The Amazing Spider-Man #40 (Sept 1966).
Oscorp first appeared, albeit by name only, in The Amazing Spider-Man #37 in June 1966. Created by the legendary duo of writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, the company was introduced as the enterprise of Norman Osborn, who would soon be revealed as the Green Goblin. The creation of Oscorp reflected the societal anxieties of the Cold War era, tapping into the public's fascination with and suspicion of the burgeoning military-industrial complex and the morally ambiguous potential of unchecked corporate power.
In its early appearances, Oscorp was simply the backdrop for Norman Osborn's wealth and resources. It provided a plausible explanation for his access to advanced technology, chemical engineering, and the means to develop the Green Goblin's arsenal. Over the decades, writers expanded upon the corporation's role, transforming it from a simple plot device into a sprawling, malevolent entity in its own right—a symbol of corporate corruption and the dark side of scientific ambition that would plague not only Spider-Man but the entire Marvel Universe.
The history of Oscorp is a tale of ambition, betrayal, and madness, though its specific narrative differs significantly between the primary comic book universe and its various on-screen adaptations.
In the mainstream Marvel continuity, Osborn Chemical was co-founded by the brilliant but ruthless Norman Osborn and his more timid university professor, Dr. Mendel Stromm. Osborn, possessing a sharp business acumen and a complete lack of ethical restraint, provided the financial backing and corporate drive, while Stromm provided much of the foundational scientific genius. Their partnership, however, was doomed from the start. Norman, desiring sole credit and control, discovered Stromm was engaging in “off-the-books” embezzlement. Seizing the opportunity, Osborn reported Stromm to the authorities, leading to his co-founder's arrest and imprisonment. With Stromm out of the picture, Norman Osborn consolidated his control, rebranded the company as Oscorp, and claimed all of Stromm's research and innovations as his own. The company rapidly diversified, expanding from industrial chemicals into more advanced and lucrative sectors, including robotics, experimental electronics, and, most importantly, military contracts. It was this pursuit of a lucrative U.S. military contract that led to Oscorp's defining moment. While attempting to perfect a super-soldier serum based on Stromm's incomplete notes—a formula that would come to be known as the Goblin Formula—a volatile mixture exploded in Norman Osborn's face. The accident dramatically increased his intelligence and granted him superhuman strength, but at a catastrophic cost: it shattered his sanity and unleashed the malevolent, cackling persona of the Green Goblin. From that moment on, Oscorp became a two-faced beast. Publicly, it was a respected and innovative technology giant, with the iconic Oscorp Tower dominating the New York City skyline. Secretly, it was the engine of the Green Goblin's madness, its vast resources used to design and build his glider, pumpkin bombs, and other weaponry. Over the years, control of Oscorp has shifted multiple times. After Norman's apparent death, his son, harry_osborn, inherited the company and the curse of the Green Goblin. Following Harry's own death, the company's assets were eventually acquired and absorbed by alchemax, a rival corporation run by liz_allan, Harry's former wife. However, Norman Osborn's penchant for cheating death meant he would inevitably return to reclaim his corporate empire, often rebranding it (as “Osborn Industries” or “H.A.M.M.E.R.”) but always using it as a tool for power and revenge against Spider-Man.
Unlike the unified history of the comics, Oscorp has appeared in multiple, distinct cinematic continuities, with no single version existing in the primary MCU timeline (designated Earth-199999).
In this universe, Oscorp is introduced as an established, publicly-traded titan in military technology. It is a major contractor for the United States military, with its primary focus on developing human performance enhancers and advanced flight technology. Norman Osborn is the brilliant founder and CEO, but he faces immense pressure from the board of directors, who threaten to oust him and sell the company to a rival, Quest Aerospace.
Desperate to secure the military contract and save his company, Norman tests his unstable performance enhancer on himself. Much like in the comics, the experiment grants him superhuman abilities but fractures his mind, creating the Green Goblin. After Norman's death at the end of Spider-Man (2002), his son Harry inherits the company. Harry's Oscorp shifts focus, secretly funding Dr. Otto Octavius's fusion power project, which inadvertently leads to the creation of Doctor Octopus in Spider-Man 2 (2004). By Spider-Man 3 (2007), Harry rediscovers his father's Goblin technology within a hidden Oscorp lab and becomes the New Goblin, using the company's resources to wage his vendetta against Spider-Man. This version of Oscorp is a classic military-industrial complex powerhouse, directly responsible for the creation of its universe's three main supervillains.
This incarnation of Oscorp is far more focused on biotechnology and genetics, with a sinister, conspiratorial undercurrent. It's revealed that Peter Parker's father, Richard Parker, was a brilliant geneticist at Oscorp who developed the genetically-altered spiders that would eventually bite his son. The company is run by an ailing Norman Osborn, who is desperately seeking a cure for a terminal, genetic retroviral disease that afflicts his family line.
This singular obsession drives all of Oscorp's research, particularly the “cross-species genetics” program led by Dr. Curtis Connors. Connors's self-experimentation to regrow his arm, using a formula derived from Richard Parker's research, transforms him into the Lizard. After Norman Osborn's off-screen death, the 20-year-old Harry Osborn inherits the company. Discovering he has the same genetic disease, a desperate Harry uses the flawed spider-venom from Oscorp's “Special Projects” division to try and cure himself, which instead transforms him into this universe's Green Goblin.
