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List of DC Comics characters: B

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

B'wana Beast

Bad Samaritan

The Bad Samaritan (alias Zviad Baazovi) is a supervillain, and enemy of the Outsiders who first appeared in The Outsiders #3 (January 1986). He is a former Soviet spymaster who became a neutral party after the Cold War, to which became a valued asset for Checkmate.[1]

Bad Samaritan in other media

Zviad Baazovi appears in Young Justice, voiced by Yuri Lowenthal.[2] This version is a psychic metahuman, Markovian ambassador, and member of the Light.

Bane

Baron Bedlam

Baron Blitzkrieg

Barrage

Barrage is the name of a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Phillip Karnowski is a criminal who originally fought Maggie Sawyer and lost his right arm in the process. While incarcerated at Stryker's Island, Karnowski gained some favors from his fellow inmates where he built a high-tech armor that included an energy cannon arm that replaced his lost right arm. With this armor, Karnowski became Barrage and attacked the Metropolis Police Department's Special Victims Unit to get revenge on Maggie Sawyer. Barrage was defeated by Superman.[3]

Barrage later escaped from prison and was recruited by Morgan Edge to join the Superman Revenge Squad and get revenge on Superman. The group was defeated by Superman.[4]

Barrage in other media

  • Phillip Karnowski appears in the Supergirl episode "The Darkest Place", portrayed by Victor Zinck Jr.[5] This version is a former Navy SEAL. After his wife Julie was murdered, Karnowski became a rogue vigilante who targets criminals that escaped justice on technicalities. He frames Guardian for the attacks, but is defeated by him and arrested by the National City Police Department.
  • Phillip Karnowski appears in the Superman & Lois episode "The Ties That Bind", portrayed by Shaw Madsen. This version is an arms and drug dealer. After taking hostages and being confronted by Superman, Karnowski inhales a substance that makes him as strong as the former. Due to painful visions plaguing Superman at the time, Karnowski overpowers him until he is defeated by Lieutenant General Mitch Anderson's superhero group.

Battalion

Batgirl

Batman

Batman Jones

Batman Jones is a Batman expert in the DC Universe.[6]

The character, created by Jack Schiff and Bill Finger, first appeared in Batman #108 (June 1957). A rebooted version appears in Battle for the Cowl interviewed by Vicki Vale.[7]

Within the context of the stories, his parents were rescued by Batman shortly before Jones was born and they named him "Batman" as thanks. The boy grew up idolizing Batman and tried to become a crimefighter before he began collecting stamps.[8] As an adult, he is an expert on Batman.[7]

Bat-Mite

Batwing

Batwoman

Beard Hunter

Beard Hunter is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Ernest Franklin was a disturbed and closeted gay assassin of bearded men who was hired by the Bearded Gentlemen's Club of Metropolis to kill the Chief because he would not sell his beard to them. He cannot grow a beard due to a male hormone deficiency, as stated by to his mother when she was visited by the police.[9]

Beard Hunter in other media

  • Beard Hunter appears in Doom Patrol, portrayed by Tommy Snider. This version is a bounty hunter with the ability to track down individuals by consuming their facial hair.
  • Beard Hunter appears in a self-titled episode of Teen Titans Go!, voiced by Fred Tatasciore. This version sports an Australian accent.

Beast Boy

Bekka

Khalid Ben-Hassin

Beppo

Bibbo Bibbowski

Big Barda

Billy Numerous

Billy Numerous (voiced by Jason Marsden)[10] was specifically created for the Teen Titans animated series and did not have a previous appearance in the mainstream comics. He later appeared in comics starting in Catwoman (vol. 3) #78 (April 2008), now known as Repro.

Billy Numerous (real name William "Billy" Strayer) is a former student of the H.I.V.E. Academy and enemy of the Teen Titans. Numerous first appeared as a student of the H.I.V.E Academy, where his power of self-duplication was subtly hinted at. After the H.I.V.E. was destroyed during Cyborg's confrontation with Brother Blood, Numerous and most of the other students went freelance. Later, Numerous engaged in a robbing spree all across Jump City and he stole anything he and his innumerable clones could get his (their) collective hands on. His power thoroughly confounded the Titans, especially Cyborg, who became all the more obsessed in catching him. Finally, however, Cyborg realized that there was another way of catching Numerous. He and the other Titans confronted Numerous in the old stadium where he had stashed his loot, seemingly with numerous copies of themselves. To bring them down, Numerous created even more clones of himself, but finally pushed his powers too far. The resulting reabsorption of each of his clones caused a massive physical and mental shock, stunning him and enabling his capture.

At some point, Numerous entered Jinx's H.I.V.E. Five and was also recruited into the Brotherhood of Evil. As one of the Five, he participated in the attempted capture of Kid Flash, but even his numerous clones were unable to stop the super-speedster. Later, when the Brotherhood executed its worldwide strike against young superheroes, he and Gizmo were sent to capture Kole and Gnarrk in their subterranean retreat, but both heroes escaped them. When the remnants of the Titans under Beast Boy later attacked the Brotherhood's headquarters, Numerous and most of his H.I.V.E. Five teammates tried to run, but were intercepted by Kid Flash, aghast to see that Jinx had switched sides and joined up with him. Moments later, they were all swept away by one of Jinx's hexes and carted off by Kid Flash for flash-freeze treatment.

In Catwoman (vol. 3) #78 (April 2008), a character based on Billy Numerous named Repro appears. The small-time crook known as Repro was operating in Gotham City during the time when many of the city's criminals disappeared for a short time. He was one of the only two criminals left in the city, with the other being the Thief. Repro was a young and inexperienced criminal who only did small-time criminal activities, just enough to stay off the radar of big-time crime fighters. After a confrontation with Catwoman where he thought he had shot her in the chest, he hastily departed and ran to the Thief to tell him about it. He was, in turn, shot in the chest and killed by the Thief, who then dumped his body in an alley to cover up the murder.

Billy Numerous in other media

  • Billy Numerous appears in the Teen Titans Go! tie-in comics. He appears as a background villain and member of the H.I.V.E. Five in this comic adaptation of the animated television series. He engages in various petty crimes and attempts at one point to join a new iteration of the team being organised by Psimon and Dr. Light. He fails the test, along with dozens of other villains.
  • Billy Numerous appears in Teen Titans Go!, voiced by Scott Menville.[10] He is a minor supporting villain, typically appearing alongside the other H.I.V.E. Five members.

