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Hackett is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Hackett is a former pilot of the Royal Air Force who later became a henchman of the heroin manufacturerChina White.[1] Decades prior, he manipulatedOliver Queen into investing in illegal offshore accounts.[2]
Two characters loosely based on Hackett,David "Dave" Hackett and his sonSam Hackett, appear inArrow, portrayed byBen Cotton and Luke Camilleri respectively. The former worked as a bodyguard forRobert Queen while the latter is a former minor criminal and electrical engineer. In flashbacks, Dave accompanied Robert on his yacht, theQueen's Gambit, as part of a business trip to China. However, the ship sank and Dave, Robert, and Robert's sonOliver were left adrift on a raft until Robert killed Dave and himself to ensure Oliver's survival. In the present, Sam hacks theDA office's computer and obtains unredacted transcripts of Oliver's therapy sessions, through which Sam discovers his father's fate and plots revenge on Oliver. After Sam hacksStar City's power grid, Oliver attempts to calm him by telling his side of the story, but Sam refuses to stand down untilDinah Drake destroys Sam's machine and Sam is arrested.
Sebastian Hady is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Sebastian Hady was the corruptmayor ofGotham City, associated withCarmine Falcone, and eventually killed by the League of Shadows.[3]
Sebastian Hady appears inThe Penguin, portrayed byRhys Coiro. This version was a city councilman with a gambling addiction who used public funds to pay off his gambling debts.
Hagen is a character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Hagen is anAtlantean magic user who was trained by the Atlantean mageGamemnae. He tried to controlMera before being defeated byAquaman.[4]
In "Infinite Crisis", Hagen appears as a member ofAlexander Luthor Jr.'sSecret Society of Super Villains. He assists some of Aquaman's enemies in attacking Sub Diego, but is killed by theSpectre.[5]
Jack Haly (also known asC.C. Haly) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Jack Haly is theringmaster of Haly's Circus, whichDick Grayson and his family worked for. When the circus came to Gotham City, Haly was confronted byTony Zucco, who demanded protection money and murdered Dick's parents, theFlying Graysons, after he refused. Following that incident, Haly paid protection money to Zucco while Dick was taken in by Bruce Wayne.[6]
Hector Sanders Hall (also known asHektor Hol) is asuperhero appearing inAmerican comic books published byDC Comics. Created byRoy Thomas andJerry Ordway, he made his first appearance inAll-Star Squadron #25 (September, 1983). While having adopted various codenames, the character is frequently associated withHawkman-related characters.
Hector Hall is the son ofCarter andShiera Hall, theGolden Age heroes known asHawkman andHawkgirl.[8] Carter and Shiera werereincarnations of an ancient Egyptian pharaoh and his wife, both of whom had been killed and cursed by their rivalHath-Set. Unbeknownst to either of them, however, Hath-Set's curse also concerned the two's children. The curse of Seketh, the ancient Egyptian god of death, prophesied the combination of theSilver Scarab and the Eye of Ra, which would mean the end of the world. Hector is born without a soul and destined to be a vessel for the Silver Scarab, an agent of vengeance called forth by Hath-Set.[9]
Feeling neglected by his parents, Hector constructs a suit out of theNth Metal that granted his parents the power of flight, while also adding some solar improvements. Hector enrolls atUCLA and reunites with his childhood friend,LytaTrevor. The two quickly fall in love and decide to apply for membership in the Justice Society of America. However, they,Atom Smasher, andNorthwind are rejected due to their age and inexperience. AlongsideJade,Obsidian,Brainwave,Star-Spangled Kid,Power Girl, andHuntress, the heroes found a new group calledInfinity, Inc.[10]
After battling their parents and mentors (who were under the influence of Koehaha, the River of Evil), the team publicly reveals their secret identities and Hector announces his engagement to Lyta.[11] They have little time to enjoy their happiness as the entity that had been within Hector since his birth came forth, thanks to the manipulation of Hath-Set.[12] The reincarnated Silver Scarab battles Infinity, Inc. alongside Hath-Set and summons the Eye of Ra. The heroes manage to defeat Silver Scarab, but at the cost of Hector's life.[13]
