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New Gotham has a thriving metahuman underground, mostly made of metahumans who are trying to live their own lives, although a self-hating metahuman, Claude Morton (Joe Flanigan), tries to convince the police that all metahumans are evil.
In DC Universe, a metahuman is a character with superpowers. This is a list of metahumans that have appeared in comic book titles published by DC Comics , as well as properties from other media are listed below, with appropriately brief descriptions and accompanying citations.
E. Lockhart, writer of Whistle: A New Gotham City Hero, states that she drew inspiration for the novel from her own Jewish upbringing, and modeled Down River after the Lower East Side of New York City. She was also inspired by Kamala Khan / Ms. Marvel from Marvel Comics, as that character is the first Muslim superhero to headline a comic book ...
Former operatives are Major Force, Mace Gardner (brother of Guy Gardner), Loria a New Blood, the metahuman known as Sledge, and an army of armored men known as Sweepers. The Quorum sponsored and funded the Blood Pack, a superhero team made up of "New Bloods", in a failed attempt to create a superhuman army based on their DNA. [39]
B. Baby Wildebeest; Ballistic (DC Comics) Bane (DC Comics) Baron Bedlam; Baron Blitzkrieg; The Batman Who Laughs; Battalion (DC Comics) Beast Boy; Big Sir (character)
Duke Thomas is a fictional character appearing in comics published by DC Comics.He was created by Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo. [1] He was introduced as a supporting character of Batman, his first appearance being in 2013 in Batman (vol. 2) #21, [2] before later leading a youth vigilante movement inspired by Robin, in the comic book We Are...
Livewire (Leslie Willis) is a supervillain appearing in multimedia produced by DC Entertainment, and American comic books published by DC Comics.Created for Superman: The Animated Series, the character appeared in March 1997 in Superman Adventures #5 (based on the animated series).
Killer Croc escaped custody and sought revenge on Harvey Bullock and two other criminals who got him in jail. Batman tracked him down and Croc went into a homicidal rage. When new water tunnels were built, which would flood Killer Croc's new home, Croc seemingly sacrificed himself to hold the water back when they finally were open. [6]