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Snowflame
Snowflame as depicted in Catwoman vol. 5 #24 (October 2020). Art by Cian Tormey (penciler/inker), FCO Plascencia (colorist), and Gabriela Downie (letterer).
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceNew Guardians #2 (October 1988)
Created by
In-story information
Alter egoStefan
Abilities

Snowflame is a supervillain appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by Steve Englehart and Cary Bates to serve as a villain for the superhero team the New Guardians. In later appearances, Snowflame also fought Catwoman and Peacemaker.

Character biography

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Origins

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Snowflame first appeared in the 1988 comic book New Guardians #2 in a story titled Jungle Snow. In it, he meets the New Guardians in Colombia as the leader of a drug cartel. In their first encounter he defeats the superhero team, but is later killed by them in a chemical shed explosion.[1][2]

New Justice

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In Catwoman #23, Catwoman travels to South America and encounters Snowflame, whose real name is revealed to be Stefan. Snowflame reveals that he faked his death in the chemical shed explosion to take over the island of Isla Nevada. He then escorts Catwoman to his home, where he is auctioning off expensive and dangerous artifacts to other supervillains.[3][4][5] In Catwoman #24, Catwoman sneaks into the jungle and meets Kisin, the island's mythical giant panther and god of death, before returning to do battle with Snowflame. She defeats him with the help of Kisin.[6]

Snowflame returns in the Dawn of DC series Peacemaker Tries Hard!, in which he fights against Peacemaker. He is defeated and seemingly killed after choking on a poison dart frog that Peacemaker snuck into his cocaine.[7]

Powers and abilities

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By inhaling cocaine, Snowflame is capable of granting himself superhuman strength, speed, an immunity to pain, pyrokinesis, and the ability to give targets an instant contact high by touching them. [1][8][9][10]

In other media

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Snowflame is a fictional supervillain in DC Comics, depicted as a Colombian drug lord who gains superhuman abilities through cocaine-fueled rituals that manifest a fiery, demonic entity possessing his body.[1][2] Created by writer Steve Englehart with contributions from Cary Bates and artist Joe Staton, the character first appeared in The New Guardians #2 in July 1988, where he overpowers the superhero team in his jungle stronghold while espousing anti-American rhetoric. His powers, which intensify with greater cocaine ingestion, include superhuman strength, speed, pain immunity, pyrokinesis, and the ability to induce narcotic effects through physical contact.[1] Snowflame's debut storyline highlights his role as a cartel enforcer, but the character's limited subsequent comic appearances—primarily cameo roles in titles like Catwoman #23 (2020)—have cemented his notoriety for the provocative linkage of villainy to drug empowerment amid the era's anti-narcotics campaigns, sparking debates on creative intent versus unintended glorification.[3]

Creation and Publication History

Creators and Concept Development

Snowflame was co-created by DC Comics writers Steve Englehart and Cary Bates, who developed the character for the spin-off series The New Guardians, following Englehart's work on the 1987-1988 Millennium crossover event. Artist Joe Staton provided the initial visual depiction, featuring a towering, flame-wreathed figure with stark white hair to evoke the drug's appearance. The debut occurred in The New Guardians #2, cover-dated February 1988.[4][2] The concept drew directly from the 1980s cocaine epidemic, particularly the violent trade routes originating in Colombia, where production surged amid U.S. consumption peaking at over 100 metric tons annually by 1985. Englehart and Bates conceptualized Snowflame as a drug cartel leader who achieves superhuman strength, speed, and pyrokinesis by inhaling pure cocaine, treating the substance as a literal deity that channels its "will" through him. This design choice emphasized cocaine's pharmacological effects—intense euphoria and hyperactivity from dopamine overload—manifesting as delusional godhood and frenzied aggression, reflecting documented cases of cocaine-induced psychosis involving paranoia, hallucinations, and homicidal impulses.[4][5] By framing the drug as both power source and master, the creators avoided equivocation, portraying addiction's causal pathway from perceived invincibility to self-destructive mania without heroic redemption or normalization. This approach countered contemporaneous cultural tendencies to glamorize excess in media, instead highlighting empirical realities of tolerance buildup, cardiovascular strain, and neurological damage that undermine long-term functionality, as evidenced in clinical studies of chronic users exhibiting diminished executive function and heightened risk-taking. The character's overt absurdity further underscored the irrationality of substance worship over rational agency.[4][2]

