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Earth-10's Lex Luthor arrives on the Satellite, warning them that the Anti-Monitor has found the Bleed and forced its way inside. After it destroys Earth-146 and Earth-2, Question and Earth-1's Lois Lane deduce that Luthor revealed the Bleed's location to the Anti-Monitor in exchange for Earth-10's survival. Luthor explains that he and his ...
The Anti-Monitor is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. [1] He served as the main antagonist of the 1985 DC Comics miniseries Crisis on Infinite Earths and later appears as an enemy to the Green Lantern Corps and the Justice League. [2] In 2009, Anti-Monitor was ranked as IGN's 49th-greatest comic book ...
The Anti-Monitor: Crisis on Infinite Earths #2 (May 1985) The villain behind Crisis on Infinite Earths, an event that rebooted the DC Multiverse. The Anti-Monitor is one of the most powerful beings in the DC Multiverse. This character has a strong metafictional nature. The Atomic Skull: Superman #323 (September 1976)
The Monitors are a group of fictional comic book characters, who appear in books published by DC Comics.. They are based on the Monitor and the Anti-Monitor, two characters created by comic book writer Marv Wolfman and comic artist George Pérez as the main characters of DC Comics' Crisis on Infinite Earths limited series.
In Green Lantern: Rebirth, Kyle Rayner is recorded saying that Ganthet could crack a planet in half with a thought and have been shown able to stagger Superman-Prime and the Anti-Monitor. The Guardians display the power of time travel as they send a time-lost Kyle Rayner back to his present timeline.
Captain Scarlet (character) Carl Brutananadilewski; John Carter of Mars; Casca (series) Castiel (Supernatural) Princess Celestia; Celestial Toymaker; Chia Black Dragon; Christian Walker (fictional character) Chucky (Child's Play) Chử Đồng Tử; Mort Cinder; Claudia (The Vampire Chronicles) Coeurl; Barnabas Collins; Quentin Collins; Coop ...
The Monitor rescues him and forces him to witness the destruction of others universes. In Crisis on Infinite Earths, the Anti-Monitor escapes his prison and ravages the multiverse. After the Anti-Monitor is destroyed and the multiverse reduced to a singular universe, Pariah, Lady Quark, and Harbinger embark to explore it. [2] [3] [4]
Synthetic humans made from plastalloy that were essentially immortal and indestructible that menaced the League. The Anti-Matter Man: Justice League of America #46 (August 1966) A powerful entity from the Anti-Matter Universe that destroyed all matter that it touched. The combined power of the Justice Society and the Justice League defeated him.