Original incarnation Robin (Dick Grayson), Kid Flash (Wally West) and Aqualad (Garth) team up to defeat a weather-controlling villain known as
Mister Twister in
The Brave and the Bold #54 (July 1964) by writer
Bob Haney and artist
Bruno Premiani. They appeared under the name "Teen Titans" in
The Brave and the Bold #60 (July 1965), joined by Wonder Woman's younger sister Wonder Girl (Donna Troy). After being featured in
Showcase #59 (December 1965), the Teen Titans were spun off into their own series with
Teen Titans #1 by Haney and artist
Nick Cardy. The series' original premise had the Teen Titans helping teenagers and answering calls. Comics historian
Les Daniels noted that Haney "took some ribbing for the writing style that described the Teen Titans as 'the Cool Quartet' or 'the Fab Foursome'. The attempt to reach the youth culture then embracing performers like
The Beatles and
Bob Dylan impressed some observers." Green Arrow's sidekick Speedy makes guest appearances before officially joining the team in
Teen Titans #19. Aqualad takes a leave of absence from the group in the same issue, sometimes with girlfriend
Aquagirl.
Neal Adams was called upon to rewrite and redraw a
Teen Titans story which had been written by
Len Wein and
Marv Wolfman. The story, titled "Titans Fit the Battle of Jericho!", would have introduced DC's first
African American superhero, but was rejected by publisher
Carmine Infantino. The revised story appeared in
Teen Titans #20 (March–April 1969). Wolfman and
Gil Kane created an origin for Wonder Girl in
Teen Titans #22 (July–Aug. 1969) and introduced her new costume. Psychic
Lilith Clay and
Mal Duncan also join the group.
Beast Boy of the
Doom Patrol makes a guest appearance seeking membership, but was rejected as too young at the time; existing heroes
Hawk and Dove, a duo of teenaged superpowered brothers, appear in issue #21; and time-displaced
caveman Gnarrk aids the team in two issues. The series explored events such as inner-city racial tension and protests against the
Vietnam War. One storyline beginning in issue #25 (February 1970) saw the Titans deal with the accidental death of a peace activist, leading them to reconsider their methods. As a result, the Teen Titans briefly abandoned their identities to work as ordinary civilians, but the effort was quickly abandoned. Along the way, Aqualad left the series and the character of Mr. Jupiter, who was Lilith's mentor and employer, was introduced. He financially backed the Titans for a brief period. The series was canceled with #43 (January–February 1973).
1970s revival and
Vince Colletta The series resumed with issue #44 (November 1976). The stories included the introductions of African American superheroine
Bumblebee and former supervillainess-turned-superheroine
Harlequin in issue #48 and the introduction of the "Teen Titans West" team in issues #50–52 consisting of a number of other teen heroes, including
Bat-Girl (Betty Kane) and
Golden Eagle. The revival was short-lived and the series was cancelled as of issue #53 (February 1978), which featured an origin story. At the end, the heroes realized that, now that they were in their early 20s, they had outgrown the name the "Teen" Titans. In the last panel, without speaking, they all go their separate ways. The title appeared again in 1999 for
Giant Teen Titans Annual #1 (1967) (), a one-shot special that reprinted selected
Silver Age stories in the 1960s-style
80-Page Giant format.
The New Teen Titans (1980–1996) DC Comics Presents #26 (October 1980)
introduced a new team of Titans, anchored by Robin, Wonder Girl, and Kid Flash and soon followed by
The New Teen Titans #1 (November 1980). The series, created by writer Marv Wolfman and artist
George Pérez, re-introduced Beast Boy as Changeling and introduced the machine man Cyborg, the alien Starfire, and the dark
empath Raven. Raven, an expert manipulator, forms the group to fight her demonic father
Trigon and the team remains together. Both Wolfman and Pérez believed the series would only last six issues, due to overall poor sales at DC Comics. Wolfman and Pérez's working relationship quickly evolved to the point where they were plotting the series jointly. Wolfman recalled that "once George moved to the same town I lived in, only five blocks or so away, we usually got together for lunch and would work out a story over the next few hours. In many cases I would then go home and write up a plot based on it, or sometimes George would take the verbal plotting we did and take it from there." The series' first twenty issues focused primarily on short,
one-shot storylines before both creators decided to attempt "more complex tales" and introduce villains whose "origins and motivations were very different from the norm of the day". a
mercenary who takes a contract to kill the Titans to fulfill a job his son
Grant Wilson had been unable to complete. Based on Wolfman's interest in occult manipulation from his previous work on
Marvel's Tomb of Dracula, Brother Blood's "very dark" storyline received praise from older readers but alienated younger readers of the title. featured a psychopathic girl named
Terra with the power to manipulate Earth and all Earth-related materials. She infiltrates the Titans in order to destroy them. "The Judas Contract" won the
Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Award for "Favorite Comic Book Story" of 1984 Robin adopts the identity of
Nightwing, while Wally West gives up his Kid Flash persona and quits the Titans. It also featured the introduction of a new member in
Jericho, Deathstroke's other son. Other notable
New Teen Titans stories included "A Day in the Lives...", presenting a day in the team members' personal lives; "Who is Donna Troy?", depicting Robin investigating Wonder Girl's origins; and "We Are Gathered Here Today...", telling the story of Wonder Girl's wedding.