Initial Appearance and Story Arc

Snowflame debuted in New Guardians #2 (October 1988), a DC Comics publication set within the post-Crisis on Infinite Earths continuity. The series followed the multinational superhero team as they addressed global crises, including this encounter during their mission to dismantle a powerful Colombian drug cartel on behalf of the CIA. Snowflame emerged as the cartel's leader, a figure who derived superhuman abilities directly from cocaine consumption, proclaiming it as his god.[6][5] In the issue's "Jungle Snow" storyline, the New Guardians infiltrate Snowflame's compound in Colombia, where they first battle his drug-enhanced minions before confronting the villain himself. Upon ingesting large quantities of cocaine, Snowflame's body erupts in flames, granting him enhanced strength, speed, and immunity to pain, allowing him to overpower the team in their initial clash and seemingly kill several members. His flamboyant red costume and fiery aura, rendered prominently in Joe Staton's artwork, visually amplified his empowered state tied to the drug's immediate effects.[7][5] The arc resolves in a rematch where team member Ram, a Soviet strongman, exploits Snowflame's reliance on continuous cocaine intake by slamming him into a chemical storage shed, triggering an explosion that engulfs the villain in flames and leads to his presumed death by immolation. This defeat highlights the ephemeral quality of his powers, dependent on the drug's short-lived high, as his abilities wane without fresh doses, rendering him vulnerable once isolated from his supply.[7][5]

Subsequent Comic Appearances and Continuities

Snowflame's comic appearances following his 1988 debut in New Guardians #2 have been infrequent, limited to three verified instances across DC's shifting continuities. In the post-Crisis New Earth continuity, the character did not feature in any major storylines during the 1990s or early 2000s, reflecting his niche status amid broader events like Infinite Crisis and Final Crisis.[8] The character's return occurred in the Prime Earth continuity established after the 2011 Flashpoint reboot, reimagined as a drug lord operating from Isla Nevada. This version appeared in Catwoman (vol. 5) #23, published July 14, 2020, where Snowflame clashed with Catwoman in a storyline involving cartel conflicts, emphasizing his empowerment through cocaine consumption without altering core traits from his original depiction.[9][10] A brief resurgence followed in 2023 with Peacemaker Tries Hard! #2–4, written by Kyle Starks and illustrated by Steve Pugh, released between July and August. Issues #2 and #4 specifically featured Snowflame in confrontations with Peacemaker, culminating in his apparent death, which highlighted the villain's pyrokinesis and drug-fueled durability in a self-contained arc tied to the Dawn of DC initiative.[11][12] As of October 2025, no additional comic appearances or major arcs have materialized post-2023, underscoring Snowflame's peripheral role in DC's event-driven landscape dominated by crossovers like Absolute Power and DC All-In. This sparsity aligns with the character's origins as a one-off anti-drug parable, rarely integrated into ongoing narratives despite occasional revivals for thematic contrast in solo titles.[13]

Fictional Character Biography

Origins and Transformation

In DC Comics' New Guardians series, Snowflame's origin traces to Fabian Orosco, a Colombian drug cartel leader operating in the nation's jungles during the late 1980s. Orosco, immersed in the cocaine trade, underwent a radical transformation after inhaling an immense quantity of the substance, which the narrative depicts as the catalyst for his empowerment.[5][14] This ingestion triggered the manifestation of a persistent white flame aura enveloping his body, accompanied by declarations of cocaine as his personal deity and himself as its chosen vessel. The event amplified his physical prowess, enabling feats attributed to the drug's direct infusion, though empirically, cocaine's effects involve neural overstimulation via dopamine surge, potentially explaining the god-like delusions and perceived enhancements as psychotropic byproducts rather than objective superhuman traits.[5][14] Pre-transformation, Orosco's role as a cartel figure positioned him amid Colombia's illicit narcotics operations, where the incident unfolded amid refining processes, framing his change as an extreme outcome of habitual excess rather than innate mutation. This satirical portrayal underscores cocaine's capacity for inducing euphoria, hyperactivity, and paranoia, with the flame aura and abilities serving as exaggerated, fictional extensions of such physiological responses.[5][14]

