verse arcs. When he eventually visits those parallel worlds—the Into the Spider-Verse continuity, the Lost Universe, etc.—that's when his "meta-knowledge" becomes a genuine asset. At home in his own universe, he still has to bleed for his victories.
Why Spider-Man?
Two reasons. First, I wanted to read a Spider-Man story that felt like this, and I couldn't find one, so I started typing. Second, Spider-Man has the best "operational range" in fiction. He can be trading quips with the Avengers during a cosmic invasion, or he can be helping Daredevil in a Hell's Kitchen alley at 2 AM. Both feel right. You can't really do that with someone like Superman or Homelander without making the street-level stuff look trivial. With Spidey, the scale just makes him look more resourceful.
Here is the list of characters that appear in the fanfiction between Chapters 1 and 34, along with their in-story descriptions and a fun fact about their comic book origins.
The Parker Family & Friends
Peter Benjamin Parker / Spider-Man
Benjamin Parker (Uncle Ben)
May Parker (Aunt May)
Gwen Stacy
Captain George Stacy
Harold "Harry" Lyman (Osborn)
Amadeus Cho
Mary Jane Watson
Jessica Miriam Drew
Carl King
The Avengers
Tony Stark / Iron Man
Steve Rogers / Captain America
Hank Pym / Ant-Man
Bruce Banner / The Hulk
Thor Odinson / God Of Lightning
Janet van Dyne / The Wasp
Antagonists & Other Figures
Herman Schultz / The Shocker
Otto (Doctor Octopus)
Norman Osborn
Wilson Fisk / The Kingpin
Julia Carpenter / Madame Web
Dmitri Snerdyakov / The Chameleon
Quentin Beck / Mysterio
Frank Castle / The Punisher
