Close Menu
Kickstarter Comic
  • Home
  • kickstarter
  • kickstarter game
  • kickstarter comic
  • kickstarter card game
  • kickstarter comic book
  • Comic

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Review: Starship Godzilla #5

February 20, 2026

Review: Otherkin #1

February 19, 2026

Review: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Battle Nexus #5

February 18, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Kickstarter Comic
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • DMCA Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Home
  • kickstarter
  • kickstarter game
  • kickstarter comic
  • kickstarter card game
  • kickstarter comic book
  • Comic
Kickstarter Comic
Home » DC Teen Heroes and Beyond
kickstarter card game

DC Teen Heroes and Beyond

matthewephotography@yahoo.comBy matthewephotography@yahoo.comJuly 25, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link


SDCC Coverage sponsored by Mad Cave


Gabriel Neeb

They were assembled like heroes called together by a common destiny. This is some of the best creators who have worked on a comic book story involving a teenage sidekick who gathers in San Diego Comics Room 10.

On the panel, “The Making of the Legend: DC Teen Heroes and Beyond,” moderator TJ Shelvin (Upper Deck Publishing) features Barbara Kesel (editor, New Titan), Todd Nauck (artist, Young Justice), Mark Waid (world’s best: Teen Titans), Joey Ridge (editor, Batgirl), Phil Zimenez (artist), Time #1) an investigation into the best stories and features of DC Comics’ teen superheroes.

The moderator forms a panel around ambiguous questions, allowing the panelists to talk about topics he has raised. The first one is, “What do sidekicks and teenage heroes mean to you?”

Sheridan began the discussion by focusing on the 1989 Batman story “A Lonely Place” and introducing the character and future Robin, Tim Drake. Sheridan saw how to identify herself in a way she had never seen in the comics at that time. For Jimenez, one of the big things he saw was that teenagers were trying to do good things in the world, and that all the heroes he cared about are good people. Illidge focused on his experience reading Marv Wolfman and George Perez’s ingenious run at Newtan, seeing the amazing characters mature and growing. Wade wanted to be Robin. Well, when he was a kid, the other kids wanted to be Batman, but you can’t really become Batman because Batman is a billionaire. But if you play your cards correctly, you can become an orphan. The audience laughed at one of them.

The moderators then asked what mindset each creator had inspired teenage heroes. Wade wanted to work for Wally West (Kid Flash) because Wally had “become better fans.” Illidge was there for the static birth of the milestone character. He also oversaw the introduction of Batgirl’s Cassandra Kaine version of the “No Man’s Land” story in 2000.

Jimenez’s first comic was the new Teen Titan #12, where Wonder Girl (Donna Troy) fights against the gods of Olympus. For Zimenez, Donna was a lot of things he responded to. And she was the most girl character in the best way.

This led to a very intense debate about Donna Troy, especially his relationship with Dick Grayson (First Robin and Nightwing), as it was one of the few male-female relationships that didn’t help set up all the parties, especially romantic subplots. Jimenez also took this time to mention that he has a story focused on Donna in the new Titans year released next week.

Other panelists praised Donna Troy, especially Illidge, who cited the new Teen Titans #38 as one of the best single issues ever released.

The panel had to be the point to note that this is not a Donatroy panel.

Nauck used this topic to discuss his time on young justice and how he got there. First of all, it was originally planned to be called Justice League Junior. Todd Desago was planning to write it until Peter David took over. An interesting story is that Nauck became a sensational Spider-Man artist, but he refused because young justice meant he could attract impulses, Flash’s companion of the time (late 1990s). Many people around Nauk tried to point him towards Spider-Man, but Todd was a huge fan of impulse, and young justice won.

Sheridan’s experience is written for Titans Academy. There, Sidekicks have come at an interesting time in the history of DC and Time Warner (or whatever they called themselves back then, seriously, they give new names with horrifying regularity). He was aiming for a “Degrasi with Cape” story, but in particular, he had to incorporate the character Red X into the story.

DC had no permission to use Red X from the teenage Titans cartoon until DC got permission.

One interesting topic that occurred was that while DC currently had three flashes, three batgirls and two blue beetles, it seemed to have only one Robin at the time. Waid specifically spoke about this about his theory of this trend: “Robin” is a position of honor and must earn it by one character surviving training with Batman.

This handed the panel over to the audience’s questions. One was when it was okay to age the characters. answer? “In a shared universe, never!” This issue was also addressed by Nauck. Titans Academy featured character bunkers and flirted with adults. This was stopped by the editor as the bunker was a teenager and they held that they were not allowed to flirt with teenage adults. With the exception of the series, the bunkers were adults. The editorial still thought that although that might be true, they considered the bunker as a teenager.

During this time, Iridge pointed out that DC operates over a 10-year cycle. Every ten years, fans get a new Batgirl or a new child’s flash. He also suggested that we are all looking for the true history of Waid’s recent DC Universe (of which 2#2 was just released).

Another question is, what influenced the aging of teenage heroes? “When first generation fans became professionals,” and those pros tried to make the characters more than they did.

The panel ended with each member recommending their favorite teen heroes and sidekick stories.

Sheridan: The Lonely Place of Death

Jimenez: Titans Annual #1

Iridge: First Year of Static (Collection Coming soon)

Wait: Silver Age Teen Titan

Nauck: Impulse since the 1990s

Kesel: New Teen Titan

Keep an eye out for more coverage from SDCC ’25.

Tags: SDCC ’25

Like this:

Like loading…

SDCC Coverage sponsored by Mad Cave






Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
matthewephotography@yahoo.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Gemma Correll’s feminist comics

January 15, 2026

GI Joe #19 Preview

January 15, 2026

Influential 2000 A.D. Pioneer ACTION releases 50th anniversary special in April

January 15, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Transformers #22 Review

July 8, 202529 Views

Comic Book Review: Doctor Who #1 (2020)

December 21, 202429 Views

Transformers #21 Review

June 11, 202521 Views

Comic Review: X-Force #59 (1996)

December 20, 202421 Views
Don't Miss
kickstarter comic book

Review: Starship Godzilla #5

Image credit: IDW The crew of the spaceship Godzilla is captured and trapped by the…

Review: Otherkin #1

February 19, 2026

Review: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Battle Nexus #5

February 18, 2026

Review: Ultimate Spider-Man #2 (2024)

February 16, 2026
About Us
About Us

Welcome to KickstarterComic.com!

At KickstarterComic.com, we’re passionate about bringing the latest and greatest in Kickstarter-funded games and comics to the forefront. Our mission is to be your go-to resource for discovering and exploring the exciting world of crowdfunding campaigns for board games, card games, comic books, and more.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Review: Starship Godzilla #5

February 20, 2026

Review: Otherkin #1

February 19, 2026

Review: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Battle Nexus #5

February 18, 2026
Most Popular

The best gaming laptops for 2024

September 19, 20240 Views

Iranian hackers tried to leak Trump information to the Biden campaign

September 19, 20240 Views

EU gives Apple six months to ease interoperability between devices

September 19, 20240 Views
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • DMCA Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2026 kickstartercomic. Designed by kickstartercomic.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.