Conflict with the New Guardians

In New Guardians #2 (September 1988), Snowflame confronted the New Guardians amid their mission to dismantle a Colombian drug cartel he led, initiating hostilities in the surrounding jungle.[7][15] Issuing a warning to the approaching heroes—"First freak who comes any closer is a dead freak"—he demonstrated his cocaine-derived powers by effortlessly repelling Ram's initial charge, proclaiming, "I am Snowflame! Every cell of my being burns with white-hot ecstasy. Cocaine is my God."[15] Snowflame's superhuman strength allowed him to withstand Ram's blows without pain, while his pyrokinesis generated flames that scorched the team's defenses, nearly securing victory as his armed followers emerged from concealment to unleash a barrage of gunfire, simulating the heroes' demise and compelling their temporary withdrawal.[7][15] These rants, fixated on cocaine's divine supremacy, disrupted team coordination, functioning as psychological intimidation amid the chaos. Regrouping, the New Guardians launched a direct raid on Snowflame's fortified compound of excess, where his acolytes—intoxicated and fanatically loyal, exhibiting erratic aggression suggestive of secondary exposure effects—swarmed the intruders in defense.[7] Snowflame, refusing surrender and ingesting additional cocaine to amplify his abilities, directed the counterassault, but the heroes subdued the followers through coordinated efforts involving Harbinger's energy manipulation and Jet's speed.[15] The decisive phase unfolded as Ram grappled Snowflame, first submerging him in a pool to impair his flames before propelling him into an adjacent chemical synthesis shed; the resulting detonation immolated Snowflame in a massive fireball, marking his apparent demise and halting the cartel's operations.[15][7] This outcome underscored the team's reliance on environmental tactics over direct confrontation, given Snowflame's overwhelming individual prowess in prior exchanges.[15]

Alliance with New Justice

In Catwoman #23 (cover-dated September 2020), Snowflame resurfaced after faking his death from the 1988 confrontation with the New Guardians, operating as a drug lord on Isla Nevada and hosting an exclusive auction of illicit artifacts attended by various supervillains seeking high-value items like a comprehensive list of criminal contacts.[16] This event positioned him in temporary, pragmatic collaborations with fellow criminals for mutual profit, rather than any structured team or anti-heroic initiative against larger threats, underscoring his continued self-serving criminal enterprise.[16] Subsequent appearances further illustrate opportunistic villain alignments without evidence of ideological reform. In Peacemaker Tries Hard! #4 (cover-dated October 2023), Snowflame served as an operative allied with the telepathic villain the Brain, participating in schemes that escalated into direct conflict with Peacemaker, where his cocaine-fueled powers granted temporary advantages but exposed persistent volatility and dependency-induced lapses in control.[12] These partnerships highlight strategic expediency amid greater adversarial pressures, yet internal unreliability—stemming from his empowerment mechanism—frequently undermined cohesion, as seen in his eventual defeat via unconventional means exploiting his substance reliance.[11] No canonical depictions show a formal affiliation with a group termed "New Justice," with interactions remaining ad hoc and villain-centric.[17]

Modern-Day Encounters and Fate

In the Prime Earth continuity, Snowflame reemerged as a drug lord overseeing cocaine operations on the remote island of Isla Nevada, retaining his cocaine-dependent physiology amid DC's narrative reboots that emphasized his isolation and cartel dominance.[11] Snowflame's final comic book encounter occurred in Peacemaker Tries Hard! #4, released August 2023, where he clashed with Peacemaker during an assault on a fortified island base allied with villain General Immortus.[11][18] The confrontation escalated when Peacemaker, aided by unconventional allies including a hallucinatory bee entity, disrupted Snowflame's defenses; despite initial resilience to gunfire, Snowflame's plot to overpower the intruder collapsed after he was deceived into snorting an enormous pile of cocaine laced with toxins from a poison dart frog.[11][19] This led to his asphyxiation and apparent death by overdose, an ironic and visceral end that underscored the fragility of his empowerment mechanism—superhuman traits sustained only by precise cocaine intake, vulnerable to excess or adulteration.[19][12] No further resurrections or appearances in DC Comics publications have followed as of October 2025, cementing Snowflame's status as a sporadically revived but ultimately expendable figure in the publisher's canon.[12]

