This is a list of major characters appearing in the
Big Bang Comics universe, which encompasses most fictional characters created for the shared Big Bang universe and those characters owned by Big Bang Comics.
Cyclone (based on
Kid Flash, the Blitz's sidekick from Earth A)
Marty Eastman was addicted to the Rocket Pills that gave him his power. Later becomes the cybernetic Overdrive after being damaged in the explosion that killed the Blitz.[1]
Mister U.S. (based on Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's creation
Captain America and on DC Comics Commander Steel)
Mister US was a generic hero shown in issue #8 in six different incarnations from six different decades. The purpose was to poke fun at all the clichés in comics during each major era: the "Glittering Golden Age", the "Silly Side of the Silver Age", the "Pseudo-Intellectual Pseventies", the "'Oity-Toity Eighties", and the "Nigh-Incomprehensible Nineties".
Robo-Hood first appeared in Big Bang #21. Little is known about Robo-Hood, but he seems to tackle street-level crime like muggers and pickpockets. He is a combination of
Robotman and
Green Arrow, but his actual name seems to derive from the legend of
Robin Hood, the English freedom fighter (or outlaw) well known for his clashes with
Sheriff of Nottingham.
A parody of the 1960-era Batman comics complete with the Shadowcar, Lady ShadowHawkette, Shadowdog and kid sidekick, Squirrel aka Hawk Shadow. He is working with Knight Watchman.
The Sphinx (a hero from an Egypt-dominated alternate Earth, similar to
Hawkman created by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville)
Sphinx: Peter Chefren/Chefren Ra
Sphinx: Allison Kane
Stars 'n' Stripes
Possibly a reference to the
Star-Spangled Kid and
Stripesy. He appeared on a mock-up cover of the
metafictionalRed Hot Comics, but haven't been seen since.
Op the Cop: A humour strip written by Gary Carlson, featured in Caliber Press #1. Op hasn't appeared since.
Percy: The second and final humour strip in Big Bang Comics, this time satirising the older generation of science-fiction films. He appeared in Image Comics #1.
This is a list of major characters appearing in the
Big Bang Comics universe, which encompasses most fictional characters created for the shared Big Bang universe and those characters owned by Big Bang Comics.
Cyclone (based on
Kid Flash, the Blitz's sidekick from Earth A)
Marty Eastman was addicted to the Rocket Pills that gave him his power. Later becomes the cybernetic Overdrive after being damaged in the explosion that killed the Blitz.[1]
Mister U.S. (based on Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's creation
Captain America and on DC Comics Commander Steel)
Mister US was a generic hero shown in issue #8 in six different incarnations from six different decades. The purpose was to poke fun at all the clichés in comics during each major era: the "Glittering Golden Age", the "Silly Side of the Silver Age", the "Pseudo-Intellectual Pseventies", the "'Oity-Toity Eighties", and the "Nigh-Incomprehensible Nineties".
Robo-Hood first appeared in Big Bang #21. Little is known about Robo-Hood, but he seems to tackle street-level crime like muggers and pickpockets. He is a combination of
Robotman and
Green Arrow, but his actual name seems to derive from the legend of
Robin Hood, the English freedom fighter (or outlaw) well known for his clashes with
Sheriff of Nottingham.
A parody of the 1960-era Batman comics complete with the Shadowcar, Lady ShadowHawkette, Shadowdog and kid sidekick, Squirrel aka Hawk Shadow. He is working with Knight Watchman.
The Sphinx (a hero from an Egypt-dominated alternate Earth, similar to
Hawkman created by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville)
Sphinx: Peter Chefren/Chefren Ra
Sphinx: Allison Kane
Stars 'n' Stripes
Possibly a reference to the
Star-Spangled Kid and
Stripesy. He appeared on a mock-up cover of the
metafictionalRed Hot Comics, but haven't been seen since.
Op the Cop: A humour strip written by Gary Carlson, featured in Caliber Press #1. Op hasn't appeared since.
Percy: The second and final humour strip in Big Bang Comics, this time satirising the older generation of science-fiction films. He appeared in Image Comics #1.