TheGreen Lantern Corps is an intergalacticpeace keeping agency appearing in comics published byDC Comics. They patrol the farthest reaches of theDC Universe at the behest of the Guardians, a race of immortals residing on the planet Oa. According to DC continuity, the Green Lantern Corps have been in existence for three billion years. Currently operating amongst the 3600 "sectors" of the universe, there are 7204 members (known commonly as Green Lanterns). Each Green Lantern is given a power ring, a tool granting the use of incredible abilities that are directed by the wearer's own willpower.
In 1959, during a revival of the popularity of superhero comics in America, DC Comics' editorJulius Schwartz decided to reinvent the 1940s superhero character Green Lantern as a science fiction hero. Schwartz's new conception of Green Lantern had a different name (Hal Jordan), costume, and origin story, and no connection to the original Green Lantern. Whereas theGreen Lantern of the 1940s was a lone vigilante who only had adventures on Earth, the new Green Lantern was but one of a group of interstellar lawmen who all called themselves Green Lanterns. The group is first mentioned inShowcase #22 (1960) when a dying Green Lantern passes on his ring to Hal Jordan. Over the years, writers have introduced a large cast of Green Lanterns in both supporting and starring roles.
The first appearance of a power ring was inAll-American Comics #16 on July 14, 1940, the flagship title of comic book publisherAll-American Publications, which featured the first appearance ofAlan Scott. CreatorMartin Nodell citedRichard Wagner's opera cycleThe Ring of the Nibelung and the sight of a trainman's green railway lantern as inspirations for the combination of a magical ring and lantern.[1]
Scott's ring is powered by the Green Flame, a magically empowered flame contained within a metallic alien orb that was found and forged into a lantern and ring by a lampmaker named Chang.[2] Later writers revised this to be a fragment of the Starheart, a mystical object created by theGuardians of the Universe to contain magic.
When the Green Lantern character was reinvented, beginning with the introduction ofHal Jordan, themagic ring concept was replaced with a scientifically based one.[3][4] The new version of the ring is created by the Guardians of the Universe, who also create the Green Lantern Corps.
No hard upper limit to the power ring's capabilities has yet been demonstrated; it is often referred to as the most powerful weapon in the DC universe.[5]
The ring can generate solid energy constructs that can be modeled into whatever shape the user desires. It also generates a protective force field that enables the user to fly and survive in space.[6]
Power rings are able to give off electromagnetic radiation of various frequencies. This radiation can be focused by the wearer into a beam, similar in appearance and effect to alaser. They also allow real-time communication between the different alien species of the Corps, translating all languages in the universe.
Green Lantern rings possess a limited amount of charge and must be periodically recharged.[5][7] Various devices and abilities can drain the ring of its power against the will of its wearer, or absorb its energy for later use.[8][9][10][11]
Originally, power rings were unable to affect objects colored yellow. The reason why the rings were unable to affect yellow objects has changed from writer to writer. In early stories, it was because of a necessary design flaw.Gerard Jones revised this, in a story that revealed that the Guardians could change the weakness at will.[12] InGreen Lantern: Rebirth, the "yellow impurity" is the result of the fear entityParallax being imprisoned in the Central Power Battery.[13]
By far, the most significant limitation of the ring is the willpower of the wielder. Only people with exceptional willpower can use a ring, a restriction which makes use of the rings by average individuals difficult.[14]
Power rings originally possessed programming to prevent the wearer from killing sentient beings.[15][16] This restriction was rescinded by the Guardians to combat the Sinestro Corps, then for the general execution of their duties.[17][10]
All power rings need periodic recharging. When doing so, many Green Lanterns recite an oath while the ring charges. The oath is not required to charge the ring, but is recited to reaffirm commitment to the Green Lantern Corps. While many Green Lanterns create their own oath, the majority use the Corps' official oath as a sign of respect.[18] As additional Corps were introduced into DC continuity, with their own rings, corresponding oaths unique to each Corps were introduced as well.
