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The Atom (Dr. Ryan Choi) is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by Gail Simone and Grant Morrison , the character first appeared in DCU: Brave New World #1 (August 2006) as the fourth superhero character to use the Atom name in the DC Universe .
The second Atom was the Silver Age Atom, Ray Palmer, who first appeared in 1961. The third Atom, Adam Cray, was a minor character present in Suicide Squad stories. The fourth Atom, Ryan Choi, debuted in a new Atom series in August 2006. Another Atom from the 853rd Century first appeared as part of Justice Legion Alpha in August 1999.
This version was the original Atom and mentored Ryan Choi before eventually retiring to the Amazon rainforest, where he entered a relationship with Princess Laethwyn of the Morlaidhans. Ray Palmer / Atom appears in Young Justice , voiced by Jason Marsden . [ 74 ]
Giganta is a teacher at Ryan Choi's Ivy Town University. [17] Infected and controlled by M'Nagalah, the monstrous Cancer god, she was sent to seduce and capture Ryan Choi, the new Atom, in the process even going so far as to swallow the miniature hero alive (he escapes, and also discovers that she has a tongue piercing [18]). Now free of M ...
In The New 52 era, further changes to the retroactive continuity of the DC Universe were made, such as Cyborg, one of DC's premier African American heroes, becoming a founding member of the team. In 2011, DC Comics also released a spin-off title called Justice League Dark , which is an ensemble team of prominent magic users of the DC Universe ...
Ryan Choi The Atom: Ryan Zheng E [139] Darkseid: Ray Porter E [140] DeSaad: Peter Guinness E [141] Goodness Granny Goodness: C S E [142] James Gordon: J. K. Simmons [143] Kilowog: C S E [144] Mera 2: Amber Heard [145] Elinore Stone: Karen Bryson E [146] Nuidis Vulko: Willem Dafoe E [147] Willem Dafoe [148] Iris West 2: Kiersey Clemons E [149 ...
DC Comics had the first fictional universe of superheroes, with the Justice Society of America forming in the Golden Age of Comic Books in the 1940s. This shared continuity became increasingly complex with multiple worlds, including a similar team of all-star superheroes formed in the 1960s named the Justice League of America, debuting in The Brave and the Bold Volume 1 #28.
An alternate universe variant of Al Pratt / Atom appears in JSA: The Golden Age. [14] An alternate universe variant of Al Pratt / Atom from Earth-2 appears in The New 52. This version is an Army captain who was killed while creating a sanctuary, which is dubbed Atom's Haven in his honor. [15] [16] [17]