In order to qualify, a roster has to exist for at least five issues (which eliminates one-issue joke lineups, like the "52" Justice League and Justice League Antarctica) and it has to be a distinct lineup (so Bryan Hitch's current "Justice League of America" lineup doesn't count). With so man incarnations of the Justice League over the years, we decided to rank them for you, from worst to best. Another first came in 1989, with the League getting its first spinoff "Justice League" series when "Justice League Europe" spun out of "Justice League International." In the years since, rarely a month has gone by without at least two "Justice League" comic books released (in the early days of Grant Morrison's "JLA," these other series tended to be one-shots and miniseries), and quite often there have been three monthly "Justice League" titles.Īs DC Rebirth continues to roll out, there will be one "Justice League" series shipping twice a month ( Fernando Pasarin will share art duties with Daniel), while a second twice-monthly "Justice League of America" book looms in the future (with no creative team announced just yet). Since that point, the League has gone through a variety of different rosters, while also relaunching at #1 for the first time in 1987. However, as the comic book market changed in the 1980s with the most popular team books being "New Teen Titans," "Legion of Super-Heroes," "Uncanny X-Men" and "New Mutants," all books starring younger heroes, the Justice League responded with their first wholesale new lineup in nearly 25 years with the creation of a Justice League featuring a number of young heroes in it. Heroes were added while others would take their leave (almost always temporarily, but some of the breaks were extended ones, like the Martian Manhunter missing out on much of the 1970s), but the League stayed basically the same. Even as Fox was succeeded by Denny O'Neil, Mike Friedrich, Len Wein, Steve Englehart and Gerry Conway during the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s, the book maintained a strong consistency. When the League debuted at DC Comics in 1960, it had a constant membership and a constant creative team, with writer Gardner Fox writing the book for much of the 1960s. RELATED: "Justice League" Is Your Summer Disaster Blockbuster, in Comic Book Form The Justice League has been around for over 50 years now, and the team's membership has been an interesting encapsulation of the history of the comic book industry itself. Daniel showed readers what the next incarnation of the famed Justice League looks like during DC Comics' Rebirth. The debut of "Justice League" #1 by Bryan Hitch and Tony S.
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