Powers and Abilities

Source of Empowerment

Snowflame's superhuman abilities originate solely from the consumption of cocaine, which he inhales nasally to initiate and sustain his powers. Prior to his first exposure, he exhibited no innate metahuman traits, functioning as an ordinary human drug lord in the Colombian jungle. The drug acts as a physiological trigger, inducing a permanent transformation into a flame-wreathed humanoid form, though the potency and functionality of his powers remain inextricably linked to repeated dosing.[4][5] The mechanism involves cocaine accelerating Snowflame's brain activity to extreme levels, generating a bio-electric energy field that manifests as pyrokinesis and enhanced physical prowess. This neural hyperactivity produces the visible flames encasing his body and fuels his strength, but the effects dissipate rapidly without additional intake, rendering him vulnerable during periods of abstinence. In comic depictions, failure to redose leads to a swift decline in his fiery aura and combat effectiveness, underscoring the substance's role as both enabler and limiter.[5] This dependency is portrayed without ambiguity in his encounters, where Snowflame explicitly reveres cocaine as a divine source—"Cocaine is my god, and I am the flame of Snowflame"—highlighting its centrality to his identity and empowerment process. No alternative catalysts or inherent biological factors are indicated as contributing to his abilities, distinguishing his origin from typical metahuman activations in DC lore.

Physical Enhancements

Snowflame demonstrates superhuman strength capable of knocking Ram—a New Guardian with enhanced physiology—sprawling with a single punch and inflicting notable harm on him despite Ram's exceptional resilience.[20] His physical power enabled him to overpower the entire New Guardians team in their initial confrontation, subduing multiple enhanced individuals simultaneously.[5] In terms of speed, Snowflame possesses superhuman reflexes and movement velocity, allowing him to evade and counter attacks from coordinated superhero assaults.[4] Snowflame's durability includes high resistance to blunt force trauma, as evidenced by withstanding direct strikes from Ram that would fell ordinary humans, shrugging off multiple such blows without apparent injury or slowdown.[20] However, this does not equate to full invulnerability; he remains vulnerable to sufficient overwhelming force or power depletion, as shown in subsequent defeats by the same team.[5] Complementing these traits is complete immunity to pain during empowerment, permitting relentless aggression irrespective of sustained damage and facilitating sustained combat engagement.[20] As a tactical extension, physical contact with Snowflame induces euphoric disorientation in opponents, serving as a non-lethal debilitation method akin to a contact high.[20]

Pyrokinesis and Other Effects

Snowflame's pyrokinesis manifests as the generation of psychokinetic flames that envelop his body upon cocaine ingestion, accelerating his brain activity to produce a constant fiery aura. This enables him to project and control fire for offensive attacks, including white-hot flames emitting from his eyes.[5][21] The flames are notably difficult to extinguish, persisting even under suppression attempts. Accompanying this power are psychotropic side effects from the drug, inducing a profound god complex wherein Snowflame perceives cocaine as a divine entity delivering "white hot ecstasy" and "divine rapture," often expressed through grandiose, irrational monologues during combat.[21] These abilities are strictly contingent on maintaining a cocaine high; as the drug's effects wane, powers diminish, risking burnout and vulnerability without resupply. Overexertion or environmental factors, such as exposure to refining chemicals amid open flames, can lead to catastrophic self-immolation, as evidenced by Snowflame's presumed demise in an explosive incident.[21][5]

