Spectre made its first appearance in the DC comics series in 1940. Spectre was shown in the "next issue" slip in the January issue of More Fun Comics, and subsequently appeared in the February issue of the comic series in the same year.
DC Comics The Spectre.
It would probaly be The Spectre, who can pretty much do anything.
Green Arrow first appeared in More Fun Comics #73, issued in November of 1941. This was a comic line published by DC, and created by Morton Weisinger and George Papp.
It was founded in 1934 as National Allied Comics.As early as 1940, they started using the name "Superman-DC" (After their two most successful books, Superman and Detective Comics, which was where Batman was first introduced in #27), with their earliest version of the DC Comics logo being found at the time. They were called DC Comics from then on by readers, even though, officially, they were still called "Superman-DC". It was until 1977 that the company OFFICIALLY adopted the name DC Comics.
DC Comics was founded in 1934, while Marvel Comics was founded later in 1939. So, DC came first.
Enigma, a character from DC Comics, was created by Peter Milligan and Duncan Fegredo in 1993. He made his first appearance in "Enigma" #1.
The initials "DC" came from the company's popular series Detective Comics, which subsequently became part of the company's name.
DC Comics was founded in 1934, originally as National Allied Publications. The company rebranded as DC Comics in the 1930s, with the name "DC" derived from its popular series, Detective Comics. The first comic under the DC banner, "Detective Comics #1," was published in March 1937.
dc comics
Holocaust - DC Comics - was created in 1993.
Menagerie - DC Comics - was created in 2001.
The hugely successful comic book company known as DC Comics came to be in 1937. Their first issue was named "Detective Comics" (thus the initials DC). The letters DC appeared as an insignia first on the covers of comics produced by National Comics (a merger of Detective Comics and National Allied Publications), but as readers began to refer to the titles as "DC comics," the company adopted the name officially. Over the years, the company's abbreviated name "DC" has been defined in other ways, including parodical forms such as "Distinguished Competition" used by rival publisher Marvel Comics.It also has since been used to stand for Diamond Comics Distributors. Although, Diamond comics officially uses the initials DCD. DC is actually copyrighted by DC Comics.