Hector's consciousness is cast into the Dreaming, where he is discovered by Brute and Glob, former servants ofDream who manipulate him into adopting the identity ofSandman.[14] Some time later, Dream escapes captivity, returns Hector to the realm of the dead, and claims Hector's unborn sonDaniel, who is destined to become the next Lord of Dreams.[15]
Hector Hall later undergoes a reincarnation cycle that enables him to return to life. Shortly after his birth,Mordru accelerates Hector's aging process to adulthood, intending to usurp his power asDoctor Fate.[16] On a later adventure inKahndaq, Hector andNabu clash as the latter argues the legitimacy ofBlack Adam's current agenda and accuses him of blindly following his father. Nabu later takes control of Hector and imprisons his spirit in the Amulet of Anubis. Within the Amulet, he is reunited with the previous incarnations of Doctor Fate: Kent Nelson,Eric Strauss, andLinda Strauss, who help him trap Nabu inside the Amulet.[17] Lyta and Hector return to the Tower of Fate and live happily until they are trapped in Hell by theSpectre, who is on a rampage to destroy all magic.[18][19] Near death, Lyta and Hector enter a portal to the Dreaming as their physical bodies die.[20]
FollowingThe New 52 reboot in 2011, the histories of previous Doctor Fates, including Hector Hall, were erased from continuity.[21] In "Infinite Frontier", Hector as the Silver Scarab appears in a portrait of the Infinity Inc. members.[22] In a short backup story in the conclusion of theSuperboy: Man of Tomorrow limited series, Changeling appears during a battle between Hawkman, Hawkwoman, and various alien creatures. He introduces himself as his son Hektor Hol, much to Hawkman's surprise.[23]
Hector Hall appears inThe Sandman, portrayed byLloyd Everitt. This version died in a car accident.
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(August 2025) |
Catherine Hamilton-Kane is a character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Following the death of his wife Gabrielle,Jacob Kane later remarried Hamilton Rifle Company heiress Catherine Hamilton who becameKate Kane andBeth Kane's stepmother.[24]
Hammer is the name of several characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Ivan and his brotherIgor were acrobats who were turned into deadly agents by theNKVD's "Red Flag" program and fought theBlackhawks as Hammer and Sickle.[27]
The second Hammer is an unnamed man who fought the Blackhawks.[28]
Boris Ulyanov is a Russian man with super-strength and an expert at hand-to-hand combat who is the sister ofSickle. They went together as Hammer and Sickle and fought theOutsiders.[29]
In "Infinite Crisis", Hammer and Sickle joinAlexander Luthor Jr.'sSecret Society of Super Villains.[30]
The fourth Hammer is a British superhero who frequents a pub called "Time in a Bottle".[31]
Sydney Happerson is a scientist working forLexCorp, deeply loyal toLex Luthor. Luthor threatens to launch a barrage of missiles atMetropolis, but is dissuaded by Superman, who states that he would be committing mass murder. Enraged by Luthor's refusal, Happersen presses the detonation switch himself and is killed by an accidental electric surge.[32]
Emilia Harcourt is a character from DC Comics created by Rob Williams andJim Lee, debuting inSuicide Squad #2 (2016).
Emilia Harcourt is anNSA agent sent to work withA.R.G.U.S. to oversee theSuicide Squad. However, she is actually a spy for a terrorist organization, and is eventually killed byAmanda Waller.[34]
In 2023'sBatman: The Brave and the Bold, Waller resurrects Harcourt using a Lazarus Pit.[35]
Emilia Harcourt appears in media set in theDC Extended Universe and theDC Universe, portrayed byJennifer Holland. This version is an agent of A.R.G.U.S., aide toAmanda Waller, eventual founding member ofCheckmate, and an ally and love interest ofPeacemaker.
Harlequin's Son is a character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
He is the son ofMolly Mayne / Harlequin and an unknown man and utilized the former's technology to become a villain. However, he eventually reforms and becomes an actor before mysteriously disappearing.[36]
InFlashpoint Beyond, Harlequin's Son is among the thirteen missingGolden Age superheroes who are kidnapped by theTime Masters before eventually being returned to his own time when the pods they were in failed and caused history to rebuild around them.[37]
He is later transported to the present day, targeted males who were abusive towards their male partners, and becomes an ally of theJustice Society of America when they apprehended him. It was also revealed that the fabric of his outfit was enhanced byWizard to provide him with some magical protection.[38]
Harm (William Hayes) is a teenage supervillain in the DC Universe. Created by writerPeter David and artistTodd Nauck, he first appeared inYoung Justice #4 (January 1999).
