Legion of Super-Heroes (1994 team)
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Legion of Super-Heroes | |
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Group publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 4) #0 (October 1994) |
Created by | Mark Waid and Tom McCraw (writers) Stuart Immonen (artist) |
In-story information | |
Base(s) | Legion headquarters Legion World |
Roster | |
See: List of Legion of Super-Heroes members | |
Legion of Super-Heroes | |
Cover of Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 4) #0 (October 1994). Art by Stuart Immonen & Ron Boyd. | |
Series publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing series, Limited series |
Genre | Superhero |
Publication date | (Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 4)) October 1994 – May 2000 (Legionnaires) October 1994 – March 2000 (Legion Lost) May 2000 – April 2001 (The Legion) December 2001 – October 2004 |
Number of issues | (vol. 4): 64 Legionnaires: 63 Legion Lost: 12 The Legion: 38 |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | Mark Waid Tom McGraw Dan Abnett Andy Lanning |
Penciller(s) | Lee Moder Jason Armstrong Scott Kolins Olivier Coipel |
Inker(s) | Ron Boyd |
Colorist(s) | Tom McCraw |
Creator(s) | Mark Waid and Tom McCraw (writers) Stuart Immonen (artist) |
The 1994 version of the Legion of Super-Heroes (also called the post–Zero Hour or Reboot Legion) is a fictional superhero team in the 31st century of the DC Universe. The team is the second incarnation of the Legion of Super-Heroes, following after the 1958 version, and was followed by the 2004 rebooted version. It first appeared in Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 4) #0 (October 1994) and was created by Mark Waid, Tom McCraw and Stuart Immonen.
Publication history
Following
While in some ways following the pattern of the original continuity, the new continuity diverged from the old one in several ways: some characters died as they had previously, others did not, and some Legion members spent time in the 20th century where they recruited
New writers Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning came on board with penciller Olivier Coipel to produce a dark story leading to the near-collapse of the United Planets and the Legion. In the wake of the disaster, a group of Legionnaires disappeared through a spatial rift and the two existing Legion series came to an end. The limited series Legion Lost (2000–2001) chronicled the difficult journey of these Legionnaires to return home, while the ensuing limited series Legion Worlds (2001) showed what was happening back in the United Planets during their absence.
A new series, The Legion, was launched in which the Legion was reunited and given a new base and purpose. Written for its first 33 issues by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, the series was cancelled with issue #38. The most notable addition to the team during the title's publication was the Post-Crisis Superboy, a 21st-century clone of Superman and Lex Luthor who had previously been granted honorary membership.
Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds
The Post-Zero Hour Legion reappeared in the 2008-2009
It is revealed at the end of the miniseries that Earth-247 and its entire universe were destroyed during the events of Infinite Crisis. The Post-Zero Hour Legion, under the guidance of
Members
Workforce
Workforce | |
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Publication information | |
The Workforce is a
Fictional history
The Workforce was founded by the corrupt industrialist
The team had little teamwork skills, often getting in each other's way in battle. McCauley would often shout orders at them through holographic projection, thereby telegraphing their moves to their opponents. Live Wire eventually quit and rejoined the Legion, inspiring other members to do the same, which forced McCauley to hire new members frequently.
A later version of the group consisted entirely of adults, to make the point that the Legion was endangering teenagers. However, a member of this group was actually the eight-year-old Lori Morning, using her H-Dial to appear adult.
The group disbanded during the "One Year Gap" and was replaced by the "Oversight Watch."
Membership
Original members
- Spider Girl (fired to create "Adult Workforce")
- Evolvo (fired to create "Adult Workforce")
- Ultra Boy (quit, joined Legion)
- Karate Kid(quit, joined Legion)
- Inferno (transported to 20th century Earth)
Later members
- Blast-Off ("killed", see Wildfire)
- Particon (contract bought out by R.J. Brande)
- Radion (contract bought out by R.J. Brande)
Adult Workforce
- Repulse
- Amber
- Dune
- Lori Morning
Appearances in other media
In the
See also
- Legion of Super-Heroes
- Legion of Super-Heroes (1958 team)
- Legion of Super-Heroes (2004 team)
- List of Legion of Super-Heroes members
- List of Legion of Super-Heroes publications
References
- ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.)
The previously uninterrupted adventures of the team from the 30th Century had ended in the chaos of Zero Hour. But in this zero issue written by Tom McCraw and Mark Waid and drawn by Stuart Immonen, a new incarnation's adventures were only just beginning.
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has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - OCLC 213309017.
- ^ "GEOFF JOHNS: LEGION OF 3 WORLDS, I - NEWSARAMA". 2008-12-16. Archived from the original on December 16, 2008. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
- ^ Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds #5 (July 2009)
External links
- Legion of Super-Heroes (Post-Zero Hour) at the DC Database Project
- The Legion of Super-Heroes Reference File
- Workforce at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original).