Tales of the New Teen Titans, a four-part limited series by Wolfman and Pérez, was published in 1982, detailing the
back-stories of Cyborg, Raven, Changeling, and Starfire. Wolfman wrote a series of
New Teen Titans drug awareness comic books which were published in cooperation with The President's Drug Awareness Campaign in 1983–1984. The first was pencilled by Pérez and sponsored by the
Keebler Company, the second was illustrated by
Ross Andru and underwritten by the
American Soft Drink Industry, and the third was drawn by
Adrian Gonzales and financed by
IBM.
The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) The
New Teen Titans relaunched with a new #1 issue in August 1984 as part of a new initiative at DC informally referred to as "hardcover/softcover".
The New Teen Titans along with
Legion of Super-Heroes and
Batman and the Outsiders were the first and only titles included in this program. The same stories were published twice, first in a more expensive edition with higher-quality printing and paper distributed exclusively to comic book specialty stores, then republished a year later in the original format, distributed to newsstands. The title was renamed
Tales of the Teen Titans with issue #41, while a new concurrently published series named
The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) launched with a new #1 following the release of
Tales of the Teen Titans #44 and
Annual #3, the conclusion of the "Judas Contract" storyline. After both titles ran new stories for one year, with
Tales of the Teen Titans #45–58 taking place prior to the events of
The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) #1, and a filler issue reprinting a digest-only story and the original preview story from
DC Comics Presents #26, the series began reprinting the first 31 issues of the "hardcover" series (sans several back-up stories focusing on
Tamaran that ran in
New Teen Titans #14–18), the first
Annual, and the lead story from the second
Annual, before being cancelled with issue #91. Issue #1 of
The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) created controversy when Grayson and Starfire were depicted in bed together, although it had been established for some time that they were a couple. The initial storyline, "The Terror of Trigon", featured Raven's demon father attempting to take over Earth and Raven's own struggle to remain good despite Trigon's demonic blood inside her. Pérez left the series after issue #5.
José Luis García-López followed Pérez as the title's artist and
Eduardo Barreto followed García-López.
Paul Levitz scripted or fully wrote issues #28–33 to give Wolfman time to catch up on his writing after he fell behind by taking on
Crisis on Infinite Earths and
History of the DC Universe.
