Wonder Woman #46, Mar-Apr 1951, cover by Irwin Hasen.
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Wonder Woman #46, Mar-Apr 1951, cover by Irwin Hasen.

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Scenes from the fight between Superman and the first Nuclear Man (who acts like and resembles Bizarro, although the character is never called that) in Superman lV: The Quest For Peace (1987).
This is among the 45 minutes of footage that was cut from the film before its release, due to budget cuts and negative reviews from a test screening.
Uh…maybe?
(Green Lantern Volume 7 #23)
PG & Carter

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Aquaman #22 - "Trap of the Sinister Sea Nymphs" (1965)
art by Nick Cardy
Jay Garrick by Jerome Opena.
Legion of Super-Heroes #1 (DC, September 2026) variant cover by Hayden Sherman
Plastic Man #5 (1946)
written by Jack Cole & Gwen Hansen art by Jack Cole, Alex Kotzky, Bart Turney, & John Spranger
Justice League of America #191
DC, 1981
"The Key Crisis of the One-Man Justice League!", featuring the return of the Key and Amazo.
By Gerry Conway, Rich Buckler, & Pablo Marcos. Cover by Buckler & Dick Giordano.
https://www.comics.org/issue/35377/
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Justice League Quarterly #3: When You Wish...
by Keith Giffen; Mike McKone; Bob Smith; Gene D'Angelo and John Costanza
DC
Flash Annual #1: Death Touch
by Mike Baron; Jackson Guice; Larry Mahlstedt; Carl Gafford and Steve Haynie
DC
Kyle Rayner
by Jose Garcia Lopez
Source: Mike White (comicartfans)
Super Titles Round-Up (December 1994)
This month: Superboy gets eaten! Steel gets arrested! The Eradicator gets punched by Superman (again, from another angle)!
Superboy #10
Superboy and Tana Moon are spending a weekend on the Hawaiian town of Hilo to "figure out" their relationship, but they keep getting interrupted by giant monsters attacking the place. First it's a talking tree, then some talking electricity, and then the Godzilla knock-off seen on the cover. All three turn out to be a little blue guy called Bernard Emil Morlock (he prefers "B.E.M.") who has the power to transmute himself into anything he touches. Once discovered, he tries to turn himself into a car-themed monster, but Superboy punches him into the water...
...causing him to get transmuted into bits of liquid that get lost in the ocean. Superboy saved the day! And also, he might have killed a guy?! Superboy's pretty upset about it, and even yells at a crowd of people trying to cheer him for saving them, but soon enough he gives in and starts cheering himself too. Gotta say he dealt with that much faster than the time Superman felt bad over killing some guys.
Of course, B.E.M. isn't really dead -- that Silicon Dragon gang we've been seeing lately is already trying to put him back together. Meanwhile, Tana is so moved by seeing Superboy looking sad because he (thinks he) killed a guy that she kisses him, and I guess they're officially dating now. Huh, he would have probably killed someone earlier if he'd known that's what it'd take...
Steel #10
Speaking of members of the Superman Family killing people: this issue is about Steel being arrested for the murder of his psychic friend Rosie. As seen last issue, Rosie was actually killed by a big cat-like monster called Alter, but the cops think Steel did it because he happened to be near her body. Steel's cop ladyfriend, Shauna, helps him escape and find the real killer, who turns out to be... the belligerent detective from last issue who had "I'm a serial killer" written all over his face!!!
Actually, the detective has split personalities due to childhood abuse, so he didn't even know he was the killer. All of his victims were accused child abusers, except for Rosie, who became a victim of police violence AND supervillain violence because she was about to expose him. I'm sorry I ever doubted Rosie's powers -- it turned out she was TOO psychic for her own good.
Steel brings Alter down with Shauna's help, and he's thrown into the special section of S.T.A.R. Labs for villains who will never appear again (in this comic, anyway; he'll briefly show up in a Green Lantern issue). So, yeah, this is a pretty heavy issue, dealing topics like child abuse and the death of a recurrent character, on top of the usual gang violence. NEXT: Steel goes to space! How's that for tonal dissonance?
Outsiders #13
"DEAD AGAIN!," tie-in! An uncharacteristically pissed-off Superman stops by to fight the Eradicator because he thinks that's who put a Superman-looking corpse in his old tomb. Yes, this is (in part) a retelling of Action #704 from the Outsiders' perspective. We get some bonus dialogue when the Outsiders are trying to decide if they should help the Eradicator or not, and I finally get to read the end of the Eradicator's unfinished sentence, after 30 years: he says "Thank you."
(Yeah, I'd kinda figured.)
The Eradicator is so thankful to the Outsiders for trying to help him (even if they took their sweet time) that he proposes they stick together to "continue helping the innocent and crushing the guilty." And by crushing, of course, he means "killing." I thought they were already doing that, but okay. The rest of the issue is about non-binary light beings from another dimension coming to collect team member Halo, who used to be one of them. This serves as an excuse to inform us that her teammate Faust isn't into, uh, "Crying Game things."
That's what I get for trying to read the pages without the Eradicator in them. Next!
Anima #9
This one's about the titular teen heroine being stuck in another another dimension, which is actually kinda interesting but, you know, not our problem. Why am I telling you this? Because when she gets back to Earth at the end, she finds herself in Hawaii. Oh, and also, it's the future, and everything's on fire. Superboy is there, but he's older, has a scar over his one remaining eye, and he wants to kill her. I'm sensing a running theme here.
This will be continued in the next issue, which features the younger, non-scarred, less-murderous Superboy. Wait, Superboy in a dystopian future with a scar over his eye? Why do I feel like I JUST saw that somewhere? (My Adventures with Superman spoilers.)
The Time Trapper

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The Fury of Firestorm #1 second printing (DC, June 2026) variant cover by Diego Olortegui
Adventure Comics #449-452
DC, 1977
Featuring Aquaman.
Covers and interior art by Jim Aparo. Stories written by Steve Skeates (449) and David Michelinie (450-452).
Storyline continues in the revived Aquaman title (DC, 1977). Superboy stories begin in the next issue.
26.07