I agree with both you and
@Bolo on this subject.
The core of Spider-Man’s appeal as a character is that he’s just a regular dude who has to deal with the same problems average people face (which is also the reason that I love Daredevil). There’s also the fact that unlike most of the other Marvel characters, he actually grows up and matures past his original age (i.e., he starts out as a high school student, then a college student, and eventually graduates and moves on to his post-education life).
The problem with MCU Spider-Man for me is twofold: there’s the Tony Stark simping that you guys mentioned
and the fact that he’s back to being a high school kid (the latter is more of a personal pet peeve though).
One of my favorite runs on the character was the one by J. Michael Straczynski (well, excluding Sins Past and One More Day). I loved how he made Peter Parker a teacher, because it felt like a much needed and natural evolution and maturation of his character. I really wish that the MCU went more along this route where Peter’s already an established hero who’s been in the game for a while. It would have been a nice, refreshing change of pace from what we’ve seen before, and I really like that that’s the route the Insomniac game went.
MCU Spider-Man though really misses the point of the character, and I have no idea why MCU fans so adamantly defend this interpretation when they always tout the franchise as being more “comic-accurate” than other capeshit adaptations (I’d argue that it does take a lot more liberties than a lot of people realize, but that’s a discussion for another day).