Name changed to The New Titans Pérez temporarily returned with issue #50, when the series took the name
The New Titans without the "Teen" prefix, as the characters were no longer teenagers. Issue #50 told a new origin story for Wonder Girl, her link to Wonder Woman having been severed due to
retcons created in the aftermath of
Crisis on Infinite Earths. Pérez sketched through issues #55, 57 and 60, while only providing layouts for issues #58–59 and 61, with artist
Tom Grummett finishing pencils and
Bob McLeod as inker. Pérez remained as cover inker to issues #62–67. He would return for the series finale #130 (Feb. 1996) providing cover art. Issues #60 and #61 were part of a five-part crossover with Batman, "A Lonely Place of Dying" and along with issue #65, featured the debut of Tim Drake as the third Robin. The brief return of Pérez and the addition of Tom Grummett failed to move sales for the book, which were starting to decline. Furthermore, the addition of
Danny Chase (a teenage psychic) drew negative fan response due to his abusive attitude towards the rest of the team. Believing Wolfman had grown stagnant, DC assigned Wolfman a new editor, Jonathan Peterson, and gave Peterson authority to override Wolfman over the direction of the book. With Peterson controlling the book's direction, the series was rapidly overhauled. The
Wildebeest, a villain who used proxies and surrogates to hide his true identity while vexing the Titans, was expanded to a full army of villains called the
Wildebeest Society and revealed to be a front for the remaining members of the supervillain group
H.I.V.E. The group fell under the control of Titan Jericho, who in turn was being possessed by the corrupted souls of Azarath. During the "Titans Hunt" storyline that followed (#71–84), Cyborg was destroyed and rebuilt, along with being lobotomized; Danny Chase and
Arella (Raven's mother) were killed and resurrected as the
gestalt being Phantasm (an identity created by Chase early in the series); while Raven, Jericho, and
Golden Eagle were killed. New character
Pantha (based on plans for a female Wildcat character Wolfman conceived in the mid-'80s) joined the team, along with Deathstroke and
Red Star. Deathstroke was also given his own solo book and the team received its first crossover tie-in since
Millennium, with
The New Titans #81 being part of the "War of the Gods" storyline. Peterson also saw the launch of
Team Titans, which featured a new genetically modified (and heroic) doppelganger of Terra and Donna Troy, who was depowered in the "Total Chaos" crossover. Peterson left the book before "Total Chaos" concluded, leaving Wolfman to deal with the fallout from Peterson's editorially mandated storylines, including the final break-up between Starfire and Nightwing as a couple, the return of Speedy as Arsenal, and the resurrection of Raven as a villain. Following
Zero Hour: Crisis in Time!, the series saw a revamp: Nightwing was removed from the series by Batman editorial and a roster of new young heroes such as
Damage and Impulse were inserted into the team to try and renew interest, along with Team Titan survivors
Mirage and Terra. New Green Lantern
Kyle Rayner was also brought onto the title and given a prominent romance with Donna Troy, whose marriage with Terry Long had collapsed in the pages of
Team Titans before the book's cancellation. Sales saw a collapse and despite several crossovers with other books (
Damage,
Green Lantern,
Darkstars, and
Deathstroke), the series was cancelled with issue #130. The series finale saw the return of
Blackfire as an ally, as the Titans purged Raven of evil once again to prevent Raven and the revived
Citadel Empire from reconquering the
Vega star system.
The New Teen Titans and the Uncanny X-Men The New Teen Titans was widely thought of as DC's answer to the increasingly popular
Uncanny X-Men from
Marvel Comics, as both series featured all-new members and depicted young heroes from disparate backgrounds whose internal conflicts were as integral to the series as was their combat against villains. The two teams met in the 1982
crossover one-shot entitled "Apokolips... Now", which teamed
Darkseid, Deathstroke, and
Dark Phoenix against both teams. The story was written by
Chris Claremont and drawn by
Walt Simonson and
Terry Austin.
New Titans: Games In 1989, Marv Wolfman and George Pérez began planning a prestige format special, their first work together on the franchise since Pérez left after
The New Teen Titans (vol. 2) #5. The project was put on hold when it was decided instead to have Pérez return to the main book as artist and for their first project back together to be "Who Is Wonder Girl?" instead. Over the course of 1989 and 1990, Wolfman and Pérez continued to work on
Games, with over half the project being completed. But the ascension of Jonathan Peterson as editor of the series, and Pérez moving off of
New Titans to work on
The Infinity Gauntlet for Marvel led to the book being shelved. In the early 2000s, Wolfman and Pérez approached DC about completing the book as a stand-alone graphic novel. The book was completed in 2010 and published in 2011. The plot had the New Titans be forced by
King Faraday to go after a mysterious mastermind who forces his victims to play deadly "games" for his amusement. In the interim, Wolfman had rewritten the plot (most notably, changing the original ending where Nightwing personally executes the main villain of the series after his "games" result in the death of longtime Titan ally
Sarah Simms and the maiming of Danny Chase) though retained several key details (the death of Simms and Chase losing his hands) and several additional twists (the introduction of a previously unknown sibling of Raven, the revelation that the main villain was a schizophrenic Faraday, and the destruction of Titans Tower) that make it impossible to fit into canon. As a result, the story was established to take place in an alternate universe.
