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The character of Superman was created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, and has been continually published in a variety of DC Comics book titles since its premiere in 1938. . There have been several versions of Superman over the years, both as the main hero in the stories as well as several alternative versi
Pages in category "Alternative versions of Superman" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Superman (1978 film series character) Superman (DC Extended Universe) Superman (Earth-One), the Silver Age incarnation of Superman Superman (Earth-Two), an alternate version of the fictional superhero
Superboy-Prime (Clark Kent, born Kal-El), also known as Superman-Prime or simply Prime, is a DC Comics superhero turned supervillain and an alternate version of Superman.The character first appeared in DC Comics Presents #87 (November 1985) [1] and was created by Elliot S. Maggin and Curt Swan (based upon the original Superboy character by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster).
Superman of Earth-Two (Kal-L) is an alternate version of the fictional superhero Superman, who appears in American comic books published by DC Comics.The character was introduced after DC Comics created Earth-Two, a parallel world that was retroactively established as the home of characters whose adventures had been published in the Golden Age of comic books.
Alternative versions of Superman (14 P) U. Ultimate Marvel characters (21 P) Pages in category "Alternative versions of comics characters" The following 11 pages are ...
This version survived Krypton's destruction and accompanied Lara and Kal-El to Earth, where he sets up the corporation JorCorp while Lara establishes the self-help movement 'Raology'. An alternate universe variant of Jor-El appears in Superman Adventures. This version is a resident of a Kryptonian city that survived Krypton's destruction.
His costume and name are similar in design—albeit with a different color scheme—to the costume of Nova, an "imaginary story" version of Superman who lost his Kryptonian powers and became a Batman-like crimefighter in a two-part story. [2] This version of the character also reappeared as one of several alternate versions of Superman. [3]