While Green Lantern villainSinestro had his own version of the power ring since 1961, a yellow one that exploited the one color Green Lanterns were ineffective against,[19] in the late 2000s writerGeoff Johns and artistEthan Van Sciver worked the concept of a spectrum of rings, revolving around the colors of the rainbow as well as a corresponding emotion from which they derive their abilities.[20][21] The storylines "Sinestro Corps War" and "Blackest Night" introduce the rest of the spectrum, along with its emotions, corps and rings:red (rage),orange (greed),yellow (fear), green (willpower),blue (hope),indigo (compassion),pink (love),black (death), andwhite (life).[10][14][22][23][24][25]
Atrocitus, a member of the Empire of Tears on the planet Ysmault, forged the first Red Power Battery from the innards of Qull, the being who tellsAbin Sur the prophecy of the Blackest Night.[22] Red power rings are powered by rage and charged by the blood of those the user kills.[22][24][26]
Red rings replace the user's heart and transform their blood into corrosive plasma.[22] They normally cannot be removed without killing the user.[27][28]
An orange ring is powered byavarice (greed) and unlike the other Corps, only one living individual can wield the power of the orange light.
The orange ring allows Larfleeze the same abilities as other Corps: flight, aura projection and orange light constructs. As a side effect of wielding the orange light, Larfleeze is burdened with insatiable hunger.[29] The orange light allows Larfleeze to absorb the energy of other power rings and steal the identities of those he kills, transforming them into an Orange Lantern construct.[29][30][31] By being in constant contact with his main power battery, Larfleeze has become one with his power source. This allows him to maintain a power level high enough to support an entire Corps of orange constructs even when separated from it.[32]
The first yellow ring is acquired bySinestro following his banishment to the antimatter universe ofQward.[19] The ring is later obtained byGuy Gardner, who uses it until it is destroyed by Parallax.[33][34] TheWeaponers of Qward later forge two more rings to be used against the Green Lantern Corps, wielded byFatality and Nero.[35]
Following his return in theGreen Lantern: Rebirth storyline, Sinestro obtains a new yellow ring and founds the Sinestro Corps.[36] Yellow rings are fueled by fear instead of willpower, but function the same as their green counterparts. Members of the Sinestro Corps are chosen for their ability to instill fear in others.[37]
According to Ethan Van Sciver, the ring's symbol is based on ancient carvings made by beings who looked into thegullet of Parallax and survived.[38]
As the Sinestro Corps War ends, former Guardian of the UniverseGanthet creates the first blue power ring.[39] Blue rings are fueled by hope and must be near an active Green ring to tap into their full potential. Otherwise, the blue rings are only capable of the abilities of ordinary Green Lantern rings.[40] This is because hope requires willpower to enact it.[40]
While within the proximity of a Green Lantern's ring, a blue ring can heal wounds, neutralize the corrupting effects of a red ring, block the energy-stealing properties of orange rings, drain power from yellow rings, and charge a green ring to twice its maximum power level.[22][40][39] Blue rings can also grant precognitive visions to their wielders.[41]
The Indigo Tribe, wielders of the indigo light of compassion, make their first extended appearance inBlackest Night: Tales of the Corps #1 (July 2009). Unlike other Corps, the Indigo Tribe carry carved, lantern-like staves.[42] InBlackest Night #5, it is established that Indigo Tribe members use their staffs instead of power batteries to charge their rings. In addition to being able to store indigo light energy, they can replicate the power of nearby Lanterns.[43][44]
Like all power rings, indigo rings are capable of the default Corps abilities of flight and protective aura generation.[45] Indigo rings give their users the ability to perceive compassion and force compassion onto those who feel none.[44][46] Paradoxically, indigo light has the ability to heal individuals with great empathy and to expose people to pain they have inflicted on others.[46][47] Indigo Rings can teleport their users and others over intergalactic distances. This ability utilizes a great deal of power, so Indigo Tribe members use it sparingly.[47]
At the conclusion of theMystery of the Star Sapphire story arc, theZamarons realize that the power of theStar Sapphire gem is too great for them to control, so they forge a Violet Power Battery and power ring out of the Star Sapphire gem. This allows them to distribute its powers throughout an entire Corps of Star Sapphires.[48]
Violet rings are fueled by the emotion of love.[25] They allow their wearer to fly, generate a protective aura, and create violet light constructs.[49][50] Violet rings have several unique abilities. They can create crystals which can be used to imprison members of other Lantern Corps, gradually transforming them into Star Sapphires.[51][39] The rings can also detect when a love is in jeopardy, locate it, and then create a connection to the heart that can be used as a tether. Sapphires are also shown as being able to show others their greatest love.[50] Star Sapphires are able to teleport to escape attackers, while their constructs release disorienting dust when destroyed.[32] Violet rings can restore the recently deceased to life by drawing power from the heart of one that loves them.[52]
