Comic books
Melbourne is the capital city of Victoria, Australia. In 1835, it was almost named Batmania after one of its founders, John Batman.
half a million 6 bit characters
There are two sets of characters the Japanese use, each containing 46 characters. The first is Hiragana and the second is Katakana, combined it is referred to as the Kana.
The vikings in Iceland wrote in Icelandic or old norse. For example Snorri Sturluson Icelander that wrote Heimskringla among other works. Vikings wrote using characters called runes which were phonetic. Where our characters are called alphabetical (after alpha and beta, the first two characters in Greek) theirs is called the futhark after the first six characters (th being a single character). There is a link below.
Superman.Superman is faster.Superman can travel faster than the speed of light, although he normally limits himself to speeds that won't damage the surrounding environment. Superman is stronger.Superman is generally written in the Sextillion ton range, where World War Hulk's best feat is only in the Trillion ton range. Meaning Superman's AVERAGE is a million times greater than Hulk's BEST. Such a difference is too vast to ignore because of a no-limits fallacy. Superman is more durable.Superman can sustain several blows from beings stronger than himself without much or any injury. Superman has nigh inexauhstible stamina.Superman has faught toe to toe with beings stronger than himself for weeks. Superman has a vast array of other abilies.Superman's heat vision is off the scale that is used to measure/calculate the heat/energy of Supernovae. Superman's super scream can cancel out the impending threat of an already exploding nuclear detonation. Superman's freeze breath can stop the fission in stars. Hulk's fight with Sentry demonstrated several things; first being that Hulk does have limits. More importantly it showed that Sentry was jobbing Hulk, meaning Hulk would have lost a straight fight with Sentry.
that or batman one, or spiderman one.
Superman came first. He was introduced in 1938. Batman followed in the next year.
Superman appeared first in his debut during 1938. Batman appeared during 1939-1941.
Characters like Spider-Man, Batman, and Superman first emerged in the superhero genre. This genre gained popularity in comic books during the late 1930s and early 1940s, with Superman debuting in 1938, followed by Batman in 1939, and Spider-Man in 1962. These characters are known for their extraordinary abilities, moral dilemmas, and struggles against villains, establishing the foundation for countless superhero stories and adaptations in various media.
Batman and Superman first fought each other in the comic book "Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice" released in 1963, specifically in "World's Finest Comics" #153. The conflict arose from a misunderstanding, typical of comic book storytelling, where heroes often clash before ultimately teaming up against a common enemy. This iconic rivalry set the stage for many future encounters between the two characters in various media.
Henry Cavill (Clark Kent/Superman) and Ben Affleck (Bruce Wayne/Batman)
Yes- the sequel to "Man of Steel" will feature both Superman and Batman on-screen in a live-action film for the first time ever.
One but Batman made his first appearance in May 1939 in Detective Comics #27and Superman made his first appearance June 1938 in Action Comics #1 so really eleven
Although Spider-Man has been around a while, Batman was first. Spider-Man first appeared in Marvel comics in 1962. Batman first appeared in Detective Comics, later to become DC, in 1939.
i thnk it is superman but it could be batman im not sure
Since 1932 when writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster created him for Detective Comics
Superman's first appearance was in "Action Comics #1," cover dated June 1938. Batman's first appearance was in "Detective Comics #27," cover dated May 1939. Thus, in the real world, Superman is older. If, on the other hand, you are referring to characters, there is no clear answer to that which I am aware of. They are treated in the comics as contemporaries of similar age, and those ages aren't specified exactly. (Superhero ages rarely are these days, to better facilitate the "fluid" timelines that happen because the characters don't age nearly as rapidly as their readers.)