Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Batcave is accessible in the main campaign of Batman: Arkham Origins. From the cave the player can use the Batwing fast travel system, switch to alternate skins and enter the challenge map rooms as opposed to selecting from the main menu as in previous Arkham games. Alfred is also present in the cave, supplying Batman with gadget upgrades.
File:Batman Ninja vs. Yakuza League poster.jpg; File:Batman tactical suit JL and ZSJL.jpg; File:Batman The Dark Knight Returns (film).jpg; File:Batman v Superman - Dawn of Justice (soundtrack).jpg; File:Batman v Superman Dawn of Justice poster.jpg; File:Bat-Signal (Batman v. Superman-Dawn of Justice)..jpg; File:Batmobile (Batman v Superman ...
In Batman & Dracula: Red Rain, Wayne Manor is destroyed as part of a plan to destroy Dracula's vampire family, bombs exposing the interior of the Batcave to sunlight after Batman lured the vampires into the cave following a chase through Gotham's sewers that ended in the Batcave just as the sun rose. Although the manor collapses into the cavern ...
The Third Ghost of Batman, one of a series of Batman impostors created by Dr. Simon Hurt, became the new Azrael wearing a mystical suit of armor given to the original Batman by Talia al Ghul. In the New 52, Michael's absence from Batman's organization is explained by his choosing seclusion and daily prayer as a way of repenting for all that he ...
Batman's cage suddenly transforms into an elevator descending into the depths of Arkham Asylum. Batman interacts with a few prison cells before the last reveals a captive Joker. Batman is soon locked alone in a cell himself, which begins to change, displaying scrawled and bloody accusations of "killer" and "HA" on the walls.
The Batman Who Laughs is an alternate universe variant of Batman from Earth-22 in the Dark Multiverse who was transformed into a Joker-like form as part of the original Joker's dying scheme. He then takes over Earth, killing most of his allies and turning his son Damian Wayne into a mini-Joker.
The character first appeared in Batman #16 (April 1944), by writer Don Cameron and artist Bob Kane.Evidence suggests that Alfred was created by the writers of the 1943 Batman serial—Victor McLeod, Leslie Swabacker, and Harry Fraser—and that DC Comics asked Don Cameron to write the first Alfred story, which was published prior to the serial's release.
Professional baseball player Kenji "Ken" Sato returns home to Japan, despite being on the verge of winning a championship in America.Reporter Ami Wakita attributes his sudden departure to rumors of unfinished family business, but in reality it is because his father, Professor Sato, is the giant superhero Ultraman, and because Ken inherited his father’s powers, he reluctantly had to accept ...