Although Violet rings do not have a particular weakness to other colors, they are more susceptible to controlling their user by their own power. Love is one of the two emotions on the far ends of the emotional spectrum, and has a much stronger influence over its user.[53]
Black power rings are fueled by death, instead of light from the emotional spectrum.[24] Black Hand becomes the first Black Lantern after killing his family and committing suicide.[54] The symbol on black rings (a triangle pointing down, with five lines radiating up) is the same symbol used by Hand and his family.[54]
Black rings are wielded by the deceased. In addition to the abilities granted to them by the rings, Black Lanterns retain any superpowers they may have had in life and are capable of regenerating their bodies.[55] Black rings are able to read the emotions of the living as colored auras that correlate to the emotional spectrum.[55]
The first white power ring is depicted during theBlackest Night event.[56] The exact capabilities and limitations of white rings are unknown, but they have been shown as capable of providing their bearers with the default Corps abilities of flight, protective aura generation, and light construct creation.[57] White rings are also capable of resurrecting the dead.[28] They are also shown "overriding" rings of other colors, turning them white for a period of time.[28]
Introduced as a new piece of the Emotional Spectrum following the fall of theSource Wall, the members of the Ultraviolet Corps tap into the Invisible Emotional Spectrum and possess Power Ring tattoos. Its members are capable of using Ultraviolet energy which takes the form of purple/violet light, fueled by ambient negative energy. They can infect others with the most hateful, self-destructive, and primeval elements in their mind. Ultraviolet rings feed off the bloodlust and self-hatred of anyone they come in contact with, assimilating them into the Ultraviolet Lantern cause.
In the 2020-21Legion of Super-Heroes comic series, Gold Lantern (Kala Lour) wields a gold power ring powered by the golden light of joy. The Gold Lantern ring allegedly contains the power of the combined energies of the emotional spectrum and their various abilities.
Introduced duringAbsolute Power, the Sorrow Lantern is the manifestation of the misery the Emotional Spectrum experienced during Thaaros' attacks. The first Sorrow Lantern is Nathan Broome, Carol Ferris' ex-fiancée, who infused his engagement ring with sadness after Carol abandons him to save Hal Jordan, transforming him into the Sorrow Lantern.[58] As the Sorrow Lantern, Nathan's body constantly emits a grey mist that he can solidify and generate constructs that force sorrow onto others.[59]
InSuperman & Batman: Generations, it is stated that the rings' weakness is only based on what the users believe the rings are vulnerable to;Alan Scott believes that his ring was vulnerable to wood because he was caught off-guard by someone wielding a wooden block the first time he used the ring. After Scott's retirement, the ring is passed toKyle Rayner, who uses it with the belief that it is vulnerable to yellow, until Hal Jordan dons the ring to battle Sinestro, deducing that it has no true vulnerabilities.
In theElseworlds storylineJLA: Another Nail, a power ring essentially merges with aMother Box whenBig Barda is chosen as a Green Lantern when the war betweenNew Genesis andApokolips becomes so intense that the Green Lantern Corps step in. Through its link to the Mother Box, the ring also hosts the consciousness ofMister Miracle.
In the crossover miniseriesStar Trek/Green Lantern, various members of the seven Corps are transferred into thenewStar Trek timeline when Nekron's latest attack causes Ganthet to initiate the 'Last Light' protocol, transferring the last power rings and living wielders to another universe. After Hal Jordan, Carol Ferris andSaint Walker make contact with theUSSEnterprise, along with DoctorLeonard McCoy,Nyota Uhura, andPavel Chekov being chosen by reserve rings of the Indigo Tribe, Star Sapphires and Blue Lantern Corps respectively,Montgomery Scott's analysis of the rings allows him to create his own version. At the conclusion of the series, Scotty receives permission to put the rings into mass production. In the sequelStar Trek/Green Lantern: Strange Worlds,James T. Kirk obtains a prototype Green Lantern ring.
The Universal Ring appears inPlanet of the Apes/Green Lantern. This version was created by the Guardians of the Universe by using sorcery and science in conjunction. The user of this ring can tap directly into the energies of the emotional spectrum and harness any color. However, the Guardians of the Universe would eventually discover that users of the ring will succumb to its power and be forced to create more rings. As they were unable to destroy the ring. The Guardians sent it to a version of Earth locked in a time loop, isolating it from the rest ofHypertime. However, one Universal ring was given Katerina Mar in secret.
