A list of puns related to "Central City (DC Comics)"
Nobody has any idea when or where he could run by or show up. If I was just walking around or driving and a yellow streak zoomed past me at 1000 mph I would shit my pants. Surely this would be causing wrecks or heart attacks or something.
Iβm hearing mixed things from my seniors and teachers as well veterans. They say Gotham isnβt as bad as it used to be but itβs still rather awful. Metropolis is better and less depressing. Central city while smaller has its issues but not as bad Gotham. Then thereβs Star city, Coast City, jump cityβ¦ etc So what city PD should I look into trying to apply too.
Edit: Just Graduated from.
Legacy heroes in superhero comics are great. The journey of a young hero taking the mantle and weight of a great hero that came before can be a story for the ages if done right, as seen with the likes of Dick Grayson, Miles Morales, Wally West, Cassandra Cain, Kamala Khan, and countless others. But legacy heroes can also be the source of endless fandom drama, stirring up heated arguments and pitting fans against fans, fans against writers, writers against editors, and so on.
I've written previously about how DC turned Batgirls fans against each other, and then re-united them against the company. And have maybe willed a Batgirls book into existence. Today, we're tackling an even more contentious subject: the many, many Green Lanterns, and how DC's treatment (both good and bad) of one hero Hal Jordan ignited the wrath of multiple character fandoms.
#In Brightest Day...
To start, here's a quick primer. A Green Lantern is a superhero who has the ability to create green hard light constructs using a ring that gets its power from a power lantern. With their power ring, a Green Lantern can construct anything they put their mind to: boxing gloves, guns, cars, Wonder Woman, girlfriends, etc.
While Alan Scott was technically the first Green Lantern, created in the "Golden Age of Comics" (which spanned from the 1940s to early 50s), the modern GL mythos that we know today came about in the "Silver Age" (mid-1950s to 60s), along with Hal Jordan, who is the most well-known and most marketed Green Lantern today. Hal was a test pilot who received a power ring and lantern from a dying alien whose ship crashed on Earth. With the ring in hand, Hal joined the Green Lantern Corps, an interstellar force that policed the universe. The Green Lantern Corps was overseen by the Guardians of the Universe, who are connected to the Green Lantern Central Power Battery. Hal was adventurous, brash, and cocky. And he was infamously an idiot.
Hal wasn't the on
... keep reading on reddit β‘Khalid Nassour is an Egyptian-American medical student who is a descendent of Ancient Egyptian Pharaohs and the great nephew of Kent Nelson. On a visit to a museum he found the Helmet of Fate, which started to talk to Khalid giving him vivid hallucinations. After putting it on he learned more about it and how to control it becoming the powerful sorcerer known as Doctor Fate.
#Nabu
Looked up information on ancient Egypt on Khalidβs laptop to get him to learn about him ^(Doctor Fate #2)
Can speak with Khalid using his long dead human body ^(Doctor Fate #2)
Came to Khalidβs hand when he called for it ^(Doctor Fate #3)
May be increasing Khalidβs intelligence so he can finish his class easier ^(Doctor Fate #6)
Made a bullet disappear before it could hit Khalid ^(Doctor Fate #11)
Lended Khalid his wisdom allowing him to take dirt from a landfill he didnβt even know existed ^(Doctor Fate #13)
Forcefully teleports Khalid away abandoning Superman in an alternate dimension with Xanadoth the Lord of Chaos ^(Superman #24)
Later posses Superman to help defeat her ^(Superman #24)
Summons Kent Nelson to defend Khalid after he was overwhelmed ^(Justice League Dark #27)
#Strength
Tears off a car door ^(Doctor Fate #2)
Backhanded away a jackal after it but his leg ^(Doctor Fate #2)
Tears off another car door ^(Doctor Fate #4)
Tackled a weakened Anubis off of his dad ^(Doctor Fate #5)
Tore out large chunks of the ground and piled it up to support a collapsing bridge ^(Doctor Fate #8)
Threw a small demon off of his arm ^(Doctor Fate #14)
#Durability
Objective
The Turtle is a villain to the Flash and a conduit of the Still Force. Once a gifted scientist interested in observing the mysterious force behind momentum, a lab accident turned Russell Glosson into an ancient man with the ability to slow his surroundings to a crawl. Heβd turn to crime to fund his research until encountering the Flash, when he would become obsessed with the superheroβs unique speed signature and attempt to steal it ever since.
