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Welcome back superhero enthusiasts, 1990s culture enthusiasts and comic book collectors! Today we go back to the year 1995 to revisit one of the many tales of Marvel’s 2099 franchise focused on Spider-Man 2099 through the 2099 Unlimited quarterly comic book series!
Some time ago, I reviewed the inaugural issue of 2099 Unlimited which after all these decades remained entertaining and engaging enough to read. That comic book opened with a Spider-Man 2099 story handled by a creative team that did not involve the monthly series duo of Peter David and Rick Leonardi. Its 2nd story introduced Hulk 2099 and it efficiently told his origin story while expanding the world of 2099 convincingly.
With those details laid down, here is a look back at 2099 Unlimited #10 published in 1995 by Malibu Comics with its main story written by the late Len Wein and drawn by Andrew Wildman. The two other stories were done by the creative teams of Nancy Collins/Gary Erskine and Bob Fingerman respectively.

Early story
The story begins with Miguel O’Hara (Spider-Man) and his brother Gabriel attending Woodstock 2099 at a wet and muddy open-air location. It turns out Miguel feels uneasy being present at the music festival which for Gabriel is too important an event to miss as they are attending the final weekend.
As they talk and walk together, trouble breaks out when a man is suddenly changing physically causing his body to rip out of his clothes. Immediately he leaves Gabriel, cuts in line to enter a portalet, changes into his disguise, opens the rear with his talons and leaps off into action as Spider-Man of 2099.
The man who ripped through his clothes has since turned even bigger and monstrous looking. He grabs a woman and was about to throw her when Spider-Man suddenly swings in to grab her and move away from the monstrous guy.
Right after Spider-Man and the lady land on the ground, the monstrous guy mutated even more and begins to charge right at him with the intention to kill him…
Quality

Focusing on what is clearly the main feature of this comic book, the Spider-Man 2099 tale “Chameleon 2099” turned out to be a really good story that sets itself apart from the monthly series while still emphasizing the essence of the titular hero. Written by the late legend Len Wein, this is a tale of the futuristic Spider-Man that was crafted to entertain and also intrigue readers. The build-up of the plot moved at a medium pace with some bouts of surprise or excitement that happened along the way. By the time the story reaches the final conflict, the plot details came together nicely and the purpose behind Spider-Man’s pursuit made a lot more sense as I kept reading. This is a must-read story and Andrew Wildman’s art really brought Len Wein’s script into life!
Without spoiling the plot, I can say that this tale sheds light on the following topics: Miguel O’Hara investigating questionable ends within the very corporation he works for; a growing society of freaks within a very high-tech society; illegal substance abuse and distribution; the loss humanity paving the way for unrestrained violence. I just love the way Len Wein fused the mentioned topics into the story and executed them all while still making the story understandable and believable.
It should be noted that Wein portrayed the titular hero as a very determined protagonist who still maintains his sanity as well as his concern for others even though he gets into very violent situations.
This comic book has two other stories that do NOT feature the other established protagonists of the Marvel 2099 universe. Not even Hulk 2099 – the one major 2099 character who debuted in the launch issue of this very same quarterly comic book series – is here. The 2nd story introduces Machina Jones (who is not so interesting) and emphasizes a dark element within the 2099 society – the implantation of wetware programs into people’s bodies which are capable of controlling both the voluntary and involuntary motor responses.
The 3rd story on the other hand is a very cartoonish look at the helplessness of 2099 society’s members who suddenly get displaced by the implementation of the urban reclamation project of Alchemax. This one does not have any of the established Marvel 2099 characters.
Conclusion

With one very solid Spider-Man 2099 tale and two other stories that never engaged me at all, 2099 Unlimited #10 (1995) is very clearly a mixed bag. The Spider-Man story is indeed the biggest feature and the main reason this comic book has good stuff. Too bad the other two stories were essentially wasted efforts.
Overall, 2099 Unlimited #10 (1995) is satisfactory. It is also the final issue of the quarterly series.
+++++
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