InBatman: The Dawnbreaker—part of a series of one-shots looking at darker alternate versions of Batman—when Bruce Wayne was chosen as the Green Lantern immediately after the deaths of his parents, his rage and emotional trauma were so great that he was able to overcome the ring's limitations against using lethal force by nothing more than strength of will. This dark attitude results in him drawing on an unspecified 'void' through his ring, which allows him to overwhelm even a large number of other Green Lanterns and Guardians when they come to confront him over his violation of the rules of Oa.[60]
InGreen Lantern: Earth One, the power rings are seen merely as powerful weapons. They do not choose their users, can be used by anyone and do not require the wielder to be capable of great willpower or overcoming fear and do not appear to possess any degree of artificial intelligence or capacity for independent action. No oath is required to charge them. Following the apparent destruction of the Central Power Battery by theManhunters, the power of the rings was limited, but their full power was unlocked following the recovery of the battery from Oa.
Several Green Lantern Corps members make cameo appearances in theSuperman: The Animated Series episode "In Brightest Day...", which features Kyle Rayner.
The Green Lantern Corps appear in theJustice League episodes "In Blackest Night" and "Hearts and Minds".
The Green Lantern Corps is the primary focus ofGreen Lantern: The Animated Series, with Hal Jordan and Kilowog as the main cast. Also in the show are "frontier space" members of the corps.
Within theArrowverse, during theCrisis on Infinite Earths crossover event, footage from theGreen Lantern film was used to establish the existence of the Green Lantern Corps within the universe of Earth-12.
The series finale ofArrow, titled "Fadeout", ends withJohn Diggle approaching what appears to be a Green Lantern ring that has fallen from the sky, suggesting that he will become a Green Lantern. In theeighth season ofThe Flash, Diggle relinquishes the Green Lantern ring to be with his family.
The Green Lantern Corps is the focus of a following film,Green Lantern: Emerald Knights, which features several stories about various non-Terran Green Lanterns.
The Green Lantern Corps appear intheGreen Lantern live-action film. The leader of the Corps is Sinestro, with Abin Sur, Kilowog, and Tomar-Re being central characters.
InJustice League vs. the Fatal Five,Jessica Cruz, Kilowog, and Salaak appear as representatives of the Corps. Holographic depictions of most of the Lantern Corps' human members – Hal Jordan, Guy Gardner, Kyle Rayner, John Stewart, and Cruz – also appear as part of a Justice League exhibit in theLegion of Super-Heroes Museum.
Green LanternYalan Gur appears in a flashback in theJustice League film. He is seen fighting againstSteppenwolf and his army ofParademons but is overpowered and killed by Steppenwolf.[61]Kilowog andTomar-Re were intended to appear in a post-credits scene, but were ultimately scrapped.[62]
The Green Lantern Corps (Hal Jordan, John Stewart,Arisia Rrab, Arkkis Chummuck, Chaselon, Galius Zed,Green Man, Guy Gardner, Kilowog, Palaqua, and Salaak) appear inJustice League Dark: Apokolips War. Jordan is among the heroes decimated by Paradooms (hybrids of theParademons andDoomsday), while other Lanterns and the Guardians are slaughtered by Darkseid himself on Oa.
The Green Lantern Corps appear inGreen Lantern: Beware My Power. Before the film's main events, the Green Lantern Corps are revealed to have been slaughtered by Sinestro and a Parallax-possessed Hal Jordan. After the Sinestro Corps are defeated, Jordan's successor John Stewart takes Jordan's rings and sends them to new owners to rebuild the Corps.
The Green Lantern Corps are featured heavily inMortal Kombat vs. DC Universe. Hal Jordan appears as a playable character and one of the game's major protagonists; the Guardians appear in the game's Oa based stage, and the rest of the Corps members are mentioned to be trying to contain the universe wide crisis taking place during Story Mode. Additionally,Sonya Blade's in-game ending depicts her becoming the Green Lantern of theMortal Kombat universe after gaining the ring of a recently deceased Corps member.
InInjustice: Gods Among Us, Kilowog and Atrocitus make cameo appearances. The Corps also appear in Green Lantern's victory pose. At the end of the game, the main universe's Hal Jordan brings the parallel universe's version of himself, who had joined the Sinestro Corps during Year Two, and Sinestro to the remaining Guardians of the Universe at Oa for trial with a Green Lantern at the center of the court.
