If you go by the standard continuity that Dick was eight when his parents died, (a) the Tim Drake origin story doesn't work, since I think there's got to be at least six years between Dick and Tim, and (b) you gotta wonder what the hell kind of parents the Flying Graysons were to let a kid that age do a quadruple-flip without a net.
'Same Time, Same Place'
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Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
Which I realize is not an answer to Sumi's question, but a response to the answers, which are roughly -- as I recall, Dick was eight when his parents died; he's maybe nine or ten tops when he becomes Robin, and he's now mid-to-late 20s.
The Dick's age continutity mess is just that.
The solution is not to think about it too hard, or you'll be wiping brains off the screen for HOURS.
In Robin: Year One, he's around 12/13. Middle school age.
OK, meta-comic question. What are the key points of the superhero form? I'm thinking:
- Superpowers
- Weakness
- Origin Story
- Secret Identity
- Kickass Villain
- Love Interest
What else? Does the love interest have to bounce off the secret identity (a la Tim Drake)? Should the origin story be revealed after the superhero's introduced or before?
How are you defining superpowers?
Tights -- I think tights are probably important, or at least a silly mask and one of your superpowers is keeping the mask on your face with no visible means of support (see Robin and Nightwing).
Also, Cataclysm arrived here and since I came home during a tornado warning -- well, it just all seems so right.
Tights are more popular than superpowers.
Well, superpowers don't look nearly so good stretched over those lovely superhero quads.
no visible means of support
Spirit gum. Clearly. That stuff is awesome.
Well, superpowers don't look nearly so good stretched over those lovely superhero quads.
Two words for you:
Clark/Bruce.
IJS.