Bison-Black-as-Midnight-Sky

Bison-Black-as-Midnight-Sky is a Native American shaman in the DC Universe.

The character, created by Gerry Conway and Pat Broderick, first appeared in The Fury of Firestorm #1 (June 1982).[11]

Within the context of the stories, Bison-Black-as-Midnight-Sky is the great-grandfather of Black Bison and the last great shaman of the Bison Cult. He resents his great-grandson's disrespect for the cult's traditions. When he is killed by muggers in Central Park, he binds his spirit to a magical amulet.[Firestorm 1]

The amulet allows his spirit to influence or control his great-grandson when worn.

Bizarro

Black Adam

Black Alice

Black Arrow

Black Arrow was created by Otto Binder and George Papp, first appearing in Adventure Comics #143 (August 1949). He is a leader of a criminal gang, who creates the identity as part of a robbery scheme to outwit the Green Arrow.[12]

Black Beetle

Black Beetle is the name of different fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Unnamed version

Originally posing as a Blue Beetle from the future, the Black Beetle appears to Booster Gold in a time sphere. He offers a chance to go back in time and save the second Blue Beetle, Ted Kord, from death at Maxwell Lord's hands, despite Rip Hunter's claims that Ted's death was a point of unalterable "solidified" time. Booster agrees to go with Black Beetle who has also recruited the first Blue Beetle, Dan Garrett, and the current Blue Beetle, Jaime Reyes, for the mission. The group is successful in saving Ted. After their return to the present, however, they learn that the timeline has been altered, and that Max's OMACs are policing the whole world.[13] When Booster and Ted, gathering some of their old Justice League International teammates, attempt to fix the timeline, they are attacked by Black Beetle who reveals his affiliation with the Time Stealers, a group consisting of Despero, Per Degaton, the Ultra-Humanite, and Jonar Carter (the latter under the control of Mister Mind). As the battle with Black Beetle rages, Ted realizes that the only way to fix things is to return to the past and allow himself to be murdered. Black Beetle attempts to stop Ted, revealing that he is "Jaime Reyes' greatest enemy", and that Jaime took away someone very close to him. He also reveals that he followed the Time Stealers' plan to prevent Ted's death so that Jaime would never have been the Blue Beetle and "she" would never have died. Both he and Ted enter the Time Stealers' time sphere, which then activates.[14] In the next issue, Ted is revealed to have restored the timeline. The where (and when)-abouts of Black Beetle, however, are unknown.[15]

The "Origins and Omens" backup story in Booster Gold #17 hinted that Black Beetle would return and that his true identity would be revealed.

The Black Beetle returns in the present day, attacking Booster Gold and the new Batman in the Batcave. After a brief altercation, Black Beetle escapes into the past, changing events in a way that causes Dick Grayson to die as Robin.[16] Booster follows Black Beetle into the past, finding that he has allied himself with Grant Wilson, attempting to change the outcome of his disastrous battle with the Teen Titans.[17] He is also shown working with an unknown person who desires the destruction of the Justice League. He briefly appears in the present, revealing himself to "Jaime Reyes" and absconding with the body of a gynoid the hero had just defeated.[18] Black Beetle is then shown in a new future he created by killing the Teen Titans where Raven's father Trigon is able to take over the world in the absence of both the Titans and Batman.[18] It is then shown that his true purpose for creating this future is to use the distraction of Booster, Rip Hunter, and the resistance attacking to steal an altered Scarab from Trigon's trophy room. He claims the Scarab is more powerful than his own and bonds it to himself as the Red Beetle (or Scarlet Scarab) in addition to his current tech.[19] Rip manages to track Black Beetle to his base, using one of his devices to overload the armor with chronal energy, seemingly destroying Black Beetle.[20] He is also shown in the present in El Paso, attempting to take Jamie's Blue Beetle scarab.[19] Jaime manages to stop him by blasting him with tachyon particles, paralyzing him. But due to wounds Milagro Reyes suffered at Black Beetle's hands, Jaime is forced to let the villain escape.[20]

In the Time Masters: Vanishing Point limited series, the Time Stealers learn that the Vanishing Point fortress was destroyed.[21] Black Beetle takes his allies to the destroyed Vanishing Point and sees that Rip has locked the Linear Men in a cell because they never agreed about how to handle time. The four villains find the cell and tear it open, finding Matthew Ryder and Liri Lee.[22] Black Beetle asks the Linear Men to help bring Waverider back to life. But Supernova prevents Black Beetle from creating dystopia and he sends the Time Stealers back to the present, although Black Beetle escapes and the Linear Men choose to go with him since he freed them from imprisonment.[23] After they find Waverider's corpse in the desolate wasteland of Earth's future, Black Beetle double-crosses the Linear Men and tries to use Waverider's power to become invulnerable.[24] Black Beetle attempts to fuse Waverider's corpse power but is thwarted by Supernova, which allows Liri to fuse with Waverider's corpse to become Linear Woman. Black Beetle attacks Supernova but when Superman and the rest of the Time Masters arrive, he escapes, telling them they will see him again another time.[25]

Hector

In the final issue of Blue Beetle (vol. 2), Nadia, one of Jaime's tech supports, is killed by the Khaji Da Revolutionary Army, a subversive group of Reach Infiltrators inspired by Jaime's Scarab. Hector, Nadia's brother, angrily blames Jaime and leaves the country. It is revealed that Hector has bonded with Reach technology taken from the invaders, potentially granting him the same powers as Jaime, and that he has taken the alias "Joshua" based on "Djo Zha" (the previous owner of his scarab), and a member of the KDRA. Joshua is the name used by the Black Beetle in his earliest appearances.[26] The use of Hector is intended to cause speculation regarding the Black Beetle character, as future storylines evolve regarding the character.[27] When Black Beetle finally confronts Jamie, he claims that he is indeed Hector, blaming Jamie for Nadia's death, but instantly retracts this statement, instead stating that he in fact killed Hector and stole his technology.[19] In the following issue, he claims to be Jaime's future self, driven mad after being attacked by a brain-damaged Milagro.[20]

Black Beetle in other media

Black Bison

Further reading

Black Bison is the name of two supervillains in the DC Universe.

