This version is an art teacher at Blue Valley High School before being transformed into a paint monster by Cindy Burman and Eclipso.
After Stargirl frees and cures him, Deisinger undergoes a psych evaluation before being killed by Icicle's mother Lily Mahkent.
After Wally helps Linda deal with her apparent possession by the ancient Irish bard Seamus O’Relkig, they become close and later marry.
[10] This version is the corrupt chief psychiatrist of Slabside Maximum Security Prison who utilizes unethical and lethal methods to rehabilitate criminals.
[11] Lashawn Baez was a graduate student at Central City Medical School, but put her studies aside to help her father Tomas when he got ill, requiring a kidney transplant.
[16] In addition, Thomas expanded the character's backstory and origin so that it incorporated large chunks of The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket by Edgar Allan Poe and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas by Jules Verne.
She was created by writer James Tynion IV and artist Mikel Janín, and first appeared in Justice League (vol.
Perpetua is a sixth-dimensional being, the creator of the multiverse, and the mother of the Monitor, Anti-Monitor, and World Forger, who respectively guard the positive, anti-matter, and dark matter realms.
[17] During the Dark Nights: Death Metal event, Perpetua is freed after the World Forger's servant Barbatos and the Batman Who Laughs destroy the Source Wall.
Introduced in "The New Golden Age" event, Molly Preacher is a school girl and friend of Betsy Rose who became the sidekick of Miss America and wields a magic pitcher that enables her to create various weapons and large amounts of water.
In a twisted alternate reality, a counterpart of Central City Police Department member Jared Morillo worked as an assassin.
Derek Powers, also called Blight, is a supervillain who appears in the Batman Beyond (1999–2001) animated series, voiced by Sherman Howard.
Eventually, he retires from leading his company to focus on finding a cure, appointing his estranged son Paxton as his replacement.
[39][40] In Doomsday Clock, Pozhar appears as a member of the People's Heroes and closes Russia's borders to all foreigners, be they metahuman or not.
Preus is a fictional DC Comics supervillain who first appeared in The Adventures of Superman #625 (April 2004) and was created by Joe Kelly and Talent Caldwell as part of their "Godfall" arc.
[41] For years, Sergeant Preus had proudly served the Citizen's Patrol Corps, a police force that kept the peace in Kandor under the Kryptonian banner of El, their "creator".
[41] Due to the compression of time, more than a century had passed inside the bottle city (compared to only a handful of years outside it) during which Preus and his fellow Kandorians had come to worship "The Superman" as their "god in heaven" above.
The Corpsman was also a devout xenophobe, who dispensed justice against "non-K" (Kryptonian) dissidents that threatened their way of life, especially a citizen named Kal-El, who tainted Paradise when he seemingly murdered several Kandorians.
[43] He was also unaware that the "victims" were constructs created by an alien telepath, Lyla, who had brainwashed Kal-El into believing that Kandor was a never-exploded Krypton.
Preus followed them, but exposure to Earth's air and yellow sun drastically affected him, giving him strange, new powers equal to Superman's while amplifying his already-unbalanced racist views.
His increasing prominence eventually led both the Martian Manhunter and Jimmy Olsen to investigate, only to have both of them captured by Preus and his men.
[48] Preus possesses powers similar to those of Superman, such as superhuman strength and speed, flight, invulnerability, X-ray vision and enhanced senses.
The Protector (Jason Hart) is a superhero appearing in media published by DC Comics, primarily as an ally of the Teen Titans.
Introduced in the seventh season, he recklessly uses his abilities until deciding to help Barry Allen, Alexa Rivera and Deon Owens subdue the Speed Force and restore balance to their world.
In the eighth season, Malik falls ill with a time sickness, causing the Negative Still Force to steal his likeness until he recovers.
Raven's soul-self was finally able to break their trance and the Titans united to battle the Puppeteer and his toy robotic army.
[68] The original Puzzler is an unnamed non-costumed criminal who is skilled in parlor games and puzzles and operates a protection racket in Metropolis.
[69] The character, along with most of the Golden Age Superman material, was later assigned to the universe of Earth-Two in the DC Multiverse, before being removed from continuity during Crisis on Infinite Earths.
2) #187 (December 2002) as the supervillain identity of Valerie van Haaften, a new version of the character whose body was composed of living "puzzle pieces".
In the first appearance, as "Puzzler", she admits that she is a large fan of Superman's, and initially attempted to join several super groups to no avail.