Teen Titans Spotlight Due to fan backlash over the hardcover/softcover move to the direct market with the main title, a new newsstand Titans book was launched in August 1986 called
Teen Titans Spotlight. The series was an anthology series and featured individual members of the Titans in solo stories, often spanning multiple issues. The series also focused on former members of the group (such as Hawk and Aqualad) and the
Brotherhood of Evil, detailing the formation of the second version of the group. As the move to the direct market effectively limited
The New Teen Titans ability to be part of company-wide crossovers, two issues of
Spotlight tied into the
Millennium crossover event, with the second issue being the coda for the event. The series failed to catch on and was cancelled in 1988, along with
Tales of the Teen Titans.
Team Titans The
Team Titans were one of 100 groups sent back through time to prevent the birth of
Lord Chaos, the son of Donna Troy and Terry Long. Their mission was to kill the pregnant Troy before she could give birth.
Mirage,
Killowat, Redwing,
Terra,
Nightrider, Prestor Jon, and
Battalion made up the team.
Teen Titans (vol. 2) (1996–1998) and
George Pérez Teen Titans was written and penciled by
Dan Jurgens. It began in 1996 with a new #1 (October 1996), with Pérez as inker for the first 15 issues.
Atom, who had become a teenager following the events of
Zero Hour, leads the brand-new team (of Prysm,
Joto,
Risk, and
Argent).
Arsenal became a mentor about halfway through and
Captain Marvel Jr. joins the team. The series ended in September 1998. A contest was held in the letters pages to determine who would join the team.
Robin (Tim Drake), won the vote, but editors on the Batman titles banned his appearance, forcing Jurgens to use Captain Marvel Jr. instead. His inclusion failed to boost sales and the series was then cancelled.
Titans (1999–2003) The team returned in a three-issue miniseries,
JLA/Titans: The Technis Imperative, featuring nearly every Titan and showcasing the return of Cyborg. This led into
Titans, written by
Devin K. Grayson, starting with
Titans Secret Files and Origins #1 (March 1999). This team consisted of Nightwing, Troia, Arsenal, Tempest, the Flash, Starfire, Cyborg, Changeling, Damage and Argent. One new member,
Jesse Quick, joined. This team lasted until issue #50 (2002). The West Coast branch of the team, Titans L.A., appeared once, in the pages of
Titans Secret Files and Origins #2. Between
Teen Titans and
Titans, a new generation of young heroes formed a team in
Young Justice, consisting of
Superboy,
Robin,
Impulse,
Wonder Girl,
Secret, and
Arrowette. The two series concluded with the three-issue miniseries
Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day, which led to two new series:
Teen Titans and
Outsiders.
Teen Titans (vol. 3) (2003–2011) and Outsiders (vol. 3) (2003–2007) and Marlo Alquiza Writer
Geoff Johns'
Teen Titans series began in 2003, after a three issue miniseries entitled
Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day, which saw Lilith's death and Donna Troy sent to another world after seemingly dying, along with the disbanding of the 1998–2002 Titans roster and the Young Justice team. The relaunch came on the heels of the debut of the
Teen Titans animated series on
Cartoon Network and reflected DC Comics chief executive
Dan DiDio's desire to rehabilitate the Titans as one of DC's top franchises. Launched at the same time was a companion series, a revived version of
The Outsiders which featured Nightwing and Arsenal, along with several other Titans members (Captain Marvel Jr. and Starfire). The series featured several of the main teenage heroes from the Young Justice roster (Robin, Superboy, Wonder Girl, Impulse) and Starfire, Cyborg and Changeling (now rebranded Beast Boy to reflect the cartoon). Raven later returned to the team, reborn in a new teenage body while Jericho was brought back, having escaped death by possessing and laying dormant inside his father Deathstroke's mind. The series renewed interest in the Titans, but drew sharp complaints due to shifts in the personalities of the various Young Justice characters. Most notably, the decision to have Bart Allen become Kid Flash and the decision to Jettison his happy-go-lucky person in favor of a more serious personality. The series retconned Superboy's origin, making him a hybrid human-
Kryptonian clone created from the combined DNA of
Superman and
Lex Luthor. Originally, Superboy was a purely human clone created from the DNA of
Paul Westfield. Under Johns, the Teen Titans were front and center during the build-up and events of the
Infinite Crisis crossover. During the lead-in of the crossover, Donna Troy came back in a four-part crossover miniseries with The Outsiders called "The Return of Donna Troy" while Superboy and Cassie Sandsmark became a couple. During
Infinite Crisis, Superboy was killed by Superboy-Prime, Cyborg was severely damaged by cosmic forces unleashed by
Alexander Luthor Jr., Starfire was lost in space with several other heroes, while Kid Flash became lost in the
Speed Force, re-emerging in the Flash uniform and having aged to adulthood after a failed attempt to stop Superboy-Prime.