William demonstrated violent tendencies as a child; at the age of 11, he attempted to kill his adoptive father Burt by slitting his neck. Burt narrowly survived after William missed hisjugular vein and was left with a large scar.[39] As a teenager, William killed his adoptive sisterGreta by electrocuting her.[40][41]
As Harm, William confrontsYoung Justice and is fatally shot by Burt soon after.[42] In the "Day of Judgment" event, Harm returns fromHell after it is frozen over.[43]
Lian Harper is a character appearing in American comics published by DC Comics.
Lian is the daughter of superheroArsenal and the assassinCheshire. She is killed inJustice League: Cry for Justice whenPrometheus destroys Star City.[46] Years after her death, Lian is resurrected in theDC Rebirth relaunch and depicted asCheshire Cat, a thief andCatwoman's sidekick.[47][48][49]
Lian Harper appears inYoung Justice, voiced byZehra Fazal.[50]
Jay Harriman is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Jay Harriman is a member of theSons of Liberty.[51] He was among those killed byAgent Liberty after he learned from Superman that the Sons of Liberty killedPete Ross' predecessor.[52]
In the third volume ofBlack Lightning, Jay Harriman is reintroduced as an anti-metahuman councilman and the father of Tayler Harriman.[53] Black Lightning confronts Harriman with his knowledge that Harriman made use of the Sons of Liberty and manipulated theMasters of Disaster. After Black Lightning leaves, Harriman calls up someone to hook him up withTobias Whale.[54]
| First appearance | Action Comics #775 (February 2001) |
|---|---|
| Created by | Joe Kelly,Doug Mahnke, Tom Nguyen |
TheHat (Rampotatek) is a wannabe superhero in theDC Universe.
He is a Japanese member ofthe Elite who wields a hat powered by demonic magic. The team's violent actions lead them into conflict withSuperman, during which they are stripped of their powers.[55]
| First appearance | Future State: Justice League #1 (2021) |
|---|---|
| Created by | Ram V & Marcio Takara |
| Teams | Ogdoad Doctor Fate |
| Abilities | Hauhet's divine sphere of influence includes infinity, time, and eternity, allowing her to see through time and the multiverse and can bestow such powers to the Helm of Fate. |
Hauhet is a fictionalized version of theEgyptian entity of the same name, appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
A contemporary ofNabu in association with Doctor Fate, she acts as the patron deity within the Helm of Fate toKhalid Nassour. She first appears inFuture State: Justice League #1 within an alternate future parallel to the mainstream comic universe although she would later make her mainstream appearance inJustice League Dark Annual #2 (2022).
In the mainstream comic universe, Hauhet makes a brief appearance, the aforementioned event taking place years after; she is revealed to be the entity responsible for sending visions to Khalid Nassour, depicting the fall of the Tower of Fate through the machinations ofMerlin andArion. Upon further study, Khalid also learns that Merlin will bargain a deal withJason Blood, in which will lead to him betraying Justice League Dark and himself despite insisting otherwise. She later arranges a meeting with Diana through Doctor Fate's ankhs, having Diana act as a messenger for the urgency of the situation and warning him and the Justice League Dark to not allow Merlin access to the Helm of Fate. Both Wonder Woman and Khalid are initially skeptical of her nature and intentions.[57]
An alternate timeline variant of Hauhet appears inDC Future State.[58]
Further reading
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TheHead is an alien in theDC Universe. The character, created byGail Simone andGrant Morrison, first appeared inBrave New World #1, 2006.
Within the context of the stories, the Head is stranded on Earth after a failed plot by the microscopic alien race the Waiting to conquer it.
There have been two different characters named theHeadhunter that appear in American comic books published byDC Comics.
