[1] Ray Terrill appeared in The CW's fourth annual Arrowverse crossover event with Arrow, The Flash, the Legends of Tomorrow, and Supergirl titled "Crisis on Earth-X".
He was played by Russell Tovey, who would also voice character in the CW Seed series Freedom Fighters: The Ray.
The dying man admits that he was the Golden Age Ray, and that exposure to sunlight will activate Raymond's own light-based superpowers.
Raymond eventually decides to take up the mantle of "the Ray", defeats the evil Doctor Polaris, and succeeds in dissuading the light entity from its destructive purpose.
The last adventure of Justice League Task Force involved their traveling to the center of the Earth and into Skartaris, world of the Warlord.
Ray's own monthly comic, penned by Christopher Priest and drawn mainly by Howard Porter, ran for 28 issues from 1994 to 1996.
His relationship with his father is strained several times as he discovers the extent of Happy's manipulative streak, and the well-intentioned deceptions he had perpetrated concerning his own family.
When Death Masque targets Ray's mother, he manages to re-program and then destroy the computerized villain for good.
Brought together to take down Vandal Savage, the team eventually disbands and Ray presumably continues a solo hero career.
On their mission, Ray, along with several other modern-day "Freedom Fighters", fight to release the captured Daxamite people from imprisonment.
He is with the team during their assault on Zandia on behalf of Empress and uses up his entire supply of energy to strike a crippling blow against the vampire Lady Zand.
In the interests of expanding Young Justice, then leader Wonder Girl agrees to make the team part of a reality TV show.
After Secret is depowered by Darkseid, Ray leaves the team, which itself disbands soon afterward following the death of Donna Troy.
Ray is captured for Alex's master plan, but later escapes during the battle in the Arctic along with Power Girl, Breach, Lady Quark and all the other prisoners attached to the reality altering tower created from the Anti-Monitor's corpse.
Ray was also part of the large superhero team drafted by Alan Scott to fight Black Adam, who was, at the time, menacing China.
Though captured by the villainous Red Bee, Ray and the rest of the Fighters eventually manage to turn the tables on the insect alien invaders, defeating them.
He acted as a courier due to his ability to escape the Anti-Life Equation's powers and delivered the Daily Planet issues still being produced from Superman's Fortress of Solitude.
When the Justifiers attacked the Justice League Watch Tower, Ray turned into a carrier wave capable of teleporting most of the people there away, although Green Arrow chose to stay behind to buy them time.
He later managed to create a massive Metron Emblem across Earth, severely disrupting the Anti-Life broadcast and damaging Darkseid's operation enough to seriously cripple it.
In Blackest Night, Ray obtains a Black Lantern power ring at the behest of Simon Stagg and brings it to an underground lab for examination.
Ray eventually settles in Vanity, Oregon (previously seen in Aztek) where he saves a childhood friend from a supervillain hate-group.
In the comic book Countdown: Arena, Ray is revealed as an analogue of the Wildstorm Universe character Apollo, another light-based superhero.