The character, created by Gerry Conway and Pat Broderick, first appeared in The Fury of Firestorm #1 (June 1982).[11]

John Ravenhair

Within the context of the stories, John Ravenhair is a Native American-born Black-Cloud-in-Morning and raised in Queens, New York. When his great-grandfather, Bison-Black-as-Midnight-Sky, is killed in a mugging, he becomes influenced and possessed by his ancestor's spirit.[30] This leads him to set about avenging the wrongs committed against the Native American people.[Firestorm 1] When removed from the angry spirit, he occasionally acts for good, but is frequently a threat to Firestorm.[31]

Black Bison is armed with a coup-stick that allows him to bring any inanimate objects to life and command them to aid him as well as manipulate weather, but it requires a special amulet that he wears to maintain its power. He is also trained in the martial arts.

Black-Cloud-in-Morning

In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, this version of Black Bison, along with the Hyena, Multiplex, Plastique and Typhoon, are sent by the Crime Syndicate to finish Gorilla Grodd's work. The villains end up defeated by the Rogues, since one of their targets is at the hospital where Captain Cold's sister is recovering.[32]

In the Watchmen sequel Doomsday Clock, Black Bison is among the villains that attend the underground meeting held by the Riddler to talk about the Superman Theory. When Moonbow and Typhoon are stated to be creations of the government and Black Bison is near them, Black Bison states that he was not mentioned as having been created by the government.[33]

Black Bison in other media

  • An unidentified Black Bison appears in the Injustice: Gods Among Us prequel comic.
  • A female incarnation of Black Bison named Mina Chaytan appears in The Flash, portrayed by Chelsea Kurtz. This version acquired the ability to bring effigies to life after the Thinker tricked the Flash into exposing her to dark matter. In the episode "When Harry Met Harry...", she uses her powers to target collectors of Native American artifacts before she is defeated by Team Flash and remanded to Iron Heights Penitentiary. In the episode "True Colors", she, K%lgore, Hazard, and Dwarfstar attempt to escape after learning Warden Gregory Wolfe plans to sell them to Amunet Black, but the Thinker intercepts and kills them for their powers.

Black Canary

Black Condor

Black Flash

Black Hand

Black Lightning

Black Manta

Black Mask

Black Orchid

Black Thorn

Vera Black

Further reading

Vera Black a.k.a. Sister Superior is a British psionic cyborg in the DC Universe.

The character, created by Joe Kelly and Doug Mahnke, first appeared in JLA #100 (August 2004).[34] The storyline set up the limited series Justice League Elite which consisted of 12 issues published between 2004 and 2005.

Within the context of the stories, Vera Black is the sister of Manchester Black. As children their parents would often fight and Manchester would take her out to play to avoid them. As his idea of "play" became killing sprees, Vera's perspective became twisted. When her brother dies after attempting to destroy Superman, she has her ruined arms, lost in an untold childhood incident, replaced with cybernetic prostheses which can configure into any weapon she desires, initially contemplating revenge on Superman before she decides to be better than her brother.

Her new abilities result in her leading the remnants of the Elite and tacitly working with the Justice League. This leads to the League, encouraged by the Flash, asking her to lead a new team with the intention that she will handle black ops missions that the League cannot due to what they represent to the public, primarily involving hunting down and eliminating metahuman threats before they go public. Starting with Coldcast and Menagerie, she adds Flash, Manitou Raven, Major Disaster, Green Arrow and Kasumi to the team. She also enlists Naif al-Sheikh to keep the team in check and serve as a liaison to the governments of the world.

Equipment of Vera Black

Vera's cybernetic arms have the capacity to transform into an almost unlimited variety of melee, projectile and beam weapons. They also incorporate camouflage technology relying on optics, as well as altering sense perception in others.

Vera Black in other media

Vera Black appears in Superman vs. The Elite, voiced by Marcella Lentz-Pope as an adult and by Tara Strong as a child.[35][36]

Black Vulcan

Blackbriar Thorn

Blackbriar Thorn was a High Priest of the ancient Druids of Cymru. When his entire sect is massacred by attacking Roman forces, Thorn flees to the surrounding forest. Attempting to escape capture, he transforms himself into solid wood, hiding amongst the trees. For Thorn's dismay, the agony of his dying comrades creates a geological upheaval which buries his newly arboreal form underground.

Millennia later, Blackbriar Thorn's body is unearthed by an archaeologist and subsequently displayed at the Gotham City Museum of History. When moonlight strikes the statue on the night of its unveiling, Thorn is revived and begins to wreak havoc on the Museum and its patrons, which includes the alter egos of Superman and Etrigan the Demon. The heroic pair's actions drive Thorn to retreat into the city, where he later attempts to procure a new body—-that of Superman. Together, Etrigan and Superman defeat Thorn, rendering him incorporeal.[37]

Blackbriar Thorn appears, seemingly in human form, during the Crisis on Infinite Earths. He, Etrigan, and other assembled mystics lend their combined energies-—channeled through Doctor Occult and Green Lantern Alan Scott—-to successfully defeat the Anti-Monitor's Shadow Demons, which had been ravaging the Earth.[38]

Disembodied once more and said to have lingered in Gotham Park since his prior defeat, Thorn is channeled by a stage psychic at the behest of John Constantine to provide information about a pending calamity in The Green.[39]

Blackbriar Thorn next appears (again, with a human appearance) as an agent of the demon Neron in a demonic realm called The Abyss. Holding captive the soul of Mollie Scott as bait, Thorn attempts to ensnare her husband, Alan Scott, but is surprised to find Alan no longer vulnerable to wood.[40]

As part of Johnny Sorrow's version of the Injustice Society, a more woody-looking Thorn and his teammates are defeated by Wildcat as they invade the JSA's Headquarters.[41][42] Thorn's defeat left his body splintered into pieces, one shard of which is kept on display in JSA Headquarters. Thorn lies dormant until the Injustice Society's next attack. Using a crossbow, Injustice Society comrade Tigress shoots the splintered sliver of Blackbriar Thorn into Alan Scott's chest. Apparently once more susceptible to wood, Scott is gravely wounded as Thorn regenerates from the embedded projectile and proceeds to inflict more damage.[43] Thorn is ultimately defeated in this siege on the JSA by Stargirl.[44]

Blackbriar Thorn appears most recently in Day of Vengeance battling the Spectre, who, influenced by Eclipso, attempts to kill all magic wielders in the DC Universe. The combatants appear in gigantic form.[45] Thorn loses the battle, but delays his next regeneration to lend his powers, along with many other mystics, in a combined effort to defeat the Spectre.[46]

Blackbriar Thorn is among the villains in the ambush of the JSA led by Tapeworm.[47]

In The New 52 reboot of DC's continuity, Blackbriar Thorn is re-established as one of two powerful magical entities used by Nick Necro to combat the Justice League Dark. He tries to destroy Zatanna in Peru by controlling an entire forest with his magic. He is then possessed by Deadman and neutralized.

