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Wonder Woman's closest friend among the Amazons, Mala was the first runner-up in the contest to determine who would enter Man's World as Wonder Woman and later became the head of the Amazons’ therapeutic center Reformation Island. Nubia: Wonder Woman #204 (January 1973) Originally Diana's long-lost twin sister who was raised by Ares.
Wonder Woman without special powers fighting crime as Diana Prince. Cover of Wonder Woman #189 (July 1970) by Mike Sekowsky. Diana is depicted as a masterful athlete, acrobat, fighter and strategist, trained and experienced in many ancient and modern forms of armed and unarmed combat, including exclusive Amazonian martial arts.
List of Wonder Woman enemies; Z. Zara (character) Zeus (DC Comics) Zola (DC Comics) This page was last edited on 20 January 2021, at 02:24 (UTC). Text is ...
The Legend of the Blue Lotus. The following is a list of female superheroes in comic books, television, film, and other media. Each character's name is followed by the publisher's name in parentheses; those from television or movies have their program listed in square brackets, and those in both comic books and other media appear in parentheses.
Wonder Woman (voiced initially by Shannon Farnon, later by Connie Caulfield and B. J. Ward) is the princess of the Amazons. She wields the Lasso of Truth, a lasso that she can mentally command, and the Invisible Plane .
Noting that it will seek out its other half, which had been stolen by Ares, Harmonia warns Wonder Woman to proceed carefully, because the Amulet is a talisman of almost limitless cosmic power. Wonder Woman subsequently uses the Amulet to form a mystical bond with one of her most significant post-Crisis allies, the historian and archeologist ...
Wonder Woman later confronts him, showing the pain he inflicts on his son by being distant from him, and convinces him to renounce his wish, after which he reconciles with Alistair. Critics have compared Pascal's interpretation of Max Lord in Wonder Woman 1984 to Donald Trump during the 1980s.
Tezcatlipoca is a name used by two distinct fictional characters appearing as supervillains in DC Comics publications and related media.. The first Tezcatlipoca is a character based on the eponymous Aztec mythological figure, [1] a powerful deity of conflict, nighttime and sorcery, who commonly appears as a recurring adversary of the superheroes Wonder Woman and Aztek.