The Headhunter is a mercenary and nemesis of Batman who is hired by criminal Vincent Morelli to killCommissioner Gordon.[59]
In theDC Rebirth relaunch, Headhunter is killed bySwamp Thing.[60]
Another mercenary/serial killer called Headhunter (Moreland McShane) appeared in theCatwoman books. A former Marine, McShane is assigned to catch Catwoman by Gordon, but falls for her leading to her rejecting him once he knows her true identity. McShane is killed aboard Babylon Towers, leading Catwoman to report his body to the GCPD.[61]
This Headhunter was a warrior shaman who usedNth Metal weapons. He developed a particular fascination withHawkman, to the point of reanimating the bones of his previous incarnations.
The mercenary incarnation of Headhunter appears in the fifth season ofGotham, portrayed by Kyle Terry. This version, also known asWendell, temporarily replacedVictor Zsasz asPenguin's security counsel before Wendell was seemingly killed for his incompetence. He is later revealed to have survived after joining forces with Zsasz to fulfill a contract forSofia Falcone in her gang war against the Penguin.
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(August 2025) |
Heatstroke is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Joanne is a member of theMasters of Disaster who possesses pyrokinesis.[62]
A genderbent incarnation of Heatstroke named Joe appears inBlack Lightning, portrayed by Esteban Cueto. This version is an inmate who gained his powers through anA.S.A. experiment called "Project Masters of Disaster". While fightingBlack Lightning andThunder, Heatstroke is killed byLatavius "Lala" Johnson.
Hellhound is the name of three characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Kai was the best student in the Armless Master's dojo inGotham City. He later became a thief, mercenary, and enemy ofCatwoman before being killed during a meeting of Gotham gang bosses.
A second Hellhound,Jack Chifford, is introduced inVillains United as a member of theSecret Society of Super Villains. DuringSalvation Run, he is killed and eaten by "lion-lizards" while stranded on another planet.
In 2011, "The New 52" rebooted the DC universe. Hellhound appears as a member ofCheetah's Menagerie.[63]
Inspector Henderson is the name of two characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Originally created forThe Adventures of Superman, initially voiced byMatt Crowley and later by Earl George, InspectorWilliam Henderson is Superman's police contact. He would later appear inAction Comics #442 byElliot S! Maggin,Curt Swan andBob Oksner.[64][65] Following this, Henderson would make additional appearances inBlack Lightning, in which he has a son who joined the100 named Andrew,[66] andJohn Byrne's 1986Man of Steel miniseries before eventually becoming Metropolis'police commissioner. Additionally, a young Henderson who worked as a detective-sergeant and attempted to convince a young Superman, then known asSuperboy, to move from Smallville to Metropolis appeared inThe New Adventures of Superboy #6 (June 1980).
InspectorMike Henderson appears inSupergirl (vol. 5) #37 (March 2009) as an African-American detective who heads the Metropolis Metacrimes Division.
| First appearance | DC: The New Frontier #3 (May 2004) |
|---|---|
| Created by | Darwyn Cooke |
| Abilities | Uses sledgehammers |
| Aliases | John Wilson |
John Wilson, also known asJohn Henry, is aDC Comics superhero who appeared inDC: The New Frontier.
John Henry was a veteran of theKorean War whose family was killed by theKu Klux Klan. Devastated by the events and blamed for the murders, John forged two ironsledgehammers, donned anexecutioner's hood, and became a vigilante before eventually being captured and killed.[70]
InThe New Golden Age, John Henry's history is integrated into the main timeline. One of his sledgehammers is found by an unnamed old man and given to a youth who takes the name John Henry Jr.[36]
John Henry Jr. is a character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
John Henry Irons has a great-uncle of the same name who was inspired by the vigilanteJohn Henry after he was given one of John Henry's sledgehammers by a mysterious old man. After he brought the last of John Henry's murderers to justice, John Henry Jr. was kidnapped by theTime Masters when trying to look for the other sledgehammer that John Henry Jr. wielded.[71] John Henry Jr. was among the 13 missing Golden Age superheroes that were returned to their own time when the pods they are in failed causing history to be rewritten around them.[37] However, John Henry Jr. ended up a prisoner of the Childminder. He and the other missing sidekicks are eventually rescued byStargirl and transported to the present day.[72]
John Henry Jr. was hooked up with his grandnephew and his great-grandnieceNatasha Irons.[73]Mister Terrific later mentioned that John Henry Jr. is officially with his relatives.[74]
Heretic (also known as"Fatherless") is a character appearing in American comic books published byDC Comics debuting inBatman and Robin #12 (July 2010). He was created byGrant Morrison andDavid Finch.[75]
Heretic is an operative ofLeviathan who wears a steel bat-shaped mask and armor.[76] He is later revealed to be a genetically modified adult clone ofDamian Wayne created byTalia al Ghul.[77] Talia later seemingly kills Heretic after he kills Damian.[78]
Later, Heretic returns under the title of "The Other", having claimed aLeague of Assassins Lazarus Pit from the previous owner. Heretic/Other destroys Titans Tower, killsLady Vic, and hiresLobo to kidnap Damian. He is defeated by Robin and falls into a crevice.[79]
| First appearance | Batman Giant #4 (December 2018) |
|---|---|
| Created by | Brian Michael Bendis and Nick Derrington |
| Abilities | Uses guns and inherited some of her grandfather's divine powers |
| Aliases | Virginia Hex |
Virginia "Jinny" Hex is aDC Comics superheroine. She is the granddaughter ofJonah Hex and a member ofYoung Justice. She first appeared inBatman Giant #4 (December 2018).