During the Forever Evil storyline Forever Evil: Blight, Blackbriar Thorn is among the magic users in the possession of Felix Faust and Nick Necro. Faust and Necro plan to use the magic users as part of a weapon to defeat the creature that destroyed the Crime Syndicate's Earth.[48]

The character appears in the "DC Rebirth" relaunch as one of the villains refusing to be hired by Henry Bendix to kill Midnighter and Apollo.[49]

Powers and abilities of Blackbriar Thorn

Blackbriar Thorn has exhibited a plethora of abilities, including manipulation of the weather, extensive control over vegetation—either living or dead, the ability to regenerate from even a sliver of his physical form, and the creation of illusions. Thorn can draw strength and abilities though physical contact with the Earth itself. Inside buildings, he still retains the ability to control surrounding plant life, animating it to his will and frequently increasing its volume and strength. Thorn's organic manipulation of his own woody form, including the projection of tendrils and vines, appears to be uninhibited when separated from terra firma as well.[42]

Blackbriar Thorn in other media

Blackbriar Thorn appears in the Young Justice episode "Misplaced", voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson.[50]

Blackguard

Blackguard is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Richard Hertz is a man who works for the 1,000 where he serves as their enforcer with the codename Blackguard. When the 1,000 tried to kill Blackguard in their mission to kill Booster Gold, Blackguard was saved by Booster Gold.[51]

During the "Underworld Unleashed" storyline, Blackguard sold his soul to Neron in exchange for super-strength, enhanced intellect, and special equipment.[52] He joined Cheetah and Earthworm in attacking the Warriors bar. He and Cheetah were defeated by Joe Gardner, but Earthworm escaped.[53]

Blackguard later joined up with the Suicide Squad. He was later beheaded by General during his mutiny on the Suicide Squad.[54]

In 2016, DC Comics implemented another relaunch of its books called "DC Rebirth" which restored its continuity to a form much as it was prior to "The New 52". Blackguard was revealed to have been a former member of the Suicide Squad who died in one of their missions. During a mission to Hell, the Suicide Squad encounters Blackguard who was among the dead Suicide Squad members that make up the Hell Squad.[55]

Blackguard in other media

Blackguard appears in The Suicide Squad, portrayed by Pete Davidson.[56] He is recruited into the eponymous team for a mission in Corto Maltese, but betrays them by warning the local military of their arrival. When he tries to surrender upon making landfall, he is promptly shot and killed.

Blackhawk

Blackout

Further reading

Blackout (Farooq) is a metahuman who can harness electricity. He makes his first appearance in Flashpoint (vol. 2) #1 (July 2011). In the alternate timeline created by the events of Flashpoint, Blackout is recruited by Cyborg into a team of superheroes whose mission was to end the Amazon-Atlantean war, which had devastated Europe and caused millions of human casualties. To that end, the team was assigned to take down both Emperor Aquaman and Wonder Woman.

Another new recruit, the Outsider, revealed during a meeting with Batman that he had been hunting Blackout so he could use his abilities to power India. This manhunt resulted in the loss of Blackout's girlfriend and his departure from school. Blackout has since voiced his reluctance to be part of the same team with his worst enemy.

Blackout in other media

Farooq Gibran / Blackout appears in The Flash episode "Power Outage", portrayed by Michael Reventar. Sometime prior, he was with friends when the S.T.A.R. Labs particle accelerator exploded and electrocuted him. While he survived, he accidentally killed his friends when they tried to resuscitate him. Following this, he discovers he can siphon electrical energy and seeks revenge against the head of S.T.A.R. Labs, Harrison Wells. In pursuit of this goal, Farooq is confronted by the Flash, but he drains the hero's speed. He later storms S.T.A.R. Labs, kills Girder, and attacks Wells. However, the Flash is able to get his speed back and overcharge him, killing Farooq in the process.

Blackrock

Blackrock is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Blackrock is a recurring enemy of Superman first appearing in Action Comics #458 (April 1976).[57]

Blackrock was the creation of Dr. Peter Silverstone in an attempt to increase ratings for the United Broadcasting television network.[58] Silverstone hypnotized UB President Sam Tanner and later Tanner's nephew, Les Vegas, to fill the role. A third Blackrock (an energy construct) was created by Tanner's command not much later.

Eventually Silverstone assumed the mantle of Blackrock himself, using a powerful stone that could metabolize electromagnetic energy into energy to achieve flight, energy blasts and superhuman strength, and fought Superman several times. This rock, while a technological artifact, has the appearance of a polished gem that is as black as coal. It was appropriately dubbed the Blackrock.

The Post-Crisis version was stated (in Batman/Superman adventures) to be a symbiotic alien life form, rather than a creation of Dr. Silverstone. Its appearance and abilities are approximately the same.

Silverstone is the only Pre-Crisis user of the stone that has been mentioned in Post-Crisis continuity. Overuse of the Blackrock's powers blinded Silverstone and left him insane. He was found sitting muttering to himself and watching constant television shows in an apartment owned by an ex-convict named Samuel Benjamin, who beat Silverstone to death with the Blackrock and took it for himself. Despite its power, his inexperience with the Blackrock led to his defeat and Superman took the stone and threw it towards the Sun.[59]

A short time later, Alexander Luthor Jr., disguised as Lex Luthor, dispatched Bizarro to retrieve the Blackrock from the Sun[60] before passing it on to a South American woman named Lucia,[61] a drug smuggler and revolutionary who had been jailed by Superman before. Her intense feelings of hatred towards the Man of Steel matched those of the Blackrock and she proved particularly adept in using it. However, her skills were not enough to defeat Superman and the Blackrock withdrew into itself.[62]

It was eventually shown that the Blackrock had been kept by Superman, who locked it away in his Fortress of Solitude. The Blackrock escaped and bonded with Plastic Man. Shortly after, the Blackrock was removed from Plastic Man and found its way into the hands of Batman, who shortly afterwards decided he needed its powers to help him stop a currently-rampaging Superman (Superman had fallen under the influence of Despero as he attempted to turn Earth's alien superheroes against humans). Although it remained on Batman after Superman threw off Despero's influence, Superman was able to force it to leave Batman by threatening to kill him, informing the Blackrock that he knew Batman would rather die than live like this.

