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The release of Justice League Spectacular launched the revised Justice League titles with new writers and artists. [3] The Justice League titles expanded to four by June 1993: Justice League America (formerly Justice League International), Justice League Europe (retitled as the second volume of Justice League International), Justice League Quarterly, and Justice League Task Force.
DC Comics had the first fictional universe of superheroes, with the Justice Society of America forming in the Golden Age of Comic Books in the 1940s. This shared continuity became increasingly complex with multiple worlds, including a similar team of all-star superheroes formed in the 1960s named the Justice League of America, debuting in The Brave and the Bold Volume 1 #28.
This category collects images that are scans, screen captures, photos, and/or illustrations of the Justice League and related characters and intellectual properties for which DC Comics holds the copyright and/or trademark.
The Justice League of America, one of the most famous superhero teams, as they appear in JLA, Secret Origins. Art by Alex Ross . The following is a partial list of teams of superheroes from various comic books , television shows, and other sources.
The Global Guardians is a team of DC Comics superheroes whose members hail from countries around the world. [1] The concept originated in the Super Friends Saturday morning cartoon, which aired after the comics stories in Super Friends #7-9, in which several heroes (Black Vulcan, Samurai, Apache Chief and El Dorado) were added to the Justice League to give it more ethnic diversity.
The Justice League, or Justice League of America (JLA), is a group of superheroes appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.The team first appeared in The Brave and the Bold #28 (March 1960).
When the Justice League Europe team was reformed as La Fraternité de Justice et Liberté, the team did not know that member Icemaiden had been surreptitiously replaced by the daughter of supervillain The Mist. This new Mist killed three members of the team, including slitting Constance D'Aramis' throat, in Starman (vol. 2) #38. [3] [1]
Blue Jay and the Silver Sorceress join Justice League Europe. [3] Justice League Quarterly #3, by Mike McKone (1991). Justice League Quarterly #3 (1990) features Mitch Wacky (the amusement park owner) travelling back in time to prevent the Extremists from destroying Angor. This story introduces more members of the team (now called the ...