- Young Justice
"This article is about the comic book series and team. For the rapper called Young Justice, see
List of Wu-Tang Clan affiliates ."Superteambox
imagesize=
caption=Cover art for Young Justice #40, by Todd Nauck and Lary Stucker.
team_name=Young Justice
publisher=DC Comics
debut="Young Justice: The Secret" #1 (June 1998)
creators=Todd DeZago (writer)Todd Nauck (artist)
base=Justice League Cave; Catskill Mountain Hotel
members=Robin
Superboy
Impulse
Wonder Girl
SecretArrowette
Empress
CM3Beast Boy
Flamebird
Batgirl
Lagoon Boy
L'il Lobo/Slo-bo
The Ray
memberlist=
subcat=DC Comics
hero=y
villain=
sortkey=PAGENAME|Young Justice is a fictional
DC Comics superhero team consisting of teenaged heroes. The team first appeared in "Young Justice: The Secret" (June 1998). ArtistTodd Nauck has drawn almost all of the comics featuring the group;Todd DeZago wrote their early adventures, and their ongoing series was written almost entirely byPeter David .The team was formed at a time when DC's usual teen hero group the Teen Titans had become the Titans, a group consisting of now adult former Teen Titans. Like the original Teen Titans, Young Justice was centered around three previously established teen heroes, Superboy, Robin and Impulse, but grew to encompass most teenaged heroes in the
DC Universe .In the 2003
mini-series "Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day", both groups disbanded and members of each formed two new teams of Teen Titans and Outsiders.Fictional history
The team was first formed in a one-shot, part of the "Girlfrenzy"
Fifth week event , called "Young Justice: The Secret", written byTodd DeZago , where they first encountered the mysterious superheroine Secret. They next appeared together in theJustice League miniseries, "World Without Grown-Ups", also written by Dezago, in which a magical being moved all adults to an alternate world. This was when they first stumbled upon the abandoned Justice League Cave inHappy Harbor (formerly called "The Secret Sanctuary"). When the ongoing title began in September 1998, the three heroes had formed a clubhouse in the Cave. However, in the first issue, they woke the robot superheroRed Tornado who continued to be a recurring character throughout the series' run, acting as something of a mentor. From issue 4, the group doubled in number with the addition of 3 teen superheroines: the second Wonder Girl, Secret, andArrowette .One of the key events of the series was the "Young Justice: Sins of Youth"
fifth week event in March 2000 (takes place between Young Justice 19 and Young Justice 20), which reversed the ages of young and old heroes thanks toKlarion the Witch-Boy andDoiby Dickles , former sidekick ofAlan Scott and member ofOld Justice . During this event, Superboy's girlfriendTana Moon was killed, Wonder Girl decided to no longer use her wig, and Jack Knight (Starman) decided to give the Cosmic Rod to Courtney Whitmore, the secondStar-Spangled Kid , who later becameStargirl . It also marked the transition between the original six and the new cast, with Empress joining right after this storyline and Li'l Lobo being created by it.Li'l Lobo was Lobo who was transformed into a
teenager by the events of Sins of Youth. In this state, he joinedYoung Justice and duringOur Worlds at War accompanied them toApokolips , where he was killed in combat. However, the aforementioned magical accident had restored his ability to regrow from a single drop of blood, and millions of Lobos rushed into battle with Apokoliptian soldiers, whom the Lobos quickly defeated. The Lobos then turned on each other, and the surviving Lobo regrew to adulthood. Any memory he may have of his days as a member of Young Justice will most likely be thought of as nothing more than a bad dream.An additional teenage Lobo remained, having hidden from the fight; he rejoined Young Justice and chose to rename himself Slo-bo. Soon this clone began to degrade, first going blind. Before he could die, however,
Darkseid teleported him to the headquarters of Young Justice One Million in the 853rd Century, turning him into a (still aware) statue in the process.All four series featuring Young Justice characters took part in the "World Without Young Justice" crossover in April 2002. It ran through "Young Justice" #44, "Impulse" #85, "Robin" #101, "Superboy" #99, and concluded in "Young Justice" #45.
The series ended with #55, at which time the membership was Superboy, Robin, Impulse, Wonder Girl, Slo-Bo, Empress,
Snapper Carr and the Ray, as well as many reserves. In the follow up miniseries "Young Justice/Titans: Graduation Day", the group disbanded. Robin, Superboy, Impulse, and Wonder Girl went on to form a new team of Teen Titans. Past Young Justice members such as Secret, Empress, Snapper, Ray, and Arrowette either retired or moved on to other teams.A short Young Justice story is added into Teen Titans #50, where Wonder Girl and Robin remembering the old YJ days, and in particularly the newly deceased Bart Allen. The pair would share stories about how Bart would impulsively make mistakes such as causing an international incident in Gorilla City, failing to realize he fellow teammates were badly made robots and publishing the team's secret identities in a Young Justice comic book.
Awards
The 1,000,000 issue of the series was a part of the "
DC One Million " storyline, which was a top votegetter for theComics Buyer's Guide Fan Award for Favorite Story for 1999. Said story involved Justice Legion T, an 854th Century trio of young heroes: Robin the Toy Wonder (a robotic Robin), Superboy OMAC (One Millionth Actual Clone, a play on the classic OMAC character) and Impulse (aSpeed Force -influenced energy being, presumably either personified by the spirits of previous persons who used the heroic name, or else the living embodiment of random thoughts lost in the Speed Force).External links
* [http://users.rcn.com/aardy/comics/awards/cbg.shtml Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Awards]
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