In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, Blackrock is Bradley Glenn, an ex-con who was hired to star in a reality television show called Badass Nation about the life of a supervillain.[63] The TV company provided him with powered armor and a fictional backstory about finding it in a crashed spacecraft. They intended to film him tearing up a bridge that was scheduled for demolition, but the crew neglected to ensure that the bridge had been closed to traffic and the Pre-Flashpoint Superman had to intervene.[64]

The Post-Crisis wielders of the Blackrock seem to have developed differing powers based on their personalities. All seem to have possessed superhuman strength and endurance, flight and energy projection abilities. The Blackrock also has the ability to absorb ambient energy to empower its wielder. Dr. Silverstone seemed most adept at using its ability to process information from TV and radio signals. Samuel Benjamin was particularly skilled at using it to boost his own physical strength and toughness. Lucia's abilities seemed to be an amalgamation of her predecessors', but she seemed to prefer using its energy projection abilities and discovered a way to use it to drain Superman's power.

While the stone had bonded to Plastic Man, he was not shown using its abilities much.

Batman used it in much the same way that Lucia did, but Batman showed more of a preference for physical combat than Lucia did.

Jimmy Olsen and several other humans were bonded to the Blackrocks when a shower of them rained down on Earth. These people showed some level of superhuman abilities similar to those demonstrated by Lucia, etc. but it was not shown if they were as strong as he was.

Bradley Glenn's armor enabled him to leap great distances and an energy field around one gauntlet gave him a powerful punch.

Blackwing

Blackwing (Charles "Charlie" Bullock) is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He was created by Paul Levitz, Joe Staton and Joey Cavalieri.

The character was chronologically introduced in Adventure Comics #464 (April 1979), but was unnamed in that comic. He was, however, named in his next appearance in Wonder Woman #281 (April 1981) and later, became Blackwing in Wonder Woman #297 (August 1982). Also, worth to note, the original story in Adventure Comics was intended for All Star Comics #75. Charlie was drawn as a teen in that story, but his next appearance (only three years later) depicts him as a young adult who graduated from law school.

In his mid-teens, Charles Bullock was searching for a direction in life. The teenager found it after he helped fight off street punks alongside Wildcat and was invited to join him at his gym. Charlie attended law school and later became a junior partner and top-notch researcher to the law firm called Cranston, Grayson and Wayne. When a criminal named Karnage broke into the office looking for his boss Arthur Cranston, this, and another event, led him to become the costumed hero Blackwing. Although his first outing as a crime fighter proved unsuccessful when he was captured by the costumed villain Boa's gang, Blackwing managed to contribute in freeing the Huntress from Boa's giant snake and recorded some evidence that was used to put the mastermind and his men away.

Since then, Blackwing has never appeared again in any other published story.

Blaze

Blitzkrieg

Blitzkrieg is a character appearing in American comic books related to DC Comics. The character, created by Geoff Johns and Dale Eaglesham, first appeared in Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #2 (March 2007) as Baroness Blitzkrieg. An apparent descendant of Baron Blitzkrieg, she is a speedster who is a member of the Fourth Reich and fights against the Justice Society of America to which she is beaten by the Flash,[65] and Liberty Belle.[66] Blitzkrieg went out on her own but is beaten by Catwoman,[67] and Supergirl.[68]

Alternative versions of Blitzkrieg

Alternative versions of Blitzkrieg called Blitzen appear as inhabitants of Earth-10. The first version, a male speedster also called the Flash, appears in the stories 52, Countdown and Countdown to Final Crisis.[citation needed] He is a member of the JSAxis before he is recruited by the Monarch over Forerunner's protests and presumably died alongside Overgirl while fighting the Monitors.[69][70][71][72] The second version, a female speedster also called Lightning, appears in The Multiversity: Mastermen. She is a member of the New Reichsmen who fought against the Freedom Fighters.[73]

Blitzkrieg in other media

Block

Block is a young Maori woman living in Melbourne, Australia, the woman dubbed the Human Block was once inexplicably struck by lightning and survived the incident. Unknown to her, this similar event had happened to many other individuals throughout time and was in fact the Speed Force imbuing her with speed-related abilities. In her then-present time—1957—Block acted as a side show attraction in a carnival, the prize of $1,000 going to whoever could move her, which was failed by many, as she had manipulated her body density. One drunken man staggered onto the stage to accept her challenge, making her move by insulting her Maori heritage rather than physically moving her. Angered, she immediately struck out at him and instigated a small brawl, tearing through the crowd before someone hastily drew their firearm on her and shot, only to find that not even bullets affected her. Before the now-turned mob could attack her, Zoom, accompanied by his newly recruited acolytes the Folded Man and Magali, appeared and teleported her outside of the carnival grounds. Being offered the chance to embrace her abilities and live as a godlike being after mastering them, she did not hesitate to join Zoom and his quest to kill the "evil" Flash. Along with the other Acolytes, she would train for what would be an unknown amount of time to kill the Flash, facing off with Zoom in his place. It is unknown how long this training took place, as they stated that, over the course of centuries, this team trained to take on the Flash and when they reached older age, Magali would revert them back to their original ages when joining. Unknown to Block, Zoom is actually the one to have orchestrated her joining him to begin with, appearing to the drunk man who challenged her, while convincing him that the way to make her move was to attack her heritage, as he had been keeping close watch on her for some time.[volume & issue needed]

Powers and abilities of Block

Being imbued with the Speed Force, Block has the unique ability to slow down her atoms. In doing this, they become denser than steel and grant her invulnerability, super-strength and immobility. She can possibly slow down other speedsters, if not other people as well, through physical touch, as she stopped the Top's ability to spin and was able to hold Zoom in place in a headlock. After training centuries with Zoom, she is a deadly fighter. Recently, she was able to stop the molecules around herself to make the air unbreakable.

Block in other media

Vanessa Jansen / Block appears in The Flash episode "Blocked", portrayed by Erin Cummings. This version was a weapons dealer who worked for the East Street Skulls gang until she was betrayed and sent to Iron Heights Penitentiary for four years. After becoming a metahuman with the ability to create boxes of dense air and getting out of Iron Heights, both by unknown means, she seeks revenge on her former gang until she is stopped by the Flash and XS. Before the heroes can re-incarcerate Jansen, she is attacked and mortally wounded by Cicada. XS rushes her to the hospital, but Jansen dies of her injuries on the way off-screen.

