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An enemy of Superman, Mongul is stronger than him, intelligent, and can use telekinesis. [69] Green Lantern is a member of the Green Lantern Corps and a former fighter pilot. [70] He gets his powers from a special ring that allows him to channel will power to create objects out of light. [71]
The character was given an origin story in Green Lantern #23.2 by his co-creator Jim Starlin and artist Howard Porter as homage to the writers who participated in developing the character. He has become one of Superman's most enduring enemies belonging to the collective of adversaries that make up his rogues gallery.
A Kryptonian martial artist and man-hater who was sent to the Phantom Zone for murdering several men, she is able to beat Superman using her knowledge of Horo-kanu, a Kryptonian martial art enabling the user to immobilize an opponent via pressure points (this character was used as the basis of General Zod's lover, Zaora). General Zod
Having absorbed magic from Doctor Fate and Green Lantern, Grundy is easily able to defeat the combined might of Superman, Flash, Earth-Two Hawkman, Earth-One Hawkman, and Green Lantern, until he is defeated by both Green Lanterns and sealed in Slaughter Swamp. The alien child is finally reunited with his pet and sent back to his own dimension.
‘Superman’ Trailer: A Bloodied Man of Steel With Green Lantern, Hawkgirl and Krypto the Superdog: ‘We’re Embracing All of the Mythology,’ Says James Gunn Adam B. Vary December 19, 2024 ...
Henry "Hank" Henshaw is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, also known by the name Cyborg Superman.Created by writer-artist Dan Jurgens, the character originally appeared primarily as an enemy of Superman, and in beginning with a 2007 storyline, he was developed into an enemy of the Green Lantern Corps.
Guy Gardner was created by John Broome and Gil Kane in Green Lantern (vol. 2) #59 (March 1968), although the character was changed significantly in the 1980s by Steve Englehart and Joe Staton who turned him into a jingoistic parody of an ultra-macho "red-blooded American male."
Doomsday is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.Created by Dan Jurgens, the character first made a cameo appearance in Superman: The Man of Steel #17 (November 1992) before being fully introduced in Superman: The Man of Steel #18 (December 1992). [2]