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Emerging from the timestream before Savitar, Max Mercury became a mentor to the Flash family's various members and other speedsters, secretly preparing them against the day Savitar would exit the timestream. [3] Reappearing decades later, Savitar found that his cult had grown in his absence, awaiting his return.
In DC Comics' The Flash comics and The CW's The Flash TV series, the speedster Savitar is an enemy of the Flash who named himself after the Hindu god. [ 21 ] In a fiction by author Ryan Sequeira, called "EvOLv", where Savitr has been named as one of the Supreme Gods - parallel with Shiva - The God Savitr is referred to as the source of light in ...
Free-of-charge version available Spaced repetition Number of sides Supports Unicode Supports image Supports audio Other formats Printable Import-export Supports sync Plugin support Working offline Anki: AGPLv3 (personal computer, Android), proprietary Yes (except iOS) Yes Multiple Yes Yes Yes Video, LaTeX, HTML: Plugin [1] Yes Yes Yes Yes
A fully formed alive-and-well Bart Allen, in his Kid Flash uniform, appeared before him. [15] When the New 52 universe began, the Kid Flash working with the Titans was known as Bart Allen. He ended up with a different backstory, and eventually was written out of the storyline. He was later replaced as Kid Flash by Wally's cousin, Wallace West.
Savitar may refer to: Savitr, or Savitar, a Vedic solar deity associated with the Aditya class of divinities; Savitar (comics), a supervillain in comic books published by DC Comics; Savitar, a character from Sherrilyn Kenyon's Dark-Hunter series; Savitar, the yearbook of the University of Missouri (in print, 1894–2005)
A flashcard or flash card is a card bearing information on both sides, usually intended to practice and/or aid memorization. It can be virtual (part of a flashcard software ) or physical. Typically, each flashcard bears a question or definition on one side and an answer or target term on the other.
Waid also wrote All-Flash #1, which acted as the bridge between the two series. [2] DC had solicited The Flash: The Fastest Man Alive through issue #15. All Flash #1 replaced issue #14 and The Flash (vol. 2) #231 replaced issue #15 in title and interior creative team only. The covers and cover artists were as solicited by DC, and the ...
In The Flash #761, it was revealed that Eobard Thawne was responsible for manipulating Wally into killing the heroes at Sanctuary. Later this whole story was recollected in The Flash Annual #1 (2021), stating that Wally West was not responsible for these deaths, and it was revealed that the Speed Force caused it while trying to expel Savitar.