One Year Later and the post-Geoff Johns Titans Following the events of
Infinite Crisis, the Teen Titans fell into a state of chaos. Wonder Girl quit the group to join a cult she believed could resurrect Superboy, while Robin took a leave of absence to travel the globe with Batman and Nightwing. Beast Boy and Raven attempted to keep the Titans going, resulting in a massive open call membership drive that saw a large number of heroes come and join the roster, which was anchored by Beast Boy and Raven. New members include
Miss Martian,
Kid Devil,
Zachary Zatara,
Ravager,
Bombshell (who like Terra, was a traitor working for Deathstroke),
Young Frankenstein, and
Osiris. During this period, Osiris was driven from the team due to a smear campaign launched by Amanda Waller after she manipulated him into killing a super-villain. The smear campaign against Osiris, along with the war between Black Adam and
Intergang, led to Adam declaring war on the world. In the ensuing series of battles against the super-hero community, the Titans fought and lost a bloody battle with the villain, culminating in the deaths of Terra and Young Frankenstein. The deaths led to Beast Boy resigning from the team to join the Doom Patrol along with Herald and Bumblebee, while Raven took a leave of absence to purge Jericho of the dark forces that were corrupting him. Robin and Wonder Girl eventually rejoined the Titans (now located in San Francisco, California) and helped foil Bombshell's plan to frame Miss Martian as Deathstroke's latest mole in the team and allowed Raven to cleanse Jericho of the corruption that had turned him evil. Geoff Johns's final arc on the series would introduce a new villainous "
Titans East" team, led by Deathstroke and Batgirl
Cassandra Cain. Soon after, events related to the
Countdown story arc impacted the Titans. Duela Dent and Bart Allen are killed; Cyborg leaves, and
Supergirl joins and
Blue Beetle is invited to train, but the two eventually leave, with the members joining the Justice League of America and Justice League International, respectively. The Titans fight the future, evil adult versions of the group (
Titans Tomorrow) and
Clock King and the
Terror Titans, who are part of Darkseid's underground fight club for
metahumans. After the
Batman R.I.P storyline, Robin leaves and Wonder Girl leads the team. Red Devil loses his powers after Brother Blood absorbs them. Miss Martian returns with several teen heroes liberated from the Dark Side Club. A new team is formed: Wonder Girl, Blue Beetle and the now-powerless Red Devil are joined by
Kid Eternity and
Static, with the new
Aquagirl, Miss Martian and a reformed Bombshell signing up. In the
Blackest Night crossover, several dead Titans are resurrected as members of the
Black Lantern Corps. In the
Titans: Blackest Night miniseries, an emergency team consisting of Donna Troy, Cyborg, Wonder Girl, Starfire, Beast Boy, Kid Flash and the new
Hawk and
Dove, is formed to defend the Tower. In the ensuing battle, Hawk is killed after her predecessor Hank Hall tears her heart out. At the end of the
Blackest Knight crossover, Hank Hall is resurrected and resumes his partnership with Dove. In the main series, Ravager and Jericho fight their father Deathstroke and the dead members of the Wilson family, resurrected as Black Lanterns. During this time, several back-up stories begin to run in the series: one called "The Coven", starring
Black Alice,
Zachary Zatara and
Traci Thirteen and later, one starring Ravager. Later storylines involve the corruption of Wonder Girl at the hands of various factors (designed to address complaints about the character's abusive attitudes towards her teammates post-
Infinite Crisis), Kid Devil is killed in battle, while Kid Eternity is revealed to have been beaten to death by the
Calculator after being kidnapped by him.
J. T. Krul became the writer with issue #88 and penciler
Nicola Scott became the book's artist. The issue's teaser shows a line-up of Superboy, Wonder Girl, Raven, Beast Boy, Kid Flash and Ravager. The Titans undergo this roster change in issue #87, the final issue before Krul's run. Following a mission to an alternate dimension to rescue Raven, the team splits. Bombshell and Aquagirl are
missing in action, Miss Martian is in a coma and she and a powerless Static leave with Cyborg to go to
Project Cadmus to find a way to restore his powers.