This Oscorp is portrayed as a shadowy organization with vast, secret underground labs and a department dedicated to developing advanced weaponry based on its genetic experiments, hinting at a future sinister_six. It is directly responsible for creating the Lizard, Electro, and the Green Goblin in its universe. Norman Osborn from this reality would later be pulled into the MCU during the events of Spider-Man: No Way Home.
To date, a native Oscorp does not exist in the main MCU timeline. The film Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021) confirmed the existence of Oscorp in other parts of the multiverse by bringing the Norman Osborn from the Raimi-verse (Earth-96283) into the MCU. He explicitly states, “Oscorp doesn't exist” in the MCU, confirming its absence. The film's ending, which shows a redeveloped building where the former Stark Tower once stood, has led to fan speculation that this vacant real estate could become the site of a future, MCU-native Oscorp Tower, but this remains unconfirmed.
Oscorp's public mission statement is to be a world leader in technological innovation for a better future. It operates numerous divisions that are, on the surface, legitimate and highly profitable.
Oscorp is a publicly-traded, multinational corporation with a standard board of directors, though the CEO, typically an Osborn, has always wielded immense, often absolute, power. Its most famous headquarters is the Oscorp Tower, a skyscraper in Manhattan that has been a frequent battleground for Spider-Man. The building is known to house numerous secret labs, containment facilities, and hidden armories for the Green Goblin.
The corporate structure in the film versions is more streamlined, focusing on key individuals who drive the plot.
This Oscorp is depicted as a more traditional corporation with a powerful Board of Directors who act as a direct foil to Norman Osborn, ultimately voting to remove him as CEO. Dr. Mendel Stromm appears briefly as a key scientist who voices ethical concerns about the performance enhancer, only to be callously murdered by the newly-formed Green Goblin. The company's primary focus is clearly on its Military Contracts, with the Goblin Glider and armor being prototypes for the U.S. Army.
This version is more conspiratorial and departmentalized. Its research is driven by Norman Osborn's illness.
The Amazing Spider-Man 2, housing advanced experimental weaponry including Doctor Octopus's tentacles, Vulture's wings, and Rhino's armor, setting up the Sinister Six.As a fundamentally villainous organization, Oscorp's “alliances” are typically opportunistic partnerships built on greed and a lust for power.
Dark Reign storyline, Norman Osborn leveraged a moment of global crisis to place himself in charge of global security. He transformed S.H.I.E.L.D. into his personal organization, H.A.M.M.E.R., and made Oscorp its official technology supplier. Oscorp designed and built the Iron Patriot armor and supplied technology to his Dark Avengers, effectively making it a shadow government contractor.Superior Spider-Man storyline, Norman Osborn, operating as the “Goblin King,” created an underground criminal empire known as the Goblin Nation. He used stolen and repurposed Oscorp technology to arm a legion of followers, turning his corporate assets into the arsenal of a terrorist army that took over New York City.This is arguably the most pivotal storyline in Spider-Man's history and the one that cemented Oscorp's legacy in blood. Driven by madness from the Goblin Formula developed at his own company, Norman Osborn discovered Spider-Man's identity. In a cruel act of psychological warfare, the Green Goblin kidnapped Peter Parker's girlfriend, Gwen Stacy, and threw her from the George Washington Bridge. Spider-Man's attempt to save her inadvertently snapped her neck. This event was the ultimate consequence of Oscorp's corrupting science, transforming a corporate entity into the source of Peter Parker's most profound failure and loss.
This company-wide event saw Norman Osborn and Oscorp at the zenith of their power. After delivering the killing blow to the Skrull Queen during the Secret Invasion, Osborn was hailed as a global hero. The U.S. government granted him control of its entire national security apparatus. He dismantled S.H.I.E.L.D. and replaced it with H.A.M.M.E.R., staffed with his own loyalists. He formed a “Dark” team of Avengers, with villains posing as heroes. Throughout this era, Oscorp was the de facto R&D department for the United States, producing weapons, armor (like the Iron Patriot suit), and surveillance technology, demonstrating the terrifying potential of the company when its power is completely unchecked and state-sanctioned.
This modern storyline represents the ultimate fusion of Oscorp's two greatest threats: chemical and biological warfare. Seeking a definitive end to his war with Spider-Man, Norman Osborn managed to bond with the carnage symbiote. This created a horrifying new entity: the Red Goblin. The Goblin Formula in his system stabilized the symbiote, eliminating its weaknesses to fire and sound. This arc showcased the horrifying synergy of Oscorp's original sin—the Goblin Formula—with another of Spider-Man's most dangerous foes, pushing Peter Parker and his allies to their absolute breaking point and resulting in the heroic death of Flash Thompson.
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (Earth-1610B): Similar to the 2099 timeline, Oscorp is absent, but its spiritual successor is Alchemax, run by Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin. This corporation's “collider” experiment is the central threat of the film, threatening to destroy all reality. It employs this universe's Dr. Olivia Octavius (“Liv”) and is responsible for the death of its Peter Parker, showing that the archetype of the “morally bankrupt super-science corporation” pioneered by Oscorp is a constant across the Spider-Verse.The Amazing Spider-Man #40 (Sept 1966).Dark Reign and renamed it the Avengers Tower.Spider-Man: The Animated Series presented a version of Oscorp that was a major military contractor, but it was Norman's connection to the Kingpin's criminal underworld that funded many of his secret projects, a deviation from the comics where Oscorp itself was the primary financial engine.Spider-Man: Homecoming and shown under new construction in Spider-Man: Far From Home, many believed it would be revealed as the new Oscorp Tower. The ending of No Way Home, showing a new, more generic building in its place, has left the future location of a potential MCU Oscorp an open question.