For unexplained reasons, the Turtle was turned into a baby and carried around by Gorilla Grodd as a part of Lex Luthorβs Legion of Doom. Any feat performed in this state is marked [Baby].
Hereβs Barry Allenβs respect thread for scaling
##Physicals##
Strength
Durability
##Still Force Manipulation##
Slowing and Halting
Against Objects
Against Enemies
A race track is built along the Milky Way galaxy, and everyone is has enough oxygen supply to make it around. 3 laps. On your marks, get set, go!
(Comment who gets second to dead last as well)
There is going to be a lot of answers to this question for sure because there is a lot of people that you can fully choose in general
like him "holding back" shouldn't mean his full power is somehow magically stronger than people of the near the same/comparable ,the exact same, or far more power than him. Hell WM alone has shown better feats against him by herself but all of sudden her and like 4 other powerhouses can't take superman at "full power"???
Mine has to be either Scott Pilgrim (2010), Super (2010) or Dredd (2014)
Title, everyone in-character.
first few years as the human body can literally only take so much , alot of his body should be stiff and hard to move , his range of motion should be hampered and he shouldn't be able to nearly as much after all the injuries he's sustained
Power Girl is in that strange category of superheroes who aren't quite iconic enough to be household names, but can still spark arguments among hardcore fans. Yet most of her notoriety stems from exactly one thing. And if you're a fan, you probably already know what I mean.
First making her debut in All-Star Comics #58 in February 1976, Power Girl (also known as Karen Starr and Kara Zor-L) first came to prominence as a member of the superhero team "The Justice Society of America". She can fly, she's superhumanly strong, and she has x-ray vision and heat visionβwhich you might recognize as Superman's powers. That's because she's also Superman's cousin, and a fellow survivor of the planet Krypton's destruction.
Now, even if you're only casually aware of the Superman comics, you might know that Superman has a younger female cousin who also fights crime. But doesn't she call herself "Supergirl"?
Well, yes. And that's where it gets complicated.
See: Power Girl is actually an alternate version of Supergirl from the alternate world of "Earth 2"βwhich is technically a whole universe, and was created before there was an "Earth 1". And, strangely enough, that's probably the least confusing thing about this whole mess.
So why is there an alternate version of Supergirl?
Answering that question actually requires diving head-first into the bizarre history of American superhero comics and their odd relationship with American history.
See: the American comic book industry really took off at the height of the Great Depression, when cheap entertainment was in high demand. Comic books were an appealing source of affordable entertainment for American kids struggling through the Depression, and superhero stories were a great escapist fantasy for people who needed a spark of hope in a time of hardship and uncertainty. This led to a famously fertile period in the history of American comic books known as "The Golden Age of Comics", which lasted roughly from 1938 to 1945. And National Allied Publications (eventually renamed "DC Comics") emerged as one of the biggest comic book publishers in the world during that period.
For various reasons, superhero comics briefly dipped in popularity after World War II, forcing DC Comics to cancel several of their monthly comic books and retire their lead characters. A-Listers like Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman survived, but mid-tier characters li
... keep reading on reddit β‘Also who goes out first and who goes out second and so on
Everyone can use their powers and can go all out
Battle Location : An alternate universe in which every character can use their powers
SCP Foundation :
All The SCPS
Cthulhu Mythos :
All The Beings
Marvel Universe :
Everybody
(Ranging from Superheroes to God level beings)
DC Universe :
Everybody
(Ranging from Superheroes to God Level Beings)
Anime :
Every Cosmic Level up being
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