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Marvel Comics, a rival comic book publisher, noticed the Justice League's success and created the Avengers and the Fantastic Four. The initial Justice League lineup included seven of DC Comics' superheroes who were regularly published at that time: Superman , Batman , Aquaman , the Flash , Green Lantern , the Martian Manhunter , and Wonder Woman .
Collecting Justice League Dark #0–40; Justice League Dark Annual #1–2; Justice League Dark: Futures End #1, Constantine #5, #9–12; I, Vampire #7–8; Justice League #22–23; Justice League of America #6–7; The New 52: Free Comic Book Day Special Edition #1; Trinity of Sin: Pandora #1–3, #6–9; and Trinity of Sin: Phantom Stranger ...
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.
JLA: Shogun of Steel (2002) – Set in feudal Japan. Justice Riders (1997) – The JLI as a group of marshals, gamblers, inventors and various other characters in the Wild West. League of Justice (1996) – A quartet of teenagers find themselves joined up with fantasy fiction versions of the Justice League members.
JLA (comic book) JLA – Paradise Lost; JLA: Act of God; JLA: Age of Wonder; JLA: Created Equal; JLA: Destiny; JLA: Earth 2; JLA: Shogun of Steel; JLA: The Nail series; JLA/Avengers; JLA/The 99; The Jurassic League; Justice (DC Comics) Justice League 3000; Justice League Dark; Justice League Elite; Justice League Europe; Justice League ...
The Justice Society or Justice Society of America is a team of comic book superheroes in the DC Comics Universe.First appearing in the Golden year of 1940, the team was originally named the Justice Society of America before being reintroduced in the year of 1960 under its current and most-known name, Justice League of America.
The Justice League travels to the Marvel Universe and are shocked (especially Superman) by the Avengers' failure to improve their Earth's condition; for example, the Flash (Wally West) encounters a non-human-looking mutant running away from an anti-mutant mob and the Flash protects him from the mob.
The crossover was spread across nine issues of various comic book titles, beginning and ending with the two-issue limited series titled Justice League: Endless Winter. Additional chapters appeared in issues of the ongoing series Flash , Aquaman , Justice League , and Justice League Dark and in three one-shot specials focused on the characters ...