Cecile Horton is a character appearing inAmerican comic books published byDC Comics. The character was created byCary Bates andCarmine Infantino, and first appeared inThe Flash #332 (April 1984). She was the defense attorney forBarry Allen / The Flash forProfessor Zoom's murder in "The Trial of the Flash" storyline.
A loose interpretation ofCecile Horton appears inThe Flash, portrayed byDanielle Nicolet.[81] This version is a defense attorney who goes on to enter a relationship withJoe West after helping solvemetahuman crimes and helping Team Flash on several occasions. Later in the series, she gains the metahuman abilities of telepathy and telekinesis and becomes the superheroVirtue.
Hourman (also spelledHour-Man) is the name of three different superheroes appearing in comics published by DC Comics. The original Hourman, Rex Tyler, was created by writer Ken Fitch and artistBernard Baily and first appeared inAdventure Comics #48 (March 1940), during theGolden Age of Comic Books.[82]
Rex Tyler, raised in upstateNew York, is a scientist who develops an affinity forchemistry, particularlybiochemistry.[83] After graduating college, he lands a job researching vitamins and hormone supplements at Bannermain Chemical. A series of discoveries and accidents lead him to the "miraculous vitamin" Miraclo, which gives the user superhuman strength and vitality for one hour at a time.[84][85] Feeling that Miraclo should be used for good purposes, Rex uses its powers to help those in need, becoming a superhero based in Appleton City and a founding member of theJustice Society of America.[86] It is later revealed that Miraclo is addictive and that Rex is struggling with its effects.
InZero Hour: Crisis in Time!, Hourman is killed byExtant, who causes him to age rapidly.[87][88] He is resurrected after the Hourman android takes his place in the battle with Extant, enabling him to survive. Hourman retires from heroics and provides technical support for theJSA All-Stars, of whom his son Rick is a member.[89]
Rick Tyler, Rex's son, becomes Hourman duringCrisis on Infinite Earths, using some of his father's Miraclo pills to save people trapped in a burning hospital. After serving for a few years as a member ofInfinity, Inc., Rick becomes addicted to Miraclo just as his father did.Amazo, posing as the android Hourman, cures him of his Miraclo addiction. Having conquered his personal demons, Rick joins the Justice Society.
TheHourman android is an android from the 853rd century constructed by Tyler Chemorobotics who possesses the capability for human emotions. Rex Tyler, the original Hourman, spent some time in the future and was involved in its construction.Metron later appoints the android as his heir and entrusts him with the Worlogog, an ancient artifact containing a map of space and time.
During "DC One Million", the entitySolaris places a virus in Hourman's body that disables his time-traveling abilities, strandingJustice Legion Alpha in the past and theJustice League in the future. After overcoming the virus, Hourman creates a duplicate ofKrypton and rescues its inhabitants from the past, creating the world of New Krypton in the 853rd century. Solaris' actions deeply affect Hourman, who travels to the present day and joins the Justice League. He damages the Worlogog and limits his own power to resemble his predecessors, giving him power for one hour at a time.