Reception and Legacy

Critical Analysis and Ridicule

Snowflame's 1989 debut in New Guardians #12 elicited mixed responses from comic critics, who praised its provocative directness in depicting drug-fueled villainy amid the era's War on Drugs rhetoric, yet derided its execution as excessively literal, transforming a potential cautionary tale into inadvertent camp.[5] The character's empowerment via cocaine snorting was seen by some as an edgy archetype that prefigured later substance-abuse motifs in superhero narratives, memorable for its unflinching portrayal of addiction's physical manifestations, including involuntary highs transmitted through touch.[5] However, reviewers frequently highlighted the absurdity—such as Snowflame's demonic fire aura and bombastic declarations—as undermining any substantive critique, rendering the villain a punchline rather than a credible threat and inviting parody over analysis.[22] Professional critiques often split on whether the character's offensiveness enhanced or diluted its impact: outlets like Cracked labeled Snowflame "bizarrely offensive" for stereotyping a Colombian drug lord with supernatural highs, arguing it prioritized shock over nuance in addressing narcotics' horrors.[22] Conversely, retrospective analyses in Screen Rant commended the unvarnished depiction of cocaine's euphoric yet destructive effects, positing it as effective in visceral terms despite the ham-fisted narrative, though conceding the overkill fueled ridicule in subsequent fan discourse.[5] This tension persisted, with the villain's design—white-skinned, flame-wreathed, and powder-dependent—dismissed by some as cartoonish propaganda that trivialized addiction's causality, prioritizing spectacle over empirical realism in portraying substance escalation.[14] Snowflame's 2023 revival in Peacemaker Tries Hard! #4 amplified ridicule, as the character met a swift, gruesome end—immolated in a cocaine-refining shed after a brief clash with Peacemaker—prompting reviews to mock the anticlimactic dispatch while lauding the revival's embrace of politically incorrect origins.[19] ComicBook.com noted the fight's challenge stemmed from Snowflame's enhanced invulnerability, yet critiqued the rapid resolution as emblematic of the villain's perennial disposability, reducing a once-edgy foe to fodder.[11] Major Spoilers praised the inclusion as "note-perfect" for Peacemaker's irreverent tone, appreciating how it highlighted unfiltered drug perils without modern sanitization, though acknowledging the death's ridiculousness cemented Snowflame's status as parody bait rather than enduring menace.[23]

Interpretations of Drug Culture Satire

Snowflame's portrayal in The New Guardians #2 (February 1989) serves as a cautionary satire on cocaine addiction, depicting the drug not as a source of genuine empowerment but as a catalyst for delusion and self-destruction, consistent with the 1980s War on Drugs cultural context. The character's superhuman abilities—gained through repeated snorting of cocaine—escalate into fiery pyrokinesis and enhanced strength, yet culminate in his explosive demise amid a cocaine-processing facility ignited by his own flames, underscoring the inherent volatility and fatal risks of stimulant abuse rather than any sustainable benefit.[5][2] This narrative arc mirrors empirical evidence of cocaine's neurotoxic effects, including acute psychosis, cardiovascular collapse, and compulsive redosing driven by dopamine dysregulation, which the character's raving monologues—"Cocaine is my God—and I am the human instrument of its will!"—exaggerate into literal worship and irrational violence, debunking myths of drug-fueled invincibility. Clinical studies document how cocaine induces short-term euphoria and hyperactivity followed by paranoia and organ failure, paralleling Snowflame's unstable powers that demand constant intake and lead to his undoing, thus privileging causal mechanisms of addiction over romanticized notions of enhancement. Critics have accused the character of insensitivity, particularly regarding depictions of Colombian drug cartels amid U.S. anti-narcotics rhetoric, yet creators Paul Kupperberg and Jackson Guice framed it within an era of widespread public service announcements decrying cocaine's dangers, avoiding glorification by portraying Snowflame's highs as grotesque and short-lived. Some interpretations highlight potential racial stereotypes in his origins as a South American lord, but the primary thematic intent, as inferred from the story's resolution and contemporaneous anti-drug comics trends, targets universal patterns of substance-induced psychosis and dependency, not ethnic caricature.[14][24] Alternative readings suggest the satire inadvertently glamorizes drugs by granting overt powers, a critique echoed in fan analyses noting how the visual spectacle of flame-wreathed might undermines the moral lesson, though this overlooks the character's defeat and the raw, unvarnished portrayal of escalating mania as antithetical to heroic empowerment.[25][26]