Blok

Blockbuster

Bloodsport

Bloodwork

Bloodwork (Dr. Ramsey Rosso) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character, created by Joshua Williamson, Paul Pelletier and Howard Porter, first appeared in The Flash (vol. 5) #28 (October 2017). An enemy of Barry Allen / Flash, he has the ability to control and manipulate blood.

Bloodwork in other media

Ramsey Rosso / Bloodwork appears in the sixth and ninth seasons of The Flash, portrayed by Sendhil Ramamurthy.[75]

Blue Beetle

Blue Devil

Bombshell

Boodikka

Bolphunga

Further reading

Bolphunga is an extraterrestrial bounty hunter in the DC Universe.

The character, created by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, first appeared in Green Lantern (vol. 2) #188 (May 1985).[76]

Within the context of the stories, Bolphunga the Unrelenting has a love of destruction and plots to make a name for himself by challenging the most feared and mysterious beings in creation, fixating on Green Lanterns. This has led to his defeat by Mogo,[GL 1] Kilowog[GL 2] and Guy Gardner.[GL 3]

Bolphunga in other media

Bolphunga appears in the Green Lantern: Emerald Knights segment "Mogo Doesn't Socialize", voiced by Roddy Piper.[77] This version is described as an undefeated and merciless warrior. While seeking to prove himself the most powerful being in the universe by defeating its most powerful warriors, he attempts to find and defeat Mogo, who eventually defeats and captures Bolphunga.

Boom

Boom is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Boom I

Boom is a rock-skinned alien who was previously locked into combat with another alien of his species named Thoom when they were recruited into the Poglachian Green Lantern Corps as part of the Weaponers of Qward's plot to discredit the real Green Lantern Corps.[78]

Judy Garrick

In a bio panel of "The New Golden Age" one-shot, it revealed that Jay Garrick and Joan Garrick had a daughter named Judy Garrick who would later gain her super-speed powers the same way her dad did by the time that she was a teenager in 1963. At some point, Judy accidentally traveled back to the year 1940 during the earlier superhero work of Flash and took on the alias of "Boom". Before returning to her own time, Judy revealed her identity to her father. Boom would occasionally travel back in time to aid her dad where she even befriended Turtle's son Tortoise. Boom stopped visiting her dad in the past by the time she was born on February 14, 1949. Then one day, she mysteriously vanished.[79] By the final issue of "Flashpoint Beyond", Judy was among the thirteen missing Golden Age superheroes in the Time Masters' capsules. When the capsules failed, they were all pulled back in time with history rebuilding around them.[80]

When Red Arrow and Stargirl end up on Orphan Island and Red Arrow is captured by the Child Collectors and locked up, Red Arrow learns that her neighboring prisoner is Boom who is chained to a special treadmill who asks Red Arrow to help her get back to her own time.[81] This treadmill that Boom is on is hooked up to a Time Warp machine that Childminder uses to have Orphan Island travel through time as she sees different things. Red Arrow advises Boom to overload the machine as Childminder makes contact with the buyer who is going to buy the Lost Children that are in her possession. Boom later states that she is seeing her dad again as she also sees someone that is supposed to be a friend as the buyer is revealed to be the android version of Hourman.[82] After pulling a speed trick to get free, Boom takes Red Arrow to where her arrows are as they free Sparky, Pinky the Whiz Kid, Secret, and Dan the Dyna-Mite. By the time Red Arrow reunites with Stargirl, Boom is among those subdued by the Hourman android.[83] When Corky Baxter attacks Childminder, Boom uses this attack as a diversion to free everyone. When the Hourman android's master in the form of an older Corky named Time Master appears, Boom removes the Hourman android's brain enabling Quiz Kid and Robbie the Robot Dog to work on reprogramming it. Following Time Master and Childminder's defeat and Wing being sent back to his own time, Boom is among the Lost Children that are brought to Stargirl's time by the Hourman android due to paradoxical reasons. She later reunited with her dad.[84]

This reunion was shown one week later following the defeat of Per Degaton as she and Stargirl arrive with the Hourman android who might help Flash and the JSA members present shed some light on their time-related questions.[85] Judy's arrival restores Jay's memories of her as they speed off to meet up with Joan.[86]

With Jay and Judy meet up with Joan, her memory of Judy is jogged. They help Judy get settled in as she learns about the other members of the Flash family. After hearing about a robbery at the Keystone City Bank, Judy becomes Boom to thwart it as Flash also shows up. During a talking to, Judy also mentioned how she disappeared in 1963 after helping her dad to rescue her mother from Doctor Elemental as Jay's memory of this is jogged. Also after saving Joan, Judy was able to recognize the identity of Doctor Elemental before he got away.[87] When Judy goes to spend the day at Keystone City Mall with Courtney Whitmore, Jay follows them and remains out of sight. During this time, the Keystone City Mall is attacked by the JSA's old opponent Ro-Bear who came to claim Judy causing Jay to give himself away and fight him. While displeased that her father followed her, Judy became Boom and Courtney Whitmore became Stargirl to help fight Ro-Bear. After Ro-Bear is subdued, a green crystal teleports Ro-Bear away stating that he'll see him again as Judy asks her father what is going on.[88]

During the "Titans: Beast World" storyline, Boom is among those that were exposed to the Beast Boy spores and is mutated into a humanoid alligator. She is subdued by Stargirl and Huntress.[89]

Booster Gold

Sy Borgman

Sy Borgman is a retired scooter-bound U.S. agent with some cybernetic enhancements and an ally of Harley Quinn that first appeared in Harley Quinn (vol. 2) #2 (March 2014) as part of The New 52.

