Television • Oscorp appears in
Spider-Man: The Animated Series. In the first season,
Norman Osborn hires
Spencer Smythe to create the
Spider-Slayer in exchange for building a hoverchair for Spencer's paralyzed son,
Alistair. After the Spider-Slayer is destroyed by Spider-Man, the Oscorp building explodes and Spencer is seemingly killed. Spencer survives and is found by the
Kingpin, who works with the
Hobgoblin to kidnap Norman's son
Harry. When the Kingpin refuses to pay Hobgoblin immediately, they cease their partnership. Following this, Osborn sells 50% of his company to the Kingpin to repay his debt. After becoming the Green Goblin, Norman is defeated by Spider-Man and sustains amnesia that renders him unable to remember that he is the Green Goblin. The following day, Norman publicly announces that Oscorp will no longer produce chemical weapons and allows Harry to be brought into the company. • Oscorp appears in
Spider-Man: The New Animated Series. • Oscorp appears in
The Spectacular Spider-Man. • Oscorp appears in
Ultimate Spider-Man. Similar to the Ultimate Marvel reality, Norman allies with
Doctor Octopus to capture Spider-Man, intending to create super soldiers from his DNA. After
Taskmaster fails to capture Spider-Man, Doctor Octopus is enraged and destroys the Oscorp facility. • An Oscorp building appears in the
Avengers Assemble episode "Dark Avengers". • Oscorp appears in
Spider-Man (2017). This version of the company created the spider that gave Peter Parker his powers. Additionally, Norman Osborn founded the school
Osborn Academy as a technological rival to Horizon High and a hi-tech security force called the
Osborn Commandos made up of Osborn Academy's staff and students. • Oscorp appears in
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man.
Film Sam Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy and
57th Street was used for the exterior of the Oscorp Tower in Sam Raimi's
Spider-Man (2002). Oscorp is featured in the first two films of
Sam Raimi's
Spider-Man trilogy. • Oscorp Labs appears throughout
Spider-Man (2002). Depicted as a chemical corporation based in New York headed by
Norman Osborn (
Willem Dafoe) and
Mendel Stromm, it had a hand in military technology that produced a green metal flight-suit and purple flying glider, which Norman utilizes after becoming the Green Goblin. • In
Spider-Man 2 (2004),
Harry assumes control of Oscorp after Norman's death and funds
Otto Octavius' ambition for fusion power.
The Amazing Spider-Man duology Oscorp appears in
The Amazing Spider-Man (2012) and
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014). This version of the company is involved in a variety of illegal conspiracies, such as the framing and murder of
Richard and Mary Parker, and the development of the spider-venom that gave
Spider-Man his powers. Additionally, Oscorp has control over the
Ravencroft Institute for the Criminally Insane, in which they perform illegal and inhumane scientific experiments on the institute's patients.
Marvel Cinematic Universe The Oscorp building from
The Amazing Spider-Man was intended to appear in the
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) film
The Avengers (2012). However, by the time the Oscorp building was fully designed for
The Amazing Spider-Man, the skyline for
The Avengers was rendered, so the idea was abandoned due to timing constraints. In Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021), Norman Osborn from the Raimi films mentions that his Oscorp is gone. Later Max Dillion mentions his work at Oscorp (though not by name) to Sandman.
Sony's Spider-Man Universe An Oscorp building appears in the trailer for the
Sony's Spider-Man Universe film
Morbius; however, it was cut from the final version of the film.
Video games • Oscorp appears in the
Spider-Man tie-in game. The company in the game parallels that of the film, with Norman Osborn and his scientists attempting to capture Spider-Man in order to study his genetics to perfect a super-soldier serum that the company needs to develop for a military contract. After a number of failed attempts to capture Spider-Man using Oscorp robots, Norman subjects himself to the unfinished serum and becomes the Green Goblin. • Oscorp appears in
Spider-Man: Friend or Foe. • Oscorp appears in
Lego Marvel Super Heroes. • Oscorp appears in
The Amazing Spider-Man tie-in game. • Oscorp appears in
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 tie-in game. • Oscorp appears in
Marvel Contest of Champions. • Oscorp Tower appears in
Marvel Snap.
''Marvel's Spider-Man'' game series Oscorp Industries appears in the ''
Marvel's Spider-Man'' series developed by
Insomniac Games. This version of the company was co-founded by Norman Osborn and Otto Octavius, and its name derives from "the Os", Norman and Otto's college nickname. However, Otto eventually left the company due to Norman's corruption and the dangerous and unethical experiments Oscorp conducted. Thanks to Norman's position as mayor of New York, Oscorp technology has been implemented into many of the city's public services. Research stations were also set up throughout the city by Norman's son
Harry Osborn to carry out his late mother
Emily's wishes of eradicating pollution and cleaning the environment and are part of a side-quest in the first game. • In ''
Marvel's Spider-Man'' (2018), the company plays a central role, as it was responsible for the creation of the "Devil's Breath", a bio-weapon originally intended to be a treatment for genetic disorders, in particular the illness that killed Norman's wife Emily and later also affected Harry. After one of the test subjects for Devil's Breath,
Martin Li, gained super powers from it and accidentally killed his parents, he becomes the crime boss Mister Negative to pursue revenge against Norman. Additionally, after Norman withdraws Otto's funding for his research into advanced prosthetic limbs in a thinly veiled attempt to get him to return to Oscorp, Otto becomes inspired by Li's actions to pursue his own vendetta. Seeking to ruin Norman's reputation, Otto forms the
Sinister Six and organizes several attacks against Oscorp while also releasing the Devil's Breath in an attempt to expose Norman's role in its creation. Oscorp's response is to hire
Sable International and allow them to put the city under martial law, resulting in further abuses and corruption. The former chief scientist of the Devil's Breath project,
Morgan Michaels, eventually betrays his employer by helping
Spider-Man devise a cure for the virus. Once the Devil's Breath outbreak is stopped and the Sinister Six are defeated, Oscorp is able to avoid any major lawsuits, though Norman resigns as mayor in disgrace. • In ''
Marvel's Spider-Man: Miles Morales'', the Underground use Oscorp's abandoned science center as a hideout. The science center prior to being abandoned appears in a flashback in which
Miles Morales and
Phin Mason win a contest held there by presenting the energy converter they created before entering their respective high schools. The science center is also the place where Miles indirectly met Peter Parker and Otto, when the latter two visited the center for an idea of their prosthetic limbs project. • In ''
Marvel's Spider-Man 2'', it is revealed that Oscorp retrieved the
Venom symbiote after it crash-landed outside New York, which was later experimented on by Dr.
Curt Connors, turning it into an organic suit that can heal whoever it is bonded to. After discovering that the symbiote is sentient and can influence the behavior of its host, however, Connors advised to destroy it, but Norman attempted to use it to cure Harry's illness. This eventually results in Harry becoming Venom and starting a symbiote invasion in New York, which is thwarted by the Spider-Men (Peter Parker and Miles Morales) and
Mary Jane Watson, while Venom is destroyed, leaving Harry in a comatose state. This prompts Norman to order his scientists to use the "G-serum" on his son and vow revenge against the Spider-Men, whom he blames for Harry's condition. ==See also==