The comics arc might be included in No Way Home; those are the Sokovia Accords that were not mentioned in Captain America: Civil War:

No Way Home Can Finally Do The Sokovia Accords
No Way Home Can Finally Do The Sokovia Accords

The comics storyline might be included in Spider-Man: No Way Home. Using the Sokovia Accords, Captain America: Civil War failed to deliver its message. The Sokovia Accords, which exist as United Nations legislation, serve to govern the operations of augmented people like the Avengers. Despite supporting Iron Man against Captain America, Spider-Man is unlikely to sign. However, now that Peter Parker has been revealed, it appears that the Sokovia Accords may come into play once more. Finding himself in serious legal jeopardy, it’s likely that the aftermath of Spider-secret Man’s identity being revealed in the comics will eventually be included in the next Spider-Man sequel. At the end of Spider-Man: Far From Home, Mysterio outed Peter Parker as Spider-Man, revealing his secret identity to the whole world while portraying him as a criminal and killer. Teasers for Spider-Man: No Way Home have revealed that Peter will become public enemy number one. As a result, it’s probable that breaching the Sokovia Accords as an unknown vigilante will be one of the accusations levelled against him, given that Iron Man didn’t appear to have Spider-Man sign the Accords in Civil War. If he had, the authorities would have known his true identity long before the events of Far From Home.

Despite the fact that the Sokovia Accords served as a replacement for the Superhuman Registration Act, Spider-Man was mostly absent from the MCU’s version:

A Still Of Spider-Man's identity being revealed in spider-man: no way home
A Still Of Spider-Man’s identity being revealed in Spider-Man: no way home

Surprisingly, despite the Sokovia Accords serving as a replacement for the Superhuman Registration Act in Mark Millar and Steven McNiven’s Civil War, Spider-Man was mostly absent from the MCU’s version. Instead of seeing him unmask to the entire world as he did in the comics, the film served to debut Tom Holland’s version of the character, a sign of his original belief in the SRA and Iron Man, who spearheaded the pro-registration effort. The MCU may now portray some of the aftermath that occurred in the comics now that Peter has been unmasked by Mysterio ahead of Spider-Man: No Way Home. While Peter Parker was technically a kid throughout the events of the Civil War, he may have been tried as an adult in violation of the Sokovia Accords at the start of Spider-Man: No Way Home. Furthermore, the comics depicted Peter Parker’s entire existence being turned upside down once he registered and exposed himself to the public. While that was his decision during the Civil War, perhaps No Way Home would reverse the script and have him sign the Accords after the public has already learned who he is? It might be part of a bargain, given that the trailers show no evidence of Spider-Man being imprisoned.

Spider-Man: No Way Home may be primarily concerned with the appearance of multiversal villains:

A Still Of All The Villains from No Way Home
A Still Of All The Villains from No Way Home Green Goblin, Electro, Sandman, Lizard and Doc Ock

 

While Spider-Man: No Way Home is primarily concerned with the entrance of multiversal villains, it will be intriguing to watch how Peter Parker will get out of the legal problems that awaits him. Signing the Sokovia Accords might allow Spider-Man to evade prison while also paying respect to the comics narrative Captain America: Civil War overlooked. Nonetheless, in the face of Mysterio’s carefully created proof, he’ll definitely need a pretty competent lawyer to make that bargain happen (fingers crossed for Matt Murdock’s Daredevil).

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