====== Superboy-Prime ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: Superboy-Prime is a tragic and monstrously powerful alternate version of Superman from Earth-Prime—a world meant to be our "real" world—whose youthful idealism curdled into a universe-shattering psychosis, making him a living embodiment of toxic fandom and the devastating consequences of retcons.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Originally a hero, he became one of the most significant "Crisis-level" villains in the [[dc_comics|DC Multiverse]], serving as a meta-commentary on the evolution of comic books from the Silver Age to the Modern Age. He is a character who is tragically aware that he is in a comic book. [[crisis_on_infinite_earths]]. * **Primary Impact:** Superboy-Prime is infamous for his "retcon punch," a reality-altering blow that resurrected [[jason_todd]] and altered the histories of numerous characters. His rampage during [[infinite_crisis]] led to the deaths of multiple heroes, including [[conner_kent|Superboy (Kon-El)]], and fundamentally reshaped the cosmic landscape of the DC Universe. * **Key Incarnations:** Unlike many characters, Superboy-Prime does not have a significant counterpart in live-action or animated media. His identity is intrinsically tied to the comic book medium itself, making adaptation difficult. His primary existence is as a singular, evolving figure within the main DC Comics continuity, defined by his pre-Crisis origins and post-Crisis villainy. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Superboy-Prime made his first appearance in **//DC Comics Presents// #87**, published in November 1985. He was created by writer Elliot S. Maggin and legendary Superman artist Curt Swan. His creation was part of the monumental lead-up to the universe-defining crossover event, //Crisis on Infinite Earths//. The core concept behind Earth-Prime was to represent //our// world—a universe where superheroes like Superman existed only as fictional characters in comic books. By introducing a "Superboy" from this "real" world, DC Comics created a powerful bridge between the reader and the narrative. He was the ultimate reader-insert character, a fan who suddenly discovers he has the powers of his idol. This meta-textual origin, initially a charming Silver Age-style story, would later become the very foundation of his tragic and terrifying descent into villainy. His journey from wide-eyed fan to embittered monster is a direct commentary on the changing tastes of comic book audiences and the "darkening" of the superhero genre that began in the mid-1980s. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of Superboy-Prime is unique and inextricably linked to the history of the DC Multiverse itself. Unlike characters with a single, stable origin, his story is one of displacement, loss, and psychological collapse. === Prime Comic Universe (Pre-Crisis Earth-Prime) === On the parallel world designated Earth-Prime, a young boy named Clark Kent lived a life remarkably similar to that of a typical American teenager in the 1980s. He was an avid reader of DC Comics, idolizing the fictional hero Superman. Unbeknownst to him, he was, in fact, a Kryptonian, teleported to Earth-Prime by his father, Jor-El, moments before Krypton's destruction. Raised by adoptive parents Jerry and Naomi Kent, he lived a normal life, completely unaware of his alien heritage. His life changed forever when Halley's Comet passed by Earth. The celestial event triggered his latent Kryptonian powers. Around this same time, the [[superman|Superman of Earth-One]] accidentally crossed the dimensional barrier and arrived on Earth-Prime. The two met, and the elder Superman helped the newly empowered Superboy of Earth-Prime stop a tidal wave, marking his first heroic act. This idyllic origin was cut tragically short. Superboy-Prime's entire reality was targeted for destruction by the [[anti-monitor]] during the //Crisis on Infinite Earths//. He was swept up in the conflict, forced to fight alongside the heroes he had previously only read about. He proved instrumental in the final battle against the Anti-Monitor, but at a great cost: his entire universe, including his family, friends, and everything he ever knew, was erased from existence. At the conclusion of the Crisis, with nowhere left to go, Superboy-Prime, along with the [[superman_earth-two|Superman of Earth-Two (Kal-L)]], his wife [[lois_lane_earth-two|Lois Lane-Kent]], and [[alexander_luthor_jr|Alexander Luthor Jr. of Earth-Three]], voluntarily entered a "paradise dimension." From this pocket reality, they could observe the newly forged "New Earth" that had replaced the old Multiverse. For years, they watched in peace. But what Superboy-Prime saw would poison his soul. He watched the world he helped save grow darker, more violent, and more cynical. The heroes became killers, friends fought friends, and the bright, optimistic world he idolized was replaced by something grim and gritty. His youthful idealism curdled into bitter resentment, and he came to believe that these new heroes had squandered the paradise he had sacrificed everything for. === Other Media Adaptations === A crucial point of understanding for Superboy-Prime is his near-total absence from film, television, and major animated series. He is a character intrinsically linked to the history and