Sy Borgman is a retired U.S. agent formerly called Syborg who was rendered scooter-bound and got cybernetic enhancements after stopping a terrorist plot. When Harley Quinn heads to her nursing home appointment, Sy Borgman recognizes her causing Harley to close the door behind her. He explains his history to her and states how he must use a scooter due to the weight of the cybernetics affecting his aged body. Sy wants to help Harley by targeting the gang that was responsible for his current cybernetic state.[90] While going over the files, Harley and Sy start with Igor Lenivetskin, who is in a coma. They were able to sever the tubes going into him and set his body to explode. The second target is Ivana Brekemoff. Sy states Ivana will be more difficult than Igor. After entering the mansion by force, Harley and Sy confront Ivana who starts using an RPG on them, which blows up the mansion.[91] Emerging unscathed, Harley and Sy flee from the police helicopter while throwing Ivana to her death. Their third target is Alexei "the Bear" Medvedenko, who currently works as a security guard at the Prospect Park Zoo. When they arrive, they find that Alexei had been torn apart by the zoo animals he released upon hearing that they were coming for him. The other people that Alexei called were also on the files and consist of Kosta Armanoleg, Borya Tatierski, Yuri Beyznatofin, and Zena Bendemova. Harley and Sy send explosive bagels their way, where Kosta, Yuri, and three of Kosta's henchwomen were caught in the explosions. Harley brings a metal pipe down on Borya's head, leaving Zena as the remaining target. While it was mentioned that Zena was an ex-lover of Sy, she is caught by surprise when Sy sends her scooter into Zena enough to send her flying into the horns of a rhinoceros. Then it comes to the final target that Sy foreshadowed, where he and Harley head to Coney Island and break into the bedroom of a man named Chuck. After a monologue by Sy about the car that Chuck sold him, Harley kicks Chuck out the window where he falls into the streets below. While Sy wanted to finish off Chuck, he relents.[92]

When Harley Quinn is invited to the Skate Club by Summer Daze, she brings Sy Borgman along to accompany her.[93] Harley Quinn learns that this roller derby has no rules, as Sy Borgman places a bet on Harley. When Sy gives Harley an explosive toothpaste to use on her opponent Maria Monsterella, it kills her, causing the match to be disqualified. Sy still managed to win his bets and allows Harley to pay for the meal that follows. Harley later packs Sy's wheelchair into his car and sees him off.[94]

Sy Borgman in other media

Sy Borgman appears in Harley Quinn, voiced by Jason Alexander.[95][96] This version is a cyborg landlord and former CIA fixer. Introduced in the episode "Finding Mr. Right", he reminds his tenant Poison Ivy of the rules before evicting her and her friends for breaking them. In the episode "Being Harley Quinn", Borgman finds Ivy and her friends' comatose bodies, assumes they are dead, and nearly kills them. Impressed by his skill, however, Harley Quinn offers him a place in her crew. In "L.O.D.R.S.V.P.", it is revealed that Borgman has a scientist sister named Mirielle. In the 1980s, he asked her to fuse a monkey and an octopus together into a "monkeypus" to assist him in the field. During the procedure however, the monkey escaped and fused Mirielle with the octopus, turning her into a mutant monster which Borgman hid in an abandoned mall out of guilt. In the present, Borgman has Doctor Psycho use his psychic powers to help him communicate and reconcile with Mirielle before releasing her onto the streets of Gotham City, where she goes on a rampage. In "Dye Hard", Psycho, having left the crew after being enraged by Harley in a previous episode, takes control of an army of Parademons and traps her in a force-field in an attempt to take over Gotham and exact revenge on her. Borgman gives his right eye to her as a memento before sacrificing himself to destroy the force-field so she can escape. In "Lover's Quarrel", Harley learns Borgman put a digital backup of his mind in the eye, allowing him to help Kite Man create anti-mind control devices to combat Doctor Psycho. As of "A Thief, A Mole, An Orgy", King Shark downloads Borgman's consciousness into Catwoman's apartment's smart home hub.

Bouncer

First appearanceDetective Comics #347 (January 1966)
Created byGardner Fox
Carmine Infantino

Bouncer is an enemy of Batman who constructed a special suit out of alloy that gave him enhanced bouncing abilities. In their first encounter, he shot and killed Batman, who is replaced by the Batman of Earth-Two.[97]

He later returned as a henchman for the Monarch Of Menace. When Batman was missing, the Monarch of Menace hired various Batman villains to commit crimes for him, including the Bouncer, however he was once again defeated when Batman returned.[98]

Bouncer in other media

Bouncer makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Joker: The Vile and the Villainous!".

Bouncing Boy

Bozo the Iron Man

Brain

Brain Wave

Brainiac

Brainiac 2

Brainiac 3

Brainiac 3 (Lyrl Dox) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He is a Coluan who is the son of Brainiac 2 and the Gryxian Stealth.[99]

Brainiac 3 in other media

Brainiac 3 appears in Legion of Super-Heroes (2023), voiced by Zeno Robinson.[100] This version was fused with Brainiac 2 and 4 to form a new body for Brainiac following his failure to retrieve the Miracle Machine for him. In the present, Brainiac 5 convinces them to rebel against Brainiac, forcibly seperating themselves from him.

Brainiac 4

Brainiac 5

Brainiac 8

Brainwave

Breathtaker

Breathtaker is a name of two supervillains appearing in DC Universe.

Breathtaker I

The first is an unnamed assassin and the leader of the Assassination Bureau. He first appeared in Firestorm (vol. 2) #29 (November 1984), created by Joey Cavalieri and Rafael Kayanan.

Humiliated and tormented by his peers throughout his adolescence for being an albino dwarf, the young man constructed a powerful exoskeleton, assumed the hood and the identity of Breathtaker. He formed Assassination Bureau, supplying super-powered assassins to anyone with the right price.

The Breathtaker first comes to public attention when the criminal group 2000 Committee hires him and his organization to capture Firestorm. He tests Firestorm with his several lesser agents before confronting him with the Bureau's two chief, Incognito and Mindboggler. When Firestorm defeats those two as well, the Breathtaker finally lures him to his headquarters and attempts to kill him. Instead, Firestorm destroys the complex, putting an end to the Breathtaker's career.[101]

Breathtaker II

The second Breathtaker is an unnamed female assassin, first appearing in Titans #21 (November 2000), created by Jay Faerber and Paul Pelletier.

Born and raised in USA, Breathtaker obtained aerokinesis abilities in an unspecified way, apparently from her birth. Liking the powers, she became an international assassin. She is specialized in murdering people by sucking away the air from their lungs, making it look like a natural death. She later contacted other people with similar abilities to form a team named Hangmen, consisting of super-strong Stranglehold from Puerto Rico, the mind-controller Provoke from Australia, a young electricity-manipulator Shock Trauma from Japan, and the cyborg Killshot from Russia.

