>>36193653Sure can do.
I'd start with the Diving Bell spider, but sadly, that idea was wasted on Araquanid (it's so ugly, would would they make the head so fucking huge and give it eyelashes).
Anyway, allow me to copypaste parts of an old post of mine that I made on another board:
The famous Jumping Spiders are an obvious contender. Joltick could be said to be based on them, but it ends evolving into a tarantula anyway.
It'd be nice to have a fully evolved one retaining the elements of the Saltidae family.
The Pisaura builds an entire nest zone several times her size to care and look after her baby spiders. So there you have the idea of a motherly spider, kinda reminds me of Leavanny.
Hyptiotes Paradoxus creates a triangular webbing and grabs one of its three extremes; when an insect falls in the web she frees it and the prey gets tangled by the entire web.
There's a species/family whose name I can't remember (forgive me) who literally boobytraps single sticky threads to the ground: the moment an insect barely touches one it retracts letting the prey hanging defenseless.
Trapdoor spiders are famous for what their name implies, but some species go as far as building a secret "room" in their lair: when a predator enters (like a centipede) they close the shield of this secondary room and their lair appears empty
The Bolas spiders (like the Mastophora Hutchinsoni) hunt using a sticky 'capture blob' of silk at the end of a line. By swinging the bolas at flying moths they snag their preys in the middle of their flight.
Spitting spiders, members of the family family Scytodidae: look them up.
The Deinopidae family (one of my favorites) use a net held between their four frontal limbs to snare preys proactively (gif related).
There are much more of course, I'm only citing a few examples to show how actually diverse these fuckers can be.
And I'm kind of getting out of space for a single post, don't wanna fill the thread with my spider autism (they're my favorite animal).