self-commentary of the DC comic book medium. His motivations—rage over retcons, a belief that the "old ways" were better, and an awareness of being a character in a story—are deeply meta-textual concepts that are difficult to translate to a mainstream cinematic or television narrative without extensive backstory. * **Video Games:** His most notable appearances outside of comics are in video games. * In **//DC Universe Online//**, he appears as a powerful boss character in the "War-Torn Village" alert, showcasing his immense power and petulant rage. * In the mobile version of **//Injustice: Gods Among Us//**, he appears as a support card. * In **//Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham//**, he is a playable character, though his darker aspects are significantly toned down for the game's family-friendly audience. These appearances are cameos or boss fights rather than full adaptations. They utilize his immense power level and villainous reputation but do not (and largely cannot) explore the complex psychological and meta-narrative reasons for his fall from grace. As of now, there is no definitive "MCU-equivalent" for Superboy-Prime. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== Superboy-Prime's power set is both immense and terrifying, defined by its pre-Crisis origins and amplified by his unique physiology and rage. His personality is one of the most complex and tragic in DC's pantheon of villains. === Prime Comic Universe === ==== Powers and Abilities ==== Superboy-Prime's powers are derived from his Kryptonian physiology's interaction with the radiation of a yellow sun. However, because he is from a "purer," Silver Age-style reality, his power levels are exponentially greater than those of modern Kryptonians like Superman (Kal-El). * **Reality-Altering Strength:** Prime's most infamous ability is his superhuman strength, which is so immense it can literally break the fabric of reality. While trapped in the paradise dimension, his frustrated punches against the crystalline barrier sent ripples through spacetime, causing continuity to shift and change on New Earth. This "retcon punch" is responsible for bringing Jason Todd back from the dead, altering the origin of [[wonder_woman]], and other significant continuity changes. His physical strength is sufficient to move planets out of orbit with little effort. * **Invulnerability:** His body is nigh-invulnerable to virtually all forms of physical harm. He has flown through a red sun, withstood punches from multiple Supermen simultaneously, and endured blasts from entire corps of [[green_lantern_corps|Green Lanterns]] and [[guardians_of_the_universe|Guardians of the Universe]]. * **Kryptonite Immunity:** A key advantage is his immunity to most forms of Kryptonite. Because Kryptonite's radiation is specific to its universe of origin, the Kryptonite from the main DC Universe has no effect on him. * **Heat Vision, X-Ray Vision, Super-Speed, etc.:** He possesses all the standard Kryptonian powers, but each is magnified to a terrifying degree. His heat vision is capable of incinerating powerful heroes, and his speed allows him to keep pace with multiple Flashes at once, even managing to break out of the [[speed_force]]. * **Magic Weakness:** Like other Kryptonians, he is vulnerable to magic. This was exploited during his battles with [[black_adam]] and Mordru. * **Red Sun Vulnerability:** After being depowered by flying through a red sun during //Infinite Crisis//, his body was temporarily reset. Following this, he developed a standard Kryptonian vulnerability to concentrated red sun radiation, which became a key weakness in later conflicts. ==== Equipment ==== * **Anti-Monitor Armor:** After his escape from the paradise dimension, Alexander Luthor Jr. constructed a suit of armor for Prime modeled after the Anti-Monitor's battlesuit. This armor's primary function was to collect and store yellow sun radiation, constantly feeding Prime's power and keeping him at peak strength even when away from a yellow sun. The armor was destroyed during his battle with Kal-L and Kal-El. * **Makeshift "S" Symbol:** During the //Sinestro Corps War//, in a moment of psychotic rage and self-mutilation, Prime used his heat vision to carve the Superman "S" symbol into his own chest, a permanent and gruesome mockery of the hero he once was and could never be. * **Sinestro Corps Power Ring:** For a time, he wielded a yellow power ring as a member of the [[sinestro_corps]]. He also briefly possessed multiple other power rings during the //Blackest Night// event. ==== Personality ==== Superboy-Prime is defined by a deeply tragic case of arrested development. Mentally, he is still the teenager who lost everything, unable to process his grief and trauma. * **Narcissism and Entitlement:** Prime possesses a profound sense of entitlement. He believes he is the //only// true Superman and that the world "owes" him a perfect life. He sees the heroes of the main DC Universe as flawed, pathetic imitations who don't deserve their powers or their world. * **Violent Petulance:** His emotional state is incredibly fragile. When confronted, frustrated, or denied what he wants, he lashes out with the disproportionate, world-breaking fury of a spoiled child having a tantrum. He doesn't just get angry; he gets genocidal. His dialogue is often filled with childish taunts, internet slang ("I'll kill you to death!"), and whiny complaints, underscoring his immaturity. * **Tragic Longing:** Beneath the rage is a desperate, heartbroken boy who just wants his home back. His most destructive actions are driven by a twisted desire to restore his "perfect" world, no matter the cost. This was most evident in //Dark Nights: Death Metal//, where his final act was one of heroic sacrifice, driven by the hope of seeing his Lois and his Earth-Prime one last time. He is a monster, but a monster born of unimaginable loss. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== Superboy-Prime is a fundamentally lonely figure. His relationships are almost exclusively built on manipulation, shared bitterness, or outright hostility. ==== Core Allies ==== True "allies" are rare for Prime, as his ego and instability make him an impossible partner. * **Alexander Luthor Jr.:** His primary co-conspirator in engineering the //Infinite Crisis//. Luthor manipulated Prime's grief and rage, promising to use his reality-altering powers to restore Earth-Prime. In truth, Luthor was merely using Prime as a living weapon to create his own "perfect" Earth. Prime turned on Luthor violently once the deception was revealed. * **Superman of Earth-Two (Kal-L):** Initially a mentor and fellow survivor in the paradise dimension. Kal-L's own grief over the state of New Earth led him to support Luthor's plan, but he was horrified by Prime's brutality. Their relationship fractured completely, culminating in a tragic battle where Kal-L died trying to stop Prime's rampage. * **Sinestro:** The leader of the Sinestro Corps inducted Prime into his army during the war against the Green Lanterns. Sinestro saw Prime not as an ally, but as a powerful, uncontrollable weapon—a "dumb muscle" to be aimed at his enemies. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== Superboy-Prime's enemy list comprises nearly the entire heroic population of the DC Universe, but his hatred is most personal for its young heroes. * **Conner Kent (Superboy):** Prime's most personal nemesis. He viewed Conner as an unworthy replacement, a "clone" who had stolen his name and his legacy. Their rivalry was the emotional core of //Infinite Crisis//, ending in a brutal battle that cost Conner his life. Prime's hatred for Conner was a projection of his own self-loathing and his belief that the modern era of heroes was a pale imitation of the past. * **The Teen Titans & The Flash Family:** Prime holds a special animosity for the [[teen_titans]], whom he sees as the epitome of the flawed, "dark" modern hero. During his rampage, he murdered several Titans members and fought multiple generations of Flashes ([[barry_allen|Barry Allen]], [[wally_west|Wally West]], [[jay_garrick|Jay Garrick]]), who trapped him in the Speed Force. His battle with [[bart_allen|Bart Allen (Kid Flash/The Flash)]] was particularly vicious. * **The Green Lantern Corps:** As a herald of the Anti-Monitor during the //Sinestro Corps War//, Prime became a primary enemy of the entire Green Lantern Corps. He murdered many Lanterns and his battle against the powerhouse Daxamite Lantern, **Sodam Yat**, was one of the war's most destructive highlights. ==== Affiliations ==== * **Sinestro Corps:** He was forcibly inducted and served as one of its most powerful soldiers, feared even by his own teammates. * **Legion of Super-Villains:** In the 31st century, he was manipulated by the **Time Trapper** (revealed to be his own adult self in that timeline) and allied with the Legion of Super-Villains to destroy the [[legion_of_super-heroes|Legion of Super-Heroes]]. * **Black Lantern Corps:** After being killed and reanimated, he briefly served as a Black Lantern, though his sheer willpower allowed him to manifest other Lantern rings in response, causing his body to self-destruct. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== Superboy-Prime's character arc is defined by his central role in several of DC's most universe-altering events. ==== Crisis on Infinite Earths (1985-1986) ==== This is Prime's origin story. As the sole super-powered being from a universe without heroes, his appearance was a major turning point. He fought bravely alongside the heroes he grew up reading about, helping to defeat the Anti-Monitor. The event's conclusion defined his entire future: with his own reality erased, he accepted exile in a paradise dimension. This storyline establishes his initial heroism and the profound tragedy of his loss, setting the stage for his eventual fall. ==== Infinite Crisis (2005-2006) ==== This is Superboy-Prime's magnum opus of villainy. After years of watching the DCU from his pocket dimension, a bitter and enraged Prime is manipulated by Alexander Luthor Jr. into shattering the walls of their reality. His "retcon punches" alter history, and his subsequent rampage on Earth is a bloodbath. He brutally murders Pantha, Wildebeest, and Bushido of the Teen Titans with ease. His obsessive quest to prove he is the "real" Superboy leads to his fatal confrontation with Conner Kent. The event culminates in him being defeated by the combined might of two Supermen and flying through a red sun, which temporarily burns out his powers. It cemented him as one of the most dangerous and emotionally resonant villains of the modern era. ==== Sinestro Corps War (2007) ==== Now a young