

Regarding gameplay, the variety of enemies and obstacles prevents missions from feeling tedious and repetitive. There’s impressive detail in the various environments. The comic book art style looks clear and vibrant on touch screen devices.

It’s lively and responsive, perfectly capturing the feel of Spidey’s acrobatics. The courses also have segments of web-slinging across buildings and freefalling from rooftops. You spend missions collecting vials, avoiding obstacles, and punching enemies. Spider-Man Unlimited plays like an infinite runner, but isn’t endless. Unfortunately each member is recruiting his own dastardly alternates, meaning the road ahead will not be easy. Spider-Man must recruit alternate versions of himself from across the dimensions and defeat each member of the Sinister Six one by one. Spider-Man’s nemeses, the Sinister Six, have opened an inter-dimensional rift, threatening to destroy the world as we know it. How do they manage that? Handy narrative magic, of course. The makers boast that the game contains more playable Spider-Men ever. Which Spider-Man is in Spider-Man Unlimited? All of them-or close to it.
