Arrow has generated other media and spin-offs, including digital comic books and Internet-based mini-episodes with characters from the series.
Digital comics Arrow (2012–13) To promote the series,
DC Comics produced a 10-page preview comic for the 2012
San Diego Comic-Con, written by Kreisberg, illustrated by Omar Francia, and featuring a cover by artist
Mike Grell. The comic was regarded by the production crew as sharing the same canon as the series, with Kreisberg commenting, "[For] anyone who grabs a copy: Hold onto it and as the series progresses, you'll appreciate it more and more." It was later released free online. On October 10, 2012, DC Comics debuted a weekly digital comic tie-in written by Kreisberg and Guggenheim and drawn by various artists, including Mike Grell, which remained in continuity with the television series. The comics were to be released initially as digital chapters, and then later be collated to produce monthly print issues. The series lasted for 36 chapters, running until June 2013. These were collected, together with the initial preview comic, in two volumes with the first released digitally in October 2013 and the second in both print and digital formats in May 2014.
Titan Magazines published the comics in a physical format in the UK. The first issue was published on October 17, 2013, and contained the first four chapters of the series, with the complete series lasting six issues.
Arrow: Season 2.5 (2014–15) A follow-up to the original digital title,
Arrow: Season 2.5, is written by Guggenheim and
Keto Shimizu, one of the show's executive story editors and writers, with art by
Joe Bennett and Jack Jadson.
Arrow 2.5 is intended to tell one continuous story across two arcs, that fits within the television narrative. Guggenheim stated, "We've tried to put in all the elements that people like about the show ... We're going to see what's happened to Detective Lance after he collapsed in the season [two] finale. A good chunk of the burning questions left over will get answered in the tie-in comic. Particularly towards the latter half of the series, we're going to start introducing characters [in the comic] who you'll see in Season 3 ... before they show up on TV." The character Caleb Green, who has ties to Robert Queen, was created specifically for the comic. Guggenheim said "The goal is to end
Season 2.5 basically five minutes before Season 3 begins." The comic launched digitally biweekly on September 1, 2014, with its first physical release featuring a collection of the digital releases releasing on October 8. The series featured 24 digital issues, which constituted 12 physical issues.
Blood Rush On November 6, 2013, a six-episode series of shorts, titled
Blood Rush, premiered alongside the broadcast of the show, as well as online. The series, which features
product placement for products of its sponsor, Bose, was shot on location in Vancouver, similar to the main show. The miniseries features Emily Bett Rickards, Colton Haynes and Paul Blackthorne reprising their roles of
Felicity Smoak,
Roy Harper and
Quentin Lance, respectively. The episodes set during the course of the second season of the television series, show Roy coming to Queen Consolidated to have a meeting with Oliver. As he is out, Felicity tells Roy to go wait in the lobby. As Roy leaves, Officer Lance calls Felicity, telling her that the blood sample the Starling City police found on the vigilante, which Felicity destroyed, has resurfaced. Felicity then calls Roy, using Oliver's voice encoder, asking him to break into the lab to retrieve the sample. Felicity guides Roy through the lab, where he is able to recover the sample. As Roy is leaving, doctors enter the room, seemingly trapping him. He notifies Felicity, who then hacks into the building's PA system, and issues an evacuation notice, giving Roy a chance to escape. Roy gets out of the room before it enters into lock down, and is able to avoid two guards with the help of Felicity and exit the lab. Roy returns to Queen Consolidated, and Felicity offers to mail the acquired sample for Roy as he goes in to meet with Oliver.
Video games A Green Arrow skin based on Oliver Queen's appearance in
Arrow appears in the 2013 video game
Injustice: Gods Among Us as downloadable content. The playable skin was given as a bonus reward to the first 5,000 voters of
Injustices promotional Battle Arena competition, but was later released as a free download. Stephen Amell lends his voice and likeness to the skin.
Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham features an
Arrow downloadable content pack that adds multiple playable characters, including Arrow, John Diggle, Felicity Smoak, Huntress, Slade Wilson, Roy Harper, Canary, and Malcolm Merlyn as well as vehicles and an exclusive level set during Oliver's time in Lian Yu. Amell reprised his role in addition to voicing the traditional Green Arrow in the game, while
Cynthia Addai-Robinson reprised her role as
Amanda Waller. The video game
Lego DC Super-Villains features DLC inspired by
Arrow in the "DC Super Heroes: TV Series DLC Character Pack". The DLC pack includes The Atom, Green Arrow, and Mister Terrific as playable characters.
Novels On February 23, 2016,
Titan Books released
Arrow: Vengeance, a tie-in novelization written by Oscar Balderrama and Lauren Certo, which is set before and during the second season, detailing the origins of Slade Wilson, Sebastian Blood, and Isabel Rochev, and how they eventually meet and collaborate with each other to battle Oliver's alter-ego as seen in the television series. On November 29, 2016, Titan Books released
The Flash: The Haunting of Barry Allen, a tie-in novelization written by Susan and Clay Griffith, set during the second season of
The Flash and the fourth season of
Arrow, which features characters from both shows; the story continued in
Arrow: A Generation of Vipers, released on March 28, 2017, again written by the Griffiths. In August 2017, it was confirmed that
Arrow executive producer
Marc Guggenheim would co-author a fourth novel, alongside James R. Tuck, entitled
Arrow: Fatal Legacies, which was released in January 2018. The novel focuses on events between the fifth-season finale and sixth-season premiere.
Guidebooks The first guidebook to be released was
Arrow: Heroes and Villains by Nick Aires and published by Titan Books, released in February 2015. Described as "a companion" to the series, the book features sections on the various characters of the series, along with descriptions, backgrounds, comic book origins, and "where they stand as of the end of the second season of
Arrow". A follow-up to
Heroes and Villains by the same author and publisher, titled ''Arrow: Oliver Queen's Dossier'', was released in October 2016, during the series' fifth season. The book is presented as information collected by the Green Arrow and Felicity Smoak over the course of his four years of activity. Included in the book are "handwritten notes" and "police reports" regarding the Green Arrow and those he targets. ==Arrowverse==