Cherreads

Leveling Gacha In Marvel

Infamous_smile
“Reincarnated into the Marvel Universe with nothing but a mysterious Gacha System? Yeah... I’m so screwed.” After dying in the most absurd isekai way possible (thanks, Truck-sama), Alex finds himself reborn as Leo Faith—a 15-year-old orphan living alone in New York City. But this isn’t just any New York. This is Marvel’s New York. Superheroes. Villains. Aliens. Gods. Mutants. World-ending threats every other Tuesday. Luckily, Leo has one thing going for him: the Omniversal Gacha System. Draw one random card per day. Each one could be a new skill, a powerful ability, a piece of tech—or even a legendary summon. But there’s a catch: everything’s locked behind his level, and the Gacha has a twisted sense of humor. - "Behold, The Stimpak. With a single injection, a stab wound becomes as deadly as a paper cut. - Fury let out a sigh. "These robots could save hundreds." "The FNAF band was built to entertain children, not fight wars." - “How the hell is he driving like that?!” “Say what you want about The Fast franchise, Dom Toretto knows how to drive.” - “What- what is this power?” “Jealous? One-piece truly has some broken abilities.” To survive in a world where even high school is dangerous, Leo will need to outwit genius billionaires, dodge SHIELD surveillance, and pray the Ancient One doesn’t find out he exists. (Original story, not a translation. A.I is used only for grammar checking and pictures cause i'm dyslexic .)
Latest Updates

SPIDER-MAN: THE WANDERER

Meet Marco Rivera, a 22-year-old Filipino-Spanish photojournalist and freelance aid worker based in Manila. He travels constantly, documenting conflict zones, natural disasters, and humanitarian crises across the globe for an international news agency. During an assignment deep in the Amazon rainforest, Marco is bitten by a spider unlike anything catalogued by science. Ancient. Massive. Glowing faintly gold. Indigenous guides from a nearby tribe refuse to speak its name. Within 48 hours, Marco has the full suite: wall-crawling, superhuman strength, a web-shooter he engineers himself from materials he finds or steals in whatever country he lands in, and a precognitive spider-sense so sharp he can feel danger three seconds before it materializes. The difference between Marco and every other Spider-Man? He has no city. His beat is the whole world. Every arc takes him to a different country. He stops a weapons trafficking ring operating between Lagos and Marseille. He dismantles a child labor network hiding inside rare earth mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He faces a Spider-Man equivalent in Tokyo, a vigilante called Kumo, who operates by a completely different moral code. He gets stranded without his gear in rural Kazakhstan and has to improvise. He falls for a Médecins Sans Frontières doctor named Isla Brennan in Beirut and keeps losing her every time the next disaster pulls him somewhere new. His greatest enemy is not a supervillain at first. It is a man named Henrik Voss, a private military contractor who figures out that a masked figure keeps appearing at global crisis points and starts hunting him not to stop him, but to weaponize him. Marco never has a home base. Never has a backup team. His suit gets torn in Cairo and repaired in Seoul. His web fluid runs dry in the Sahara. He speaks four languages and gets by on body language everywhere else. He is not the friendly neighborhood Spider-Man. He is the friendly neighborhood Spider-Man for every neighborhood on Earth.
Zenonn · 1.3k Views