Wrecked with grief, the Thing blamed Doom for the whole crisis, after he had manipulated the Scarlet Witch into madness, causing Magneto's attack on the earth during the Ultimatum event in the first place. In the epilogue of the Ultimatum story, Victor Van Damme, the Ultimate Universe's incarnation of Doctor Doom, was visited by the Thing. After the Ultimatum forced Sue Storm into a coma and killed her father, the team couldn't handle the loss and decided to disband for the time being. While in the Earth-616 continuity, the FF is seen as a tenured and greatly experienced team, in the Ultimate Universe, Marvel's First Family was much less experienced. One of those shifts was the disbanding of the Fantastic Four after the team was pushed to their absolute limits. The Ultimatum wave wreaked havoc on the Ultimate Universe and caused many different shifts in the status quo in the superhuman community. He would go on to put a rifle to his head and commit suicide, marking one of the most unexpected and twisted endings to the Spider-Man villain. Then Kraven retires to his home, having found a kind of inner peace. Kraven doesn't fight back, instead, he tells Spider-Man that his work is complete and that he has truly bested his foe. In reality, Spider-Man was only tranquilized, and after two weeks, he pulls himself out of the grave and goes after Kraven. RELATED: Spider-Man Beyond: 10 Biggest Ben Reilly Moments Since He Returned From The Dead Kraven then buries Spider-Man, and puts on his own Spider-Man costume, and starts attacking criminals as the new Spider-Man. He manages to defeats Spider-Man, seemingly killing him. As one of Spider-Man's many eccentric villains, Kraven became more and more obsessed with besting Spider-Man, to prove himself "the greatest hunter". The "Kraven's Last Hunt" storyline from the Amazing Spider-Man is one of the defining Spider-Man stories of the 1980s, and the most iconic story arc to be attributed to the famous Spider-Man villain.