


This current era is introducing a bunch of concepts, places, characters, and events, leading the studio to leave aside some of its already-established characters. Although there won’t be a gap as big as that for Spider-Man, it’s understandable that it’s taking longer than the previous movies did as it’s the start of a new trilogy, and as such, there’s a lot of planning to do.Īnother possible reason for Spider-Man 4 taking longer than previous Spidey sequels is that the rest of the MCU’s Multiverse Saga is already packed. The same happened to Thor, the first MCU main character to get four solo movies, whose fourth movie, Thor: Love and Thunder, arrived five years after Thor: Ragnarok. Spider-Man’s first MCU trilogy followed the typical Marvel schedule of releasing a movie every two years, which allowed the audience to follow Peter’s story and evolution more smoothly as well as its connection to other movies and characters, but Spider-Man 4 is free from that pattern.
