
Spider-Man Triple Pointing
Perfect for when there are three of something that are essentially the same but with minor differences. Use to highlight similarities, copycat behavior, or when multiple versions of the same thing exist simultaneously.
Dimensions: 600 × 551px
Format: Three Spider-Men in costumes pointing at each other accusingly. Used when three similar or identical things exist and recognize each other.
📖 Origin Story
Source: Spider-Man animated series (1967), episode "Double Identity"
Creator: Original screenshot from cartoon; meme creator unknown
First appeared: First appeared in a Sharenator compilation in February 2011. The double version became popular first, with triple and quad versions appearing later as edits.
Originally a two-Spider-Man pointing meme from the 1967 cartoon became iconic by 2016-2017. The triple version emerged as a natural evolution when three similar things exist. Exploded after the Spider-Man: No Way Home movie featured three Spider-Men.
🎯 How to Use This Template
Perfect for when there are three of something that are essentially the same but with minor differences. Use to highlight similarities, copycat behavior, or when multiple versions of the same thing exist simultaneously.
Pro Tips:
- 💡Best when all three things are genuinely similar or derivative
- 💡Works for brands, products, people, or situations
- 💡Can represent three people with the same idea claiming originality
- 💡Great for "we're all the same" moments in communities
😂 Example Ideas

When Netflix, Hulu, and Prime all have similar content simultaneously

Brands arguing over who did something first

When everyone had the same "original" thought
💡 Did You Know?
- •The original two-Spider-Man meme was recreated by Tom Holland, Tobey Maguire, and Andrew Garfield for Spider-Man: No Way Home promotion in 2022
- •The episode "Double Identity" featured a villain impersonating Spider-Man, hence the confusion
- •Triple and quadruple versions are edited - the show only had two Spider-Men
- •This became one of the most recognizable meme formats of the 2010s