Their first assignment comes from the government of Qurac to eliminate the terrorist Cheshire who tried to nuke the entire place. Cheshire escaped from them, but Breathtaker found an easy way to get at her: she and her team target her daughter Lian Harper, to lure her out. Despite their attempts, Titans discover their plan and defeat them.[102]

She and her team later have encounters with Nightwing and his team, sometimes allying with more seasoned and proficient assassins like Deathstroke. The team later makes an alliance with Alexander Luthor Jr. and his Secret Society of Super Villains. When the team assaults Metropolis, Breathtaker and her teammates use it as a cover to loot the city. Seeking an opportunity, they double cross Luthor and Breathtaker pays Doctor Psycho to fake their own death.[103]

After her team laid low for a while, they come in contact by Libra, who was reforming Luthor's Society and offers them a prize. Although accepting, she is not interested in money and only accepted his offer because she wants to kill every Titan as a revenge. Despite of it, she and her team are later killed by Crispus Allen (the Spectre).[104]

Breathtaker in other media

  • Breathtaker appears in the Supergirl episode "In Plain Sight", portrayed by Luisa D'Oliveira. This version is a Leviathan operative and metahuman assassin who was sent to assassinate Elena Torres. Her plan is thwarted by Supergirl and is remanded to D.E.O. custody. In "Dangerous Liaisons", Breathtaker is interrogated by Alex Danvers about who hired her.
  • Breathtaker appears in DC Universe Online.

Brick

Bronze Tiger

Brother Blood

Brother Night

Brother Night (Eldon Peck) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by writer Paul Dini and artist Stéphane Roux, and first appearing in Zatanna vol. 2 #1 (July 2010), the character is a San Francisco-based sorcerer and enemy of Zatanna who bargained with evil spirits to gain extended life in exchange for serving them. Eventually, Zatanna defeats him by forcing him to renounce his powers, leading him to be tortured by the spirits for breaking his bargain with them.[105]

Brother Night in other media

Brother Night appears in Justice League Action, voiced by Dan Donohue.[106] This version is the owner of a nightclub that is primarily frequented by demons.[107]

Crystal Brown

Crystal Brown is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Crystal Brown is a nurse who is the ex-wife of Arthur Brown and the mother of Stephanie Brown who struggles with pain pill addiction.[108]

Crystal Brown in other media

Crystal Brown appears in Gotham Knights, portrayed by Sunny Mabrey.[109] Her addiction remains intact as Arthur Brown worries that it being exposed could ruin his reputation. Eventually, Harper Row stands up to Crystal over her actions, after which she is taken into rehab.

Brutale

Brutale (Guillermo Barrera) is a supervillain who first appeared in Nightwing vol. 2 #22. He was created by Chuck Dixon and Scott McDaniel.

Brutale has no superhuman powers, but is an expert with all forms of knives and blades, utilizing a variety of scalpels, throwing knives, and other blades.[110]

In other media

Bug-Eyed Bandit

Bulleteer

Bulletman and Bulletgirl

Harvey Bullock

Bumblebee

Bushido

Byth Rok

Byth Rok is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, and who is commonly known as a recurring enemy of the Silver Age Hawkman. He was created by Gardner Fox and Joe Kubert, and first appeared in The Brave and the Bold #34 (February/March 1961), titled "Creature of a Thousand Shapes".

On the alien planet Thanagar, a scientist named Krotan developed a pill that would empower the mind to control the molecular formation of the body. Just as he was about to swallow it, a thief named Byth assaulted him and swallowed the pill. Byth first transformed into a bird and left (via spaceship) to commit crimes on other planets. Katar Hol and his wife, Shayera, tracked his rocket to Earth.

For many years, Byth would escape on several occasions only to be captured again by Hawkman and Hawkwoman.[111]

In the Hawkworld mini-series, Byth is a corrupt Wingman commander and Katar Hol's superior. He manipulated a drug-induced Katar into killing his father, aiding his rise to power.[112] Now Administrator of Protection, he gains his shape-shifting powers from a new drug called Krotan. Katar Hol, with the help of Shayera Thal, uncovers his schemes but Byth escapes arrest.[113] He flees to Earth and runs criminal operations in Chicago. He supplies Carl Sands with a shadow generator.[114] He is later captured,[115] and returned to Thanagar.[116]

Byth was apparently defeated for good by the then recently resurrected Carter Hall and Kendra Saunders.

In The New 52 reboot of DC's continuity, Lord Byth is shown to be responsible for the creation of Ultra the Multi-Alien where he had combined the DNA of the alien prisoners to make Ultra the Multi-Alien the Slayer of Worlds.[117]

After consuming the Changeling Pill (or Krotan), Byth gained the ability to transform into any other person or animal at will, whether they were indigenous to Thanagar or originated on an alien world (including Earth). There appears to be no physical restriction in terms of mass or volume when it comes to Byth's shape-shifting talents.

Byth Rok in other media

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  68. ^ Supergirl (vol. 5) #59
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  80. ^ Flashpoint Beyond #6. DC Comics.
  81. ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #3. DC Comics.
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  83. ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #5. DC Comics.
  84. ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #6. DC Comics.
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  86. ^ Justice Society of America Vol. 4 #6. DC Comics.
  87. ^ The Flash: Jay Garrick #1. DC Comics.
  88. ^ The Flash: Jay Garrick #2. DC Comics.
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  90. ^ Harley Quinn (vol. 2) #4. DC Comics.
  91. ^ Harley Quinn (vol. 2) #5. DC Comics.
  92. ^ Harley Quinn (vol. 2) #6. DC Comics.
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  102. ^ Titans #22 (November 2000)
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  112. ^ Hawkworld #2 (1989) "Freefall"
  113. ^ Hawkworld #3 (1989) "Phoenix Flight"
  114. ^ Hawkworld (vol. 2) #5 (October 1990) "War of the Shadows"
  115. ^ Hawkworld (vol. 2) #9 (March 1991) "Hawkwoman Caged!"
  116. ^ Hawkworld (vol. 2) #10 (April 1990) "Images"
  117. ^ Justice League United #1
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Firestorm titles
  1. ^ a b Gerry Conway (w), Pat Broderick (p). "Day of the Bison" The Fury of Firestorm, no. 1 (June 1982). DC Comics.
Green Lantern titles
  1. ^ Alan Moore (w), Dave Gibbons (a). "Mogo Doesn't Socialize" Green Lantern, vol. 2, no. 188 (May 1985). DC Comics.
  2. ^ Dave Gibbons, Geoff Johns (w), Patrick Gleason (p), Christian Alamy, Prentis Rollins (i). "Hunted" Green Lantern Corps: Recharge, no. 4 (February 2006). DC Comics.
  3. ^ Dave Gibbons (w), Dave Gibbons (p), Michael Bair, Keith Champagne (i). "The Hunt" Green Lantern Corps, vol. 2, no. 5 (December 2006). DC Comics.
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