This listing is for the "core" series or limited series to feature the Green Lantern Corps in their various incarnations over the years:
Tales of the Green Lantern Corps (three-issueminiseries, May–July 1981)
Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #1 (1985)[65] (first annual issue forGreen Lantern (vol. 2) series)
The Green Lantern Corps #201–224 (June 1986 – May 1988) (formerlyGreen Lantern (vol. 2) series; officially re-titled asThe Green Lantern Corps (by cover only from #201–205) with #206 in the comic's legal indicia)
Annuals #2 (Dec. 1986), #3 (Aug. 1987)
Green Lantern Corps Quarterly #1–8 (Summer, 1992 – Spring, 1994)
Green Lantern: The New Corps (two-issue miniseries, 1999)
Tales of the Green Lantern Corps (collectsTales of the Green Lantern Corps #1–3 and back-up stories fromGreen Lantern (vol. 2) #148, 151–154, 161–162, 164–167), 160 pages, April 2009,ISBN1-84856-147-4, DC Comics, March 2009,ISBN1-4012-2155-6[66]
Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Vol. 2 (collects back-up stories fromGreen Lantern (vol. 2) #168, 169, 171–173, 177, 179–183, 185, 187–190 andTales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #1), 144 pages, February 2010,ISBN978-1-4012-2702-9[67]
Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Vol. 3 (collectsGreen Lantern Corps #201–206), 144 pages, Oct. 2010,ISBN1-4012-2934-4[68]
Green Lantern Corps: Beware Their Power Vol. 1 (hardcover collectsGreen Lantern Corps #207–215 andGreen Lantern Corps Annual #2–3). DC Comics, 296 pages, February 2018ISBN1-40127-750-0
Revolt of the Alpha Lanterns (collectsGreen Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #21–22, 48–52, 176 pages, hardcover, May 2011,ISBN1-4012-3139-X, paperback, June 2012,ISBN1401231403)
The Weaponer (collectsGreen Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #53–57, 128 pages, hardcover, October 2011,ISBN1-4012-3281-7, paperback, October 2012,ISBN1401234410)
Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors (collectsGreen Lantern: Emerald Warriors #1–7, 176 pages, August 16, 2011,ISBN1-4012-3079-2)
War of the Green Lanterns (collectsGreen Lantern (vol. 4) #63–67,Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #58–60, andGreen Lantern: Emerald Warriors #8–10, 240 pages, hardcover, November 2011,ISBN1-4012-3234-5, paperback, September 2012,ISBN1401234526)
War of the Green Lanterns: Aftermath (collectsGreen Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #61–63,Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors #11–13, andWar of the Green Lantern: Aftermath #1–2, 208 pages, hardcover, January 2012,ISBN1-4012-3343-0)
Green Lantern Corps Vol. 1: Fearsome (collectsGreen Lantern Corps (vol. 3) #1–7, 160 pages, Hardcover, September 2012,ISBN1-4012-3701-0 )
Green Lantern Corps Vol. 2: Alpha War (collectsGreen Lantern Corps (vol. 3) #0, #8–14, 192 pages, Hardcover, July 2013,ISBN1-4012-4012-7 )
Green Lantern Corps Vol. 3: Willpower (collectsGreen Lantern Corps (vol. 3) #15–20,Green Lantern Corps Annual #1, 256 pages, Hardcover, December 10, 2013,ISBN1-4012-4407-6 )
Green Lantern: Rise of the Third Army (collectsGreen Lantern Annual #1,Green Lantern (vol. 5) #13–16,Green Lantern Corps (vol. 3) #13–16,Green Lantern: New Guardians #13–16,Red Lanterns #13–16,Green Lantern Corps Annual #1, 416 pages, Hardcover, September 10, 2013,ISBN1-4012-4499-8)
Green Lantern: Wrath of the First Lantern (collectsGreen Lantern vol.5 #17–20,Green Lantern Corps Vol.3 #17–20,Green Lantern: New Guardians #17–20,Red Lanterns #17–20, 416 pages, Hardcover, February 25, 2014,ISBN1-4012-4409-2)
Green Lantern Corps Vol. 4: Rebuild (collectsGreen Lantern Corps (vol. 3) #21–27,Green Lantern Corps Annual #2, 208 pages, Paperback, July 8, 2014,ISBN1-4012-4745-8 )
Green Lantern: Lights Out (collectsGreen Lantern #24,Green Lantern Corps #24,Green Lantern: New Guardians #23–24,Red Lanterns #24,Green Lantern Annual #2,Green Lantern #23.1: Relic, 192 pages, Hardcover, June 24, 2014,ISBN1-4012-4816-0)
Green Lantern Corps Vol. 5: Uprising (collectsGreen Lantern Corps #28–34,Green Lantern Corps Annual #2 andGreen Lantern #31–33)
Green Lantern Corps Vol. 6: Reckoning (collectsGreen Lantern Corps issues #35–40)