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Realizing it's time to let him go, Venom withdraws itself from Eddie's body, which crumbles to dust in Venom's arms. After 500 years, and the end of the age of superheroes, all human life has been extinguished and Eddie is finally beyond saving. Eddie's memories begin to fill up with the symbiote standing in for the people in his life until he can't remember anyone else. Desperate, the Symbiote replaces them and the information they contain with yet more of itself. After two hundred years Eddie's brain begins to decay and his neurons start to die. As Eddie's organs begin to deteriorate, Venom replaces them with "venomized cellular analogues," until internally Eddie is mostly consisting of Venom pieces even down to his cellular structure. The symbiote, desperate to save Eddie, tries in vain to prologue his life, terrified of losing the being that it has been connected with for so long. This means that while the Venom symbiote can heal Eddie's wounds it can't stop him from aging, and this is what ultimately does Eddie in. Now there is an important difference to note here between Venom and the object of its affections - Venom is an immortal extra-dimensional fragment of a destroyed hive-mind and Eddie Brock is a this-dimensional muscle guy from New York City who is entirely mortal. Venom had an interest in biological life forms, and especially in Eddie Brock, who it truly loved. Warren tells us that while the majority of the Symbiotes are effectively killing machines, Venom was a little bit different. In the case of the immortal symbiote, this means that Venom: The End looks not at the last day of Venom, but of humanity itself. Marvel's The End series, such as Miles Morales: The End, take a look at the last days of various Marvel characters. RELATED: Venom Hints at the Symbiote God's Ancient History with this Marvel Hero
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It is this kind of end that Eddie Brock meets in Adam Warren's Venom: The End #1. These small, quiet deaths come not through the proverbial death ray, but instead thanks to something as simple as a bullet, or the snapping of a neck from a sudden jolt. Instead, the most impactful last stands of our favorite heroes have been the smaller ones. This is because, in these cases, the resurrection is as common as death, making it hard to truly feel the loss of our favorite characters. Increasingly, though, these deaths have lost their narrative heft. Since then, characters like Spider-Man, Batman, Wolverine, Wonder Woman and Captain America have all gone down in various blazes of heroism and glory. We've seen a lot of high-profile deaths in comics since The Death of Superman in 1992. WARNING: The following contains spoilers for Venom: The End #1 by Adam Warren, Jeffrey "Chamba" Cruz, Guru e-FX and VC's Clayton Cowles, on sale now.