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Superboy Volume 3: Lost collects Superboy vol. 5 #13-19; Superboy Annual vol. 5 #1, 200 pages, December 2013 Superboy Volume 4: Blood and Steel collects Superboy vol. 5 #20-27, 160 pages, July 2014 Superboy Volume 5: Paradox collects Superboy vol. 5 #0, #28-34; Superboy: Future's End #1, 232 pages, January 2015
The character gradually aged, however, and by the time Superboy #1 was published, Superboy was usually depicted as being in his early teens. Billed as "The Adventures of Superman When He Was a Boy", Superboy stories in both Adventure Comics and Superboy treat him as essentially a junior version of Superman.
Superboy was conceived as a way to utilize one of the licenses that father-son duo Alexander Salkind and Ilya Salkind had been in possession of for over a decade. In order to produce the first entry in the Superman series of films starring Christopher Reeve, the Salkinds had to pay Warner Bros. a fee to license the intellectual property.
Superboy starred in his own feature in the revival of Adventure Comics, which began publication in August 2009 (see Superboy of Steel/Adventure Comics #1–3 & #5–8). He then moved to his own comic again, with the new series starting up in late 2010 before being canceled in August 2011 at issue #11 and relaunched from issue #1 in September as ...
The Adventures of Superboy is a series of six-minute animated Superboy cartoons produced by Filmation that were broadcast on CBS between 1966 and 1969. The 34 segments appeared as part of three different programs during that time, packaged with similar shorts featuring The New Adventures of Superman and other DC Comics superheroes. [1]
Meanwhile, Superboy begins burning a hole through a 6-foot-thick (1.8 m) door, that is locked tight and armed with explosives, in order to get access to the missiles so he can deactivate them. Luckily, with seconds to spare, Billy disarms the security door and Superboy is able to break through and deactivate the missiles.
The Legion of Super-Heroes became a regular feature in Adventure Comics with issue #300, [1] but were relegated to back-up feature beginning with issues #381. [2] The Superboy comic book changed its title to Superboy starring the Legion of Super-Heroes with issue number #197. [3]
Superboy (vol. 3) – The third Superboy series ran from February 1994 through July 2002 with 100 issues, four Annuals, a #1,000,000 issue and a two-issue miniseries titled Superboy Plus/The Power of Shazam! #1 and Superboy Plus/Slither #2. The series featured Conner Kent (Kon-El), the clone of Superman and Lex Luthor. [25]
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