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The Vegas Comic Kingdom
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #351
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #351
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$20.00 USD
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Amazing Spider-Man #351 (September 1, 1991) is soaring into action! Titled “The Three Way Dance!” (or something close), this issue teams Spider-Man with Nova for a cosmic clash against the Tri-Sentinel—a robot so nasty, it’s like a Roomba gone rogue with murder on its mind. Written by David Michelinie and penciled by Mark Bagley, it’s a high-flying, web-slinging romp that kicks off a wild arc with the Life Foundation’s sinister schemes.
Highlights That’ll Stick Like a Web to a Rocket:
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Key Character Appearances: Nova (Richard Rider) jets in, all cosmic cool and fiery trails, teaming up with Spider-Man for some earth-sky heroics. The Tri-Sentinel stomps onto the scene, a three-headed robo-beast courtesy of the Life Foundation—think Terminator meets a hydra. Spidey’s swinging and quipping, while Mary Jane’s back home, probably wondering why Peter’s new pal glows in the dark.
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Plot That’s a Cosmic Knockout: Spidey interrupts a robbery, only to tick off the Life Foundation, who unleash their Tri-Sentinel to squash him flat. Nova swoops in to help, and it’s a tag-team brawl against a killer robot with more attitude than hardware. Part 1 of a thrilling arc—buckle up for the ride!
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Art That Shines: Mark Bagley’s pencils make Nova’s speed pop, the Tri-Sentinel’s menace loom, and Spidey’s web-work dazzle—those ‘90s pages are a visual supernova.
Current Value: A Deal J. Jonah Jameson Couldn’t Blast Off
As of April 6, 2025, ASM #351 is orbiting at $10-$20 for VG/FN copies—think “well-loved but not robot-smashed.” VF/NM grades fetch $25-$45, and a CGC 9.8 slabbed gem can hit $80-$120, thanks to the Nova team-up and Tri-Sentinel’s cult cred. (Values based on recent market buzz—no cosmic guesswork here!)
Expected Value: A Trend That’ll Soar Like Nova’s Flight Path
Nova’s star is rising with Guardians of the Galaxy vibes and potential MCU nods, while the Tri-Sentinel’s a quirky fan-favorite. Mark Bagley’s early Spidey work adds retro juice, and if that 2026 Spider-Man: No Way Home sequel or a Nova project teases cosmic crossovers (fingers crossed!), expect a lift-off—NM copies could hit $50-$80 in a year, with slabs pushing $150-$200 if the hype ignites. Long-term? A mint copy might rocket to $250-$300 by 2030 if Nova shines bright.
Why This Comic’s Your Next Big Catch, True Believer!
ASM #351 is Spider-Man and Nova duking it out with a robo-monster—a ‘90s team-up treat with cosmic kicks and web-slinging grit. Whether you’re a Nova nut, a Tri-Sentinel stan, or just here for Spidey’s wild ride, this issue’s a stellar score. Grab it now before the price blasts out of reach—or before the Life Foundation sends a Tri-Sentinel to repo it!
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