Damian Wayne, the current Robin, is announced as a new team member, officially joining in #89. A series for Static was announced. In January 2011, new Titan
Solstice debuted in the January 2011
Wonder Girl one-shot. She entered the main
Teen Titans title following the crossover with the
Red Robin series. During the crossover, Tim asks the Titans for help in tracking down the Calculator after he tries to kill his friend
Tamara Fox. Tim rejoins the team as Red Robin (rather than Robin) but Cassie would remain the leader. Following this, Damian quits the team. The book concluded with a three-part storyline spanning issues #98–100, which saw Superboy-Prime return to destroy the team. A large group of former Titans arrived and the series ended with Prime trapped in the
Source Wall. The remainder of the issue consisted of pieces of artwork showcasing the various Teen Titans who appeared in that incarnation of the title, contributed by various DC artists.
Titans (vol. 2) (2008–2011) A second ongoing Teen Titans series, titled
Titans, launched in April 2008 with a
cover date of June 2008, written by
Judd Winick. The first issue was drawn by
Ian Churchill and
Norm Rapmund and the second was by
Joe Benitez and Victor Llamas. The opening storyline follows the events of the
Teen Titans East Special one-shot released in November 2007, revealing that Cyborg's team survived the attack, except Power Boy, dead after being impaled. The team's new line up consists of former
New Teen Titans Nightwing, Flash (Wally West), Donna Troy, Beast Boy, Raven, Cyborg, Red Arrow and Starfire. In the series' first story, Trigon makes a series of attacks on every member, former or current, of the Teen Titans and Trigon has "another child" that, unlike Raven, will assist him in his attack. After reclaiming Titans Island and establishing a headquarters on the East River, Cyborg sets out to create an East Coast Titans team. During a training session, the team was massacred by an unseen force. Though Cyborg survives, Titans' members past and present are attacked by demonic entities across the globe. Raven, sensing Trigon's presence once again, calls upon her former Titans allies to defeat her fiendish father. After rescuing several Titans and questioning Trigon himself, the Titans learn that Trigon's three children have prepared his second invasion for him. Raven's three half-brothers – Jacob, Jared and Jesse – are responsible. Working as a team, the Titans thwart the Sons of Trigon and stop Trigon's invasion plan. Following this adventure, Raven chooses her adopted family over her biological family, Red Arrow decided to join his former teammates (although both he and Flash retain their JLA membership) and the Titans were back together as a team. Following this, the team settles at Titans Tower (the New York base), to recover from the events. While Dick and Kory attempt to make a decision on where their relationship will lead, Raven and Beast Boy go out on a "not-a-date". During this, Raven reveals that since she faced her brothers, she has begun to feel as if she is losing control and slipping back under her father's influence. Although Beast Boy rejects the idea, he is unexpectedly blind-sided as Raven gives in to her darker side, under the influence of her half-brother's coaxing. Using her teleporting powers, she and the sons of Trigon vanish, leaving a distraught Beast Boy to warn the others. Using a gemstone that carries Raven's pure essence within it, the Titans free Raven of her father's evil. As a result, Raven leaves each Titan with an amulet that can be used to cleanse any evil influence from her body. Jericho arrives asking the Titans for help, having become trapped in
Match's body after possessing him. It is soon revealed that Jericho has turned renegade again and fights the Titans, influenced by the remnants of those he has possessed over the years. Nightwing resigns from the Titans due to
his new responsibilities in Gotham.
Brightest Day: Titans – Villains for Hire A
Comic-Con announcement stated that Cyborg, Donna Troy and Starfire were leaving the team to pursue the JLA. Red Arrow, with his daughter
Lian, has already relocated and is no longer involved with the Titans, but he got a spotlight in issue #23 after what happens to him in
Justice League: Cry for Justice #5. After a series of spotlight issues,
Final Crisis Aftermath: INK writer-artist creative team Eric Wallace and Fabrizio Fiorentino took over. Deathstroke took over the team with the
Tattooed Man and
Cheshire. One of the new members included Carla Monetti a.k.a. Cinder, a young redheaded woman with the ability to manipulate fire.
