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Avalon: the homeworld of DC Comics' King Arthur. Bellatrix: the homeworld of Green Lantern Boodikka. Beltair IV: the homeworld of the Aquoids. Bizarro World: also known as Htrae, is the homeworld of Bizarro. Biot: the Manhunter manufacturing facility and planet. Bolovax Vik: the homeworld of Kilowog, located near the Great Bear constellation.
Blackfire (DC Comics) Blaze and Satanus; Blockbuster (DC Comics) Blok (character) Bloody Mary (DC Comics) Blue Snowman; Bolt (DC Comics) Bombshell (DC Comics) Bookworm (character) Bork (character) Brain Storm (character) Brain Wave (character) Brainiac (character) Brainiac 8; Brick (character) Paula Brooks; Brother Grimm; Bug-Eyed Bandit ...
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List of DC Comics characters: W; List of DC Comics characters: X; List of DC Comics characters: Y; List of DC Comics characters: Z; By type. List of 100 Bullets ...
Metropolis is a fictional city appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, best known as the home of Superman and his closest allies and some of his foes.First appearing by name in Action Comics #16 (Sept. 1939), Metropolis is depicted as a prosperous and massive city in the Northeastern United States, in close proximity to Gotham City.
DC Nation (vol. 2) #0 (May 2018) Also known as the Four Brothers on Colu and the Four Mothers on Mars; they are eons-old entities believed to have created life in the Prime Universe, only to consume it at the end of the Universe, to determine which of their nature had had the most impact on the Universe: their names are Mystery, Entropy, Wisdom ...
The following fictional characters are listed in alphabetical order by the name of their supervillain persona. Each character's first appearance and brief biographies of each fictional character are also listed, staying to their fictional histories and characteristics in the DC Universe. Sometimes more than one fictional character will share a ...
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.