Cultural References and Memes

Snowflame's absurd premise as a cocaine-empowered supervillain has propelled him into internet meme culture primarily through online discussions and video explainers highlighting his ridiculous origins from the 1988 New Guardians series.[27] Post-2010s, platforms like Reddit amplified his notoriety, with threads in communities such as r/todayilearned in 2019 describing him as a product of 1980s cocaine excess, garnering thousands of upvotes for his satirical take on drug-fueled power fantasies.[28] This meme status emphasizes his villainous folly, often depicted in fan edits and discussions as an unintentional anti-drug parable rather than a sympathetic figure. YouTube videos further cemented Snowflame's meme legacy, with explainer content like Huggbees' "Snowflame, the Cocaine Powered Supervillain" in April 2023 amassing views by mocking his pyrokinesis derived from snorting massive cocaine quantities, framing it as peak 1980s comic excess.[29] Similar uploads, including origins breakdowns from 2019 to 2025, peaked in popularity around 2023, tying into broader revivals of obscure DC villains and reinforcing cultural references to era-specific drug culture satire without endorsing it.[30] Fan-created works extended this influence, notably Julie Sydor's webcomic launched around 2012, which reimagines Snowflame's exploits in a humorous, non-canonical format, drawing attention via outlets like HuffPost for its ironic celebration of the character's audacity.[14] [31] Online fan art and forum posts, such as those in DC Universe Online communities from 2017, portray him as a customizable avatar for meme-inspired builds, underscoring his role in gaming-adjacent comedy focused on cocaine absurdity over heroic traits.[32] These elements collectively sustain Snowflame's internet footprint as a symbol of comic book over-the-top villainy, with discussions up to 2025 on platforms like TikTok and Reddit highlighting his enduring ridiculousness as a cautionary cultural artifact.

In Other Media

Animated Adaptations

Snowflame made his animated debut in the fourth season of the Harley Quinn television series, which premiered on Max on July 27, 2023. Voiced by James Adomian, the character is portrayed as a cocaine-empowered supervillain and member of the Legion of Doom, led by Lex Luthor, with his abilities—including pyrokinesis and enhanced strength—directly derived from consuming the drug, as depicted in on-screen snorting sequences.[33][34][35] The series features Snowflame in at least two episodes of season 4, emphasizing chaotic, drug-induced antics for comedic effect, such as a confrontation in "Icons Only" (season 4, episode 3) where Harley Quinn tricks him amid broader villain schemes. His depiction amplifies the absurdity of his comic origins, showing erratic, flame-wielding outbursts tied to substance use without portraying it as a viable or normalized empowerment method, aligning with the show's irreverent, adult-oriented humor.[36][37] This adaptation integrates Snowflame into a post-2020 revival of DC's animated universe, distinct from traditional superhero fare by leaning into satirical excess, with his fiery, unstable nature serving as fodder for physical comedy and team dynamics within the Legion of Doom. No further animated appearances outside Harley Quinn and its spin-offs have been produced as of 2025.[34][38]

Comic Tie-Ins and Crossovers

Snowflame featured prominently in the DC Comics miniseries Peacemaker Tries Hard! (issues #1–6, July 2023–January 2024), a direct tie-in to the HBO Peacemaker television series. Written by Kyle Starks and illustrated by Steve Pugh, the story depicts Snowflame as a cocaine-empowered antagonist encountered by Peacemaker Christopher Smith during chaotic missions involving his pet dog and bizarre foes. He appears in issues #2 and #4, where his pyrokinesis and superhuman strength pose a temporary threat, but Peacemaker ultimately defeats him in issue #4 through relentless combat, exploiting Snowflame's reliance on drug ingestion for power, resulting in his apparent death by immolation.[39][11] This integration ties Snowflame to the Peacemaker lore under the Dawn of DC initiative, portraying his abilities as formidable yet fleeting against a grounded vigilante, thereby emphasizing the character's satirical impotence in sustained confrontations.[11] True crossovers integrating Snowflame into non-DC universes remain absent from canon publications. His sole notable reference outside DC properties occurs in The Legion of Regrettable Supervillains (2017), a non-fiction compilation by Jon Morris profiling obscure villains across publishers, where Snowflame receives a dedicated biographical entry and artwork highlighting his drug-derived powers as an exemplar of oddball criminality. This serves as a referential nod rather than narrative participation, preserving DC-specific continuity without shared storytelling.[8]

References

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