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==Issues== |
==Issues== |
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+ | ===North America issues=== |
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</small> |
</small> |
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+ | ===Latin America issues=== |
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+ | {| cellspacing="8" valign="top" width="99%" |
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+ | |- |
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+ | | valign="top" width="33%" |<small> |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 1|Super Friends #1]] (May 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 2|Super Friends #2]] (June 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 3|Super Friends #3]] (July 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 4|Super Friends #4]] (August 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 5|Super Friends #5]] (September 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 6|Super Friends #6]] (October 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 7|Super Friends #7]] (November 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 8|Super Friends #8]] (December 1985) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 9|Super Friends #9]] (January 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 10|Super Friends #10]] (February 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 11|Super Friends #11]] (March 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 12|Super Friends #12]] (April 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 13|Super Friends #13]] (May 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 14|Super Friends #14]] (June 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 15|Super Friends #15]] (July 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 16|Super Friends #16]] (August 1986) |
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+ | </small> |
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+ | | valign="top" width="33%" |<small> |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 17|Super Friends #17]] (September 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 18|Super Friends #18]] (October 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 19|Super Friends #19]] (November 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 20|Super Friends #20]] (December 1986) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 21|Super Friends #21]] (January 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 22|Super Friends #22]] (February 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 23|Super Friends #23]] (March 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 24|Super Friends #24]] (April 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 25|Super Friends #25]] (May 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 26|Super Friends #26]] (June 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 27|Super Friends #27]] (July 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 28|Super Friends #28]] (August 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 29|Super Friends #29]] (September 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 30|Super Friends #30]] (October 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 31|Super Friends #31]] (November 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 32|Super Friends #32]] (December 1987) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 33|Super Friends #33]] (January 1988) |
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+ | </small> |
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+ | | valign="top" width="39%" |<small> |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 34|Super Friends #34]] (February 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 35|Super Friends #35]] (March 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 36|Super Friends #36]] (April 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 37|Super Friends #37]] (May 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 38|Super Friends #38]] (June 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 39|Super Friends #39]] (July 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 40|Super Friends #40]] (August 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 41|Super Friends #41]] (September 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamgios 42|Super Friends #42]] (October 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 43|Super Friends #43]] (November 1988) |
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+ | *[[Superamigos 44|Super Friends #44]] (December 1988) |
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+ | </small> |
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+ | |} |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 17:55, 23 August 2014
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The Super Friends had an ongoing comic book series published from 1976 until 1981.
The stories were further adventures of the popular Hanna-Barbera animated series, The Super Friends.
It began after the 1973 season of the TV series was canceled. It focused on the SuperFriends, and Wendy and Marvin. Then in 1977, when the SuperFriends cartoon was relaunched with Zan and Jayna, instead of Wendy and Marvin;[1] the comic followed suit. It showed how the kids "retired" to attend college and even gave an origin story to the Wonder Twins.
Although the comic overlapped several seasons of the Superfriends, we assume that the entire series takes place chronologically between Season 1 and 2.[2]
This comicbook series was responsible for creating the Global Guardians. Although it would not be till 1982 in the parallel universe of Earth-One that they go by that designation.
Like its TV counterpart the SuperFriends Comicbook was responsible for introducing several international superheroes.
In Latin America, the series was called "Superamigos" (Spanish/Portuguese for Superfriends). These issues were published by Editora Abril and featured mainly reprints of the English language DC Comics translated into the native language, some that weren't even part of the American Superfriends comic, but were reprints of Warlord, Daring Adventures of Supergirl, Camelot 3000 and even Crisis On Infinite Earths.
Notes
- Writer E. Nelson Bridwell, did his best to tie-in the SuperFriends TV series to established canon using footnotes. However, what he achieved was an entirely new universe for the SuperFriends, that fans call Earth-1A.
- Bridwell said several times in the letter column that he did not want the Legion of Doom to appear; so they never did.[?]
See Also
Issues
North America issues
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Latin America issues
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References
- ↑ The first eight issues would include Wendy and Marvin.
- ↑ The reason this is, because for only Season 1 of the series, the Hall of Justice was located in Gotham City. Apparently, the Hall of Justice is located in Gotham for the entirety of the comic book series.