Osiris, a member during the
One Year Later gap, who had been brought back to life after the events of
Blackest Night, returned as a member. The final issue of the limited series,
Justice League: The Rise of Arsenal ended with an advertisement stating that Arsenal's storyline would continue. The team debuted in the one-shot issue
Titans: Villains for Hire, where they are hired to assassinate
Ryan Choi (the Atom) in his home in
Ivy Town. The issue quickly became the subject of controversy due to Choi's violent death. Allegations of racial insensitivity dogged DC over the decision to kill off a relatively high-profile Asian character. Following the one-shot, in the team's inaugural storyline they were hired to assassinate
Lex Luthor following the events of
War of the Supermen. This is revealed to be a ruse set up by Luthor and Deathstroke to draw out the real assassin, a shape-shifter named "Facade", who had apparently killed and impersonated a woman on Luthor's security detail. Following several adventures, the Titans are confronted by
Ray Palmer and the Justice League for their hand in Ryan's murder. The Titans are nearly defeated, but manage to escape thanks to an intervention from the newly resurrected
Isis. Following the battle with the Justice League,
Titans concluded with a two-part storyline which saw Jericho's return. The series ended with Arsenal battling Slade for control of the team and the Titans ultimately disbanding and Arsenal taking Jericho under his wing, leaving Slade alone once again.
The New 52 (2011–2016) and Norm Rapmund DC Comics relaunched
Teen Titans with issue #1 (
cover dated November 2011) as part of DC's New 52 event, written by
Scott Lobdell with former
Justice League artist
Brett Booth providing interiors. The relaunch was controversial, because it was originally designed as a direct continuation of the previous Teen Titans series before Dan DiDio declared that all previous incarnations of the Titans never existed; this in spite of the fact that early issues of the 2011 series (as well as "
Red Hood and the Outlaws" and "
Batwoman") made explicit mention of the previous Teen Titans teams. The new team is formed by Tim Drake, now rebranded as "Red Robin" to protect teenage heroes from a villain known as Harvest and his organization
N.O.W.H.E.R.E. A running theme for the 2011–2014 series was Harvest kidnapping young heroes for experimentation and enslavement as part of the villainous scheme for world domination. The 2011–2014 series featured several crossovers, "
The Culling", which had the team meet the Legion of Super-Heroes, as well as "
Death of the Family", which focused upon a meeting of Batgirl, Red Hood and the Outlaws, and the Titans, as the Joker kidnapped Red Hood and Red Robin. The 2012 "Zero Month" issue provided the
New 52 origin of Tim Drake, recasting him as a young computer hacker who was adopted by Batman to protect him from retaliation by the
Penguin. The 2011–2014 series and
Scott Lobdell's writing drew negative reviews, though the Lobdell-created character
Bunker was positively received by fans. Criticism included the meandering Harvest/N.O.W.H.E.R.E storyline; the introduction of
Bar Torr, a futuristic fundamentalist Christian terrorist based on Bart Allen; and the elimination of the franchise's lore. The character of Raven and Trigon was originally embargoed by Lobdell, but the characters were brought back due to fan demand. The 2011 series also spawned a short-lived spin-off,
The Ravagers, which ran for 10 issues and featured Beast Boy, Terra, and Caitlin Fairchild of
Gen13 in major roles. The series was relaunched in July with a new issue #1 with
Will Pfeifer as writer. The series continued with the characteristics of the main characters, but ignored the events of the Ravagers spin-off, presenting Beast Boy both green and in line with his animated series characteristics. The series also added an African American version of the super-heroine
Power Girl to the roster. Due to the backlash against the removal of the previous incarnations of the Titans (and the ripple effect it had upon characters such as Nightwing and Donna Troy), DC launched a new miniseries called "Titans Hunt", which restored the original 1960s version of the Titans to canon. The series states that all memory of the original Titans was erased by Lilith to protect the team from Mister Twister. It also alludes to further reality alterations to the DC Universe; these are then picked up on in the
DC Rebirth initiative, beginning a week after "Titans Hunt", which restores
Wally West to canon, along with various aspects of the pre-
Flashpoint continuity.
DC Rebirth (2016–2020) The June 2016
DC Rebirth relaunch established two Titans teams: the Titans, with Nightwing, The Flash (Wally West), Lilith, Arsenal, Donna Troy, the Bumblebee and Tempest; and the Teen Titans, consisting of Damian Wayne as Robin,
Ace West as Kid Flash,
Jackson Hyde as Aqualad, Beast Boy, Starfire and Raven.
