The Best Animated Spider-Man Intros

The Best Animated Spider-Man Intros



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Summary

  • Spider-Man cartoons’ intros ranked by animation style, music, and content.
  • Some intros lacked effort, while others had catchy music and unique animation.
  • Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man (2025) intro stands out for its energy, originality, and music remix.

Spider-Man began in the comics in Amazing Fantasy #15, and he still persists decades later. His first animated cartoon all his own aired in 1967, which is not that far from his comics debut. It’s one of the faster turnarounds for superheroes, granted it was an age when cartoons were being produced more heavily for TV consumers.

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There were many cartoons following this, and Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man is the latest TV-based animated series airing on Disney+. Some say that a cartoon is only as good as its intro animation. Whether that’s true or not, let’s take a look at every Spider-Man cartoon’s animated intro and rank them based on the animation style and the song of choice. Only Spider-Man-centered cartoons will be counted, so Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends and Spidey and His Amazing Friends will only be touched on lightly in reference to other shows.

9

Spider-Man (2017)

No Effort At All

Spider-Man (2017) Title Screen featuring Spider-Man

No shade on the 2017 cartoon as a whole, but the intro needed more effort. It’s just a white background with minimal music as Spider-Man swings in before the show begins.

This series was produced for Disney XD and it took over quickly after the other Disney XD show, Ultimate Spider-Man, ended in 2016. The 2017 reboot did run for quite a few seasons, which is why this intro is so odd in the pantheon of intros that celebrate Spider-Man.

8

Spider-Man (1981)

An Intro With Very Few Words

Spider-Man (1981) Title Screen featuring Spider-Man

Spider-Man got a successor on NBC after the 1967 ABC original. It replaced the catchy jingle of the 1967 show with just one word: “Spider-Man.” Technically, there are two words in the intro, as it starts with the narrator saying “Spider-Man,” and the intro ends with him saying it again.

The music is a bit funkier and the animation shows clips from the show, including a huge emphasis on Doctor Doom and little time spent on classic villains like the Green Goblin. 1981 is also the year Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends aired, which gave Spider-Man two allies: Ice Man and Firestar.

7

Spider-Man: The New Animated Series (2003)

MTV’s Short-Lived Take

Spider-Man (2003) Title Screen featuring Spider-Man

The 2002 Sam Raimi Spider-Man movie was huge from a box office perspective and among critics. MTV wanted to capitalize on this momentum, so they made this 2003 Spider-Man show either called Spider-Man or Spider-Man: The New Animated Series, depending on where viewers were watching from. It used a splicing of CG animation with a cel-shaded effect. The stories told were more mature, but it was a short-lived effort.

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The principal characters in the cast get introduced to a techno beat, including Peter Parker, Mary Jane Watson, and Harry Osborn. Classic villains like Kraven the Hunter, Kingpin, and The Lizard are shown, and the intro ends with Peter removing his mask and revealing one of the weirdest animated faces ever, which is not something that enticed many viewers to keep watching.

6

Ultimate Spider-Man (2012)

A Little Too Thrash

Promo art featuring Spider-Man in Ultimate Spider-Man (2012)


Ultimate Spider-Man TV Poster

Ultimate Spider-Man


Release Date

April 1, 2012





Ultimate Spider-Man was a 2012 adaptation of the character. Its intro shows Peter experimenting with what looks to be his parents before getting bit by a spider. The intro almost has an air of having no time to talk, as the music has a thrash metal beat.

It’s honestly too fast to track what’s going on, to a nauseating degree, which was a weird choice for Disney XD to make. Like other Spider-Man cartoons, Doctor Doom is shown off in the intro, along with Venom, and other shots from the show’s episodes are inserted.

5

Spider-Man Unlimited (1999)

The End Of The 90s Loved Their Darker Tales

Promo art featuring Spider-Man in Spider-Man Unlimited (1999)

Spider-Man Unlimited was another adaptation aired on Fox shortly after the 1994 series stopped airing. It’s immediately clear in the intro that things are different, with darker lines and an overall edgier tone. 1999 was a big year for edgier adaptations of classic heroes; this series began airing in October 1999, while Batman Beyond started in January 1999.

Besides the comic panels, rain, and darker lines, the other thing that will grab the viewer’s attention is a bunch of animal people. That’s because the High Evolutionary plays a prominent role in the plot, aka. the villain from Guardians of the Galaxy Volume 3. Overall, kudos to Fox for making it clear that Spider-Man Unlimited was indeed different.

4

The Spectacular Spider-Man (2008)

Back To Lyrics

Promo art featuring Spider-Man in The Spectacular Spider-Man (2008)


The Spectacular Spider-Man

The Spectacular Spider-Man


Release Date

March 8, 2008

Directors

Victor Cook, Jennifer Coyle, Dave Bullock, Troy Adomitis, Dan Fausett, Kevin Altieri, Michael Goguen

Writers

Greg Weisman, Kevin Hopps, Matt Wayne, Andrew Robinson, Randy Jandt, Nicole Dubuc





The Spectacular Spider-Man began airing in 2008 and, visually, it shares a lot with the 2012 series. However, this is the first cartoon since 1967 that attempted to have lyrics in the intro beyond weird chanting. That automatically raises its value, and the song itself is a bop.

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The show’s younger take on Peter is clear in this intro, and it also shows a lot of classic villains, including Shocker, Sandman, the tentacles of Doc Ock, and more. It started airing on The CW and then the second season was picked up by Disney XD before the show was canceled when Spidey’s animated TV rights reverted to Disney from Sony.

3

Spider-Man (1994)

Radioactive Spider Blood

Spider-Man (1994) Title Screen featuring Spider-Man


03110488_poster_w780.jpg

Spider-Man: The Animated Series


Release Date

November 19, 1994





The 1994 Spider-Man cartoon was the character’s most successful adaptation, with many seasons following its start. Like the 1992 X-Men cartoon, which also ran on Fox and took place in the same shared universe, this Spider-Man intro decided to have catchy music instead of a lyrical ballad.

That said, the continued chants of “Spider-Man” and “Spider Blood” do help it stand out beyond the hard rock backing. There were multiple versions of this intro that changed with each season too, typically set to footage from the episodes. The very first version had Spider-Man facing off against Doc Ock, Hob Goblin, Kraven the Hunter, The Lizard, King Pin, and even Venom.

2

Spider-Man (1967)

Listen, Bud, He’s Got Radioactive Blood

Promo art featuring Spider-Man in Spider-Man (1967)


03110489_poster_w780.jpg


The original 1967 Spider-Man cartoon may not have flashy animation or even anything exciting happening all that often onscreen. The intro mostly shows Spider-Man swinging around New York City and occasionally stopping random criminals with web-based antics.

That said, the animation and direction didn’t matter because kids had an amazing song to get into, which is still being used to this day; or at least, is still referenced to this day. It’s a classic song remixed to the nth degree, and it all began with this cartoon on ABC.

1

Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man (2025)

There We Go Again Swinging

Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man Title Screen featuring Spider-Man and Harry

Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man has it all in its intro. There is energy to it thanks to the song, which reuses music from the 1967 intro remixed to a hip-hop beat. The animation has a comic-book style and doesn’t just rehash a bunch of scenes from the episodes. The most amazing thing is that every episode has a new ending to this theme song, emulating comic book cover art.

For fans who dig the song, there is a full version out there to blast in the car, too. After many Disney attempts, it’s good to see this latest adaptation having a lot of effort put behind it.

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