Power Girl

Power Girl
Power Girl as she appeared on the cover of Power Girl (vol. 2) #12 (May 2010).
Art by Amanda Conner.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceAll Star Comics #58 (February 1976)
Created byGerry Conway
Ric Estrada
Wally Wood
In-story information
Alter egoKara Zor-L
Kara Zor-El (post-Flashpoint)
Karen Starr
SpeciesKryptonian
Place of originKrypton-Two
Team affiliationsJustice Society of America
Justice League Europe
Infinity, Inc.
Birds of Prey
Suicide Squad
Sovereign Seven
Justice League
PartnershipsHelena Wayne
Notable aliasesKaren Starr
Kara of Atlantis
Nightwing
Super-Girl
Abilities
See list
    • Superhuman strength, stamina, endurance, speed, agility, reflexes, intelligence, longevity, and hearing
    • Solar radiation absorption
    • Enhanced vision
      • EM spectrum vision
      • Microscopic vision
      • X-ray vision
      • Telescopic vision
      • Infra-red vision
    • Invulnerability
    • Ice and wind breath
    • Flight
    • Heat vision
    • Telepathy
    • Combat experience
    • Business management
Power Girl
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
Schedulemonthly
FormatOngoing series
GenreSuperhero
No. of issues4 (Vol. 1)
27 (Vol. 2)
Main character(s)Power Girl
Creative team
Written byVol. 1:
Paul Kupperberg
Vol. 2:
Jimmy Palmiotti (#1–12)
Justin Gray (#1–12)
Judd Winick (#13–25)
Lilah Sturges (#26–27)
Artist(s)Vol. 1:
Rick Hoberg
Arne Starr
Vol. 2:
Amanda Conner (#1–12)
Sami Basri (#13–23)
Hendry Prasetya (#24–27)
Letterer(s)Vol. 1:
Bob Pinaha
Vol. 2:
John J. Hill (#1–24)
Travis Lanham (#25–27)
Colorist(s)Vol. 1:
Julianna Ferriter
Vol. 2:
Paul Mounts (#1–13)
Sunny Gho (#14–20)
Jessica Kholinne (#16–27)
Collected editions
Power Girl: A New BeginningISBN 978-1401226183
Power Girl: Aliens & ApesISBN 978-1401229108
Power Girl: Bomb SquadISBN 978-1401231620
Power Girl: Old FriendsISBN 978-1401233655

Power Girl, also known as Kara Zor-L, and Karen Starr, is a superheroine appearing in American comic books by DC Comics, making her first appearance in All Star Comics #58 (January/February 1976).[1] Power Girl is the cousin of the superhero Superman, but from an alternate universe in the fictional multiverse in which DC Comics stories are set. Originally hailing from the world of Earth-Two, first envisioned as the home of DC's wartime heroes as published in 1940s comic books, Power Girl becomes stranded in the main universe where DC stories are set, and becomes acquainted with that world's Superman and her own counterpart, Supergirl.

In common with Supergirl's origin story, she is the daughter of Superman's aunt and uncle and a native of the planet Krypton.[2] The infant Power Girl's parents enabled her to escape the destruction of her home planet by placing her in a rocket ship. Although she left the planet at the same time that Superman did, her ship took much longer to reach Earth-Two. On Earth, as with other Kryptonians, Power Girl discovered she possessed abilities like super strength, flight, and heat vision, using which she became a protector of innocents and a hero for humanity. Though the specifics of how vary over subsequent retellings, Power Girl is later stranded on another Earth when a cosmic crisis affects her home of Earth-Two, and later carves out a separate identity for herself from her dimensional counterpart Supergirl once they are forced to coexist.

Although she and Supergirl are biologically the same person, there are vast differences between the two. Power Girl is much older than her Prime-Earth counterpart, and as such has a more curvaceous and voluptuous figure, with her most notable feature among fans being her large breasts. Compared to Supergirl she is more level-headed due to her maturity, and her fighting style is more aggressive. She also adopts a different secret identity from her counterpart. These changes are reflected in their differing costumes and superhero names as well; Power Girl sports a bob of blond hair; wears a distinctive white, red, and blue costume with a cleavage-displaying cutout. The name Power Girl reflects that she chooses not to be seen as a derivative of Superman, but rather her own hero and this choice is reflected in the strong independent attitude of the character. Over various decades, Power Girl has been depicted as a member of superhero teams such as the Justice Society of America, Infinity, Inc., Justice League Europe, and the Birds of Prey.

Power Girl's origin has gone through revisions, but over time has reverted to her original conception as the Supergirl of Earth-Two. The 1985 limited series Crisis on Infinite Earths eliminated Earth-Two from history, causing her to be retconned as the granddaughter of an Atlantean sorcerer known as Arion. This was an unpopular change and writers depicted the revised Power Girl inconsistently. The 2005–2006 Infinite Crisis limited series then restored her status as a refugee from the Krypton of the destroyed Pre-Crisis Earth-Two universe. This has been her consistent depiction ever since.

  1. ^ Who’s Who in the DC Universe #18 (August 1986)
  2. ^ Greenberger, Robert; Pasko, Martin (2010). The Essential Superman Encyclopedia. Del Rey. pp. 315–317. ISBN 978-0-345-50108-0.

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