Titans writer
Dan Abnett confirmed in an interview with
Newsarama that
Titans characters Hawk and Dove, Herald, Gnarrk, and others would be appearing in the new series as well. After "
The Lazarus Contract" event, Ace is fired from the Teen Titans and joins Defiance, Deathstroke's version of the Titans. However, Wallace returns to the Teen Titans in issue #14. In
Super Sons #7, Superboy (
Jon Kent) acts as a temporary member. As part of the "New Justice" banner for DC Comics, both teams underwent changes in their roster, with Nightwing, Donna Troy, Raven,
Steel (Natasha Irons), Beast Boy,
Miss Martian and eventually
Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner), and Robin, Kid Flash, Red Arrow (
Emiko Queen),
Crush (
Lobo's daughter), Djinn, and Roundhouse for the Teen Titans. The
Titans series ended its run at issue #36 (April 2019), while
Teen Titans is ended its run in November 2020 at issue #47.
Infinite Frontier (2021–2022) In the
Teen Titans Academy series, the adult generation of Titans (Nightwing, Starfire, Donna Troy, Beast Boy, Cyborg, and Raven) serve as faculty of a new superhero academy designed to mentor the heroes of tomorrow. Its upperclassmen are the active Teen Titans squad (Bunker, Roundhouse, Crush, Kid Flash, Red Arrow, and
Jakeem Thunder), while its new students include three bat-themed Gotham residents (the brawny Megabat, techy Bratgirl, and bat-like metahuman Chupacabra) collectively known as the Bat Pack; the established superhero
Billy Batson / Shazam; paraplegic speedster
Bolt; EMP-generating Brick Pettirosso; nonbinary ragdoll and apprentice to
Doctor Fate,
Stitch; Raven's star pupil, Dane; tubular shapeshifter Marvin "Tooby" Murakami; ice-wielder Summer Zahid; simian superhero Gorilla Gregg, nephew of
Grodd;
Hero dial wielder Miguel Montez; green-prehensile-haired Tress; and the amnesiac, super strong, Matt Price. As the new students and faculty of the academy attempt to establish their new school, they are plagued by appearances of someone assuming the costume of
Red X, once worn by Dick Grayson and another mysterious copycat. As time goes on, the team discover that Dane is the half-demon antichrist, and under the alias Nevermore (
reflecting his similarities to Raven), is destined to bring about the apocalypse. In the first story arc's conclusion, the mysterious third Red X is revealed to be Brick, operating under the false belief that Dick Grayson is his father; he was manipulated by the second Red X, who bears a longstanding grudge against Grayson. Dane and Brick's attacks on the Academy cause the structure to collapse, but the students manage to prevent all but minimal casualties. Matt Price fires optic blasts in the final confrontation, indicating to onlookers that he may be a Kryptonian, but Grayson deduces he must be something else, as the blasts give off no heat. The events of
Teen Titans Academy lead into the storyline "
Dark Crisis", which sees Nightwing, the Titans, and the other younger heroes step up in the Justice League's absence to defeat a possessed
Deathstroke's dark army and save the multiverse.
Dawn of DC (2023–present) Following the events of "Dark Crisis" and during the run of writer
Tom Taylor on
Nightwing, Superman approaches Nightwing with the proposition that he serves as the leader of the new superhero team who succeeds the Justice League following their disbanding. This leads to Nightwing unveiling a new Titans Tower in
Blüdhaven with the team consisting of him, The Flash (Wally West), Donna Troy, Beast Boy, Cyborg, Starfire, and Raven. This will lead into a new Titans series written by Taylor and illustrated by
Nicola Scott. The Titans' first challenge brings them into conflict with Brother Eternity, a
Tamaranean named Xand'r who used to work for the royal family of
Tamaran before betraying them to the Citadel, whom has taken over the
Church of Blood (now renamed the Church of Eternity) and infuses Tempest with a parasite to turn him against the team. This later leads to the events of
Titans: Beast World where
Amanda Waller and Doctor Hate (revealed to be Raven's demonic half having escaped her gem and taken on a new form styled after Doctor Fate) take advantage of Beast Boy becoming a
Star Conqueror to defeat Brother Eternity's master, a Star Conqueror known as the Necrostar, and use him as part of a plot to transform the superheroes and supervillains into mind-controlled animals. Although the Titans do return everyone to normal, Waller frames the Titans as the culprits for the attack and confiscates the
Hall of Justice. In addition, Hate defeats Raven during the incident, imprisons her in her own gem, and poses as her to infiltrate the Titans. Tempest, freed from the parasite, finally joins the team. ==Titans Tower==