adult, Superboy-Prime is freed from his imprisonment on Oa and drafted into the Sinestro Corps. Dubbed the "Superman of a world of cowards," his power is instrumental in the Corps' early victories. He single-handedly battles the entire Green Lantern Corps, kills the Anti-Monitor (after it is weakened), and is only stopped when a Guardian of the Universe sacrifices himself in a massive explosion that flings Prime across the multiverse. This storyline showcased his power on a cosmic scale and deepened his psychological decay, as he carves the "S" into his chest and fully embraces his monstrous identity. ==== Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds (2008-2009) ==== Marooned in the 31st century, Prime discovers he is destined to become the Time Trapper, a major Legion of Super-Heroes villain. He unleashes the Legion of Super-Villains and wages war on the Legions of three separate universes. The story delves deep into his psyche, revealing his profound loneliness and desperation. He battles Bart Allen (resurrected as Kid Flash), Conner Kent (resurrected as Superboy), and Sodam Yat once again. He is ultimately defeated and sent back to a rebuilt Earth-Prime, where he is reunited with his parents and girlfriend, who are horrified by what he's become after reading the comics detailing his atrocities. ==== Dark Nights: Death Metal (2020-2021) ==== This event serves as a redemption arc for Superboy-Prime. Imprisoned by [[the_batman_who_laughs]], Prime is tormented with visions of utopian worlds that are ripped away from him. He is confronted by [[wonder_woman]], who appeals to the hero he once was. In the final battle against the Darkest Knight, Prime chooses to embrace hope over cynicism. Realizing the villain is powered by Crisis energy, Prime absorbs the energy himself and unleashes a final, reality-shattering punch. This punch destroys the Darkest Knight and helps reboot the multiverse, but the act obliterates Prime himself. In his final moments, he has a vision of his home, his Lois, and the heroes he always wanted to be, dying as the hero he was in the beginning. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== Due to his unique origin as a being from a singular, destroyed reality, Superboy-Prime has very few "variants" in the traditional sense. Most alternate versions are future or temporary states of the primary character. * **The Time Trapper:** In the //Legion of 3 Worlds// storyline, the Time Trapper is revealed to be a decayed, nihilistic adult version of Superboy-Prime from a divergent future. This version embodied the final, logical endpoint of Prime's solipsism—a being who manipulates time itself to ensure his own miserable existence is the only one that matters. * **Black Lantern:** During //Blackest Night//, Prime's corpse is reanimated as a member of the Black Lantern Corps. However, his volatile emotional state causes him to cycle through the emotional spectrum, manifesting rings from other Lantern Corps. The conflicting energies prove too much for the Black Lantern ring to handle, and his body is destroyed in a burst of colored light. * **Superman-Prime:** After absorbing immense energy from a Guardian of the Universe at the end of the //Sinestro Corps War//, he aged into a muscular adult and declared himself "Superman-Prime." This powerful, physically mature version was cosmically powerful but still possessed the mind of a petulant teenager. This form was last seen being lost in the multiverse before he re-emerged as a young adult in the 31st century. ===== See Also ===== * [[infinite_crisis]] * [[crisis_on_infinite_earths]] * [[superman]] * [[conner_kent]] * [[alexander_luthor_jr]] * [[sinestro_corps]] * [[anti-monitor]] * [[teen_titans]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Superboy-Prime's "retcon punch" from //Infinite Crisis// became a popular fan term and meme to explain any perceived continuity error or retcon in comic books.)) ((His creators, Elliot S. Maggin and Curt Swan, have cameos in his origin story in //DC Comics Presents// #87 as people Clark Kent knows on Earth-Prime.)) ((The character's creation was partially influenced by the long-running legal battles between DC Comics and the heirs of Jerry Siegel over the rights to the "Superboy" name. Creating a new Superboy from a different Earth was a creative workaround.)) ((Throughout his appearances, Superboy-Prime frequently breaks the fourth wall, referencing DC comic book titles, events, and even the message boards of comic book websites, directly connecting his rage to real-world fan discourse.)) ((His line "They ruined it! They ruined it!" upon seeing the state of the modern Teen Titans in //Infinite Crisis// is one of his most-quoted lines, perfectly encapsulating his role as a surrogate for aggrieved, older fans.)) ((The "S" he carves into his chest is a deliberate, twisted inversion of the Superman symbol. It is not a symbol of hope, but a scar of hatred and a brand of ownership—a declaration that he is the //only// Superman.)) ((Source Material: For his origin, see //DC Comics Presents// #87 and //Crisis on Infinite Earths//. For his turn to villainy, the essential reading is //Infinite Crisis//. His cosmic-level threat is detailed in //Sinestro Corps War// and //Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds//. His redemption can be found in //Dark Nights: Death Metal//.))