Hourman later joins theJustice Society of America and meets Rick Tyler, son and heir of the original Hourman. After leaving the group, Hourman gives Rick atachyon-filled hourglass that can see the future and temporarily resurrects his father, who was killed during theZero Hour: Crisis in Time! event.
In "The New Golden Age", the android Hourman is revealed to be the buyer who wanted to purchase the Lost Children, a group of kidnapped, time-displacedGolden Age sidekicks, from a Time Scavenger called Childminder.[90] It is revealed that Hourman is working for an adult version ofCorky Baxter called Time Master. After Hourman is reprogrammed and returns to his original self, he blasts Time Master into a time portal. Hourman brings the Lost Children to the present day, as returning them to their own times would cause a time paradox.[91][92][93]
Professor Hughes (first name unknown) is a character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Professor Hughes was a professor at Midwestern University.Jay Garrick worked under him while performing experiments that eventually gave him super-speed.[100][101]
InThe New Golden Age, Hughes is reimagined asDoctor Elemental, a supervillain and member of theInjustice Society who wields element-manipulating armor. In aretcon toFlash Comics #1, Hughes is said to have engineered the unlikely "accident" that transformed Jay Garrick into the Flash, making him Flash's oldest villain. In addition, he was also revealed to have created Ro-Bear and foundedS.T.A.R. Labs.[102] In the present, Hughes resurfaces and joinsScandal Savage's Injustice Society.[103]
Further reading
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TheHuman Cannonball (Ryan Chase) is asuperhero in theDC Universe. The character, created byTom DeFalco andWin Mortimer, first appeared inSuperman Family #188 (March 1978). Within the context of the stories, the Human Cannonball grew up in the circus and is a friend ofLois Lane. He has no superhuman powers, but can fly using an advanced jet-pack—he wears a cannonball-shaped helmet to allow him to crash into his targets head-on.
Further reading
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TheHyena is the name of twosupervillains published byDC Comics. The first Hyena debuted inFirestorm #4 (September 1978) and was created byGerry Conway andAl Milgrom.[104] The second Hyena debuted inThe Fury of Firestorm #10 (March 1983) and was created by Conway andPat Broderick. Both arewerehyenas who transform when under great emotional stress.
The first Hyena,Summer Day, is the sister of Doreen Day, a love interest ofFirestorm. She joined thePeace Corps as a result of relational issues with her father and was turned into a werehyena after an accident inAfrica. Taking the name the Hyena, Summer returned to America and began attacking both criminals and police officers. A result of her condition is a steadily progressing madness.[105]
The second Hyena,Jivan Shi, was apsychiatrist whom Summer Day had fallen in love with while he was attempting to treat her werehyena condition. One night, as Summer and Jivan were embracing, Summer transformed and infected him with the werehyena curse.[106] According toThe Fury of Firestorm #10–13, the madness suffered by the werehyenas is one's bestial side taking over, coupled with an exaggeration of negative emotions.
InInfinite Crisis,Deadshot killed one of the Hyenas after a prison breakout[107] and the other appeared as a member of theInjustice League inOne Year Later before being killed byParademons.[108]
A pack of werehyenas, presumably suffering from the same curse as Summer and Jivan, were seen in San Francisco before being defeated and cured.[109]
In 2011,The New 52 rebooted the DC universe. The Hyenas are reintroduced as mercenaries who possess superhuman physical abilities derived from special drugs.[110]
InForever Evil, the Summer Day incarnation of Hyena appears as a member of theSecret Society of Super Villains.[111]
The central character (aside from Oliver himself) in this issue is Lian Harper, aka Chesire Cat, aka the daughter of Roy Harper and Jade Nguyen – who's been popping up in her new identity here and there in Batman titles for a little while now. Seeing her finally back with her family feels so triumphant, righting one of DC's biggest wrongs in killing her off all the way back in Cry For Justice.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)The New Golden Age #1 was invoked but never defined (see thehelp page).We don't get many answers in this issue, and I still have quite a few questions, especially considering the reveal that the Matthew Tyler version of Hourman is the Buyer.
She has such compassion that she dedicates herself to saving the robotic Hourman, and it a significant touchstone to have her recall their time together in the JSA series. I was delighted by the events that Hourman went through and glad the heroes helped restore his heroic identity.