Omega Men

Last updated
Omega Men
OmegaMen.jpg
The Omega Men by Pasqual Ferry.
Group publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Green Lantern (vol. 2) #141 (June 1981)
Created by Marv Wolfman
Joe Staton
In-story information
Type of organizationTeam
Base(s)Kuraq in the Vegan system
Agent(s)Tigorr
Broot
Elu
Ryand'r
Omega Men
Omegamen v1 01.jpg Cover to Omega Men #1 (April 1983), art by Keith Giffen and Mike DeCarlo.
Series publication information
ScheduleMonthly
Format(vol. 1)
Ongoing series
(vol. 2)
Limited series
(vol. 3)
Limited series
Genre
Publication date(vol. 1)
April 1983 – May 1986
(vol. 2)
December 2006 – May 2007
(vol. 3)
June 2015 – May 2016
Number of issues(vol. 1)
38
(vol. 2)
6
(vol. 3)
12
Creative team
Writer(s)(vol. 1)
Roger Slifer
(vol. 2)
Andersen Gabrych
(vol. 3)
Tom King
Artist(s)(vol. 2)
Henry Flint
(vol. 3)
Barnaby Bagenda
Penciller(s)(vol. 1)
Keith Giffen
Inker(s)(vol. 1)
Mike DeCarlo
Letterer(s)(vol. 1)
John Costanza
(vol. 2)
Pat Brosseau
Colorist(s)(vol. 1)
Petra Goldberg
(vol. 2)
Donimic Regan
(vol. 3)
Romulo Fajardo, Jr
Creator(s) Marv Wolfman
Joe Staton

The Omega Men are a fictional team of extraterrestrial superheroes who have appeared in various comic book series published by DC Comics. They first appeared in Green Lantern (vol. 2) #141 (June 1981), and were created by Marv Wolfman and Joe Staton. [1]

Contents

Publication history

After appearances in Green Lantern, Action Comics and The New Teen Titans , the Omega Men were featured in their own comics series which ran for 38 issues from April 1983 to May 1986. During its run, writer Roger Slifer and artist Keith Giffen created the mercenary anti-hero Lobo. Later creators included writers Doug Moench and Todd Klein (who also lettered later issues in the run), artists Tod Smith, Shawn McManus and Alex Niño, and inkers Mike DeCarlo, Jim McDermott and Greg Theakston.

Members of the Omega Men also appeared in the 2004 eight-issue Adam Strange limited series, as well as the 2005 Infinite Crisis lead-in 6-issue limited series, Rann-Thanagar War and the 2008 follow-up Rann-Thanagar Holy War . [2]

In 2006 they had their own six issue limited series with Tigorr, Doc, Elu, Broot and Ryand'r - written by Andersen Gabrych and art by Henry Flint. [3] [4]

Fictional team history

The Omega Men hail from the Vega system, a planetary system with twenty-five habitable planets, which as of the early 1980s had been ruled for millennia by the Citadelians, a race of warriors cloned from the First Citadelian, the demi-godlike son of X'Hal. [5]

Cover of Green Lantern (vol. 2) #141, art by George Perez. Omegamen1.png
Cover of Green Lantern (vol. 2) #141, art by George Pérez.

The Citadelians established a tyrannical regime based in a fortress moon known as the Citadel. The Citadel then set about to conquer the younger races of Vega. Originally there were only two races in the Vegan system, the primitive Branx and the pacifistic Okaarans, but the Psions used Okaaran DNA to create the other twenty-three races of Vega such as the Tamaraneans, Euphorixians, Aelloans, Karnans, and the Changralyns.

The Omega Men were assembled as a group of renegades and representatives of conquered Vegan worlds to fight Citadelian aggression. Pre- Infinite Crisis the team was based on the planet Kuraq. The Omega Men are important peacekeepers in their sector because the Green Lantern Corps is not allowed into Vegan space, due to a long-standing agreement with the Psions.

The Omega Men made a return appearance in the Adam Strange mini-series. Still led by Tigorr, with veteran members Broot, Doc, Elu, Artin and Harpis. They were joined by a group of new members whose names were given, but not identified in the book. They were still fighting the Spider Empire. A vision by one of their new members, a precog, results in them waiting in a Rannian space station for some time; their ultimate purpose to meet Adam Strange. It was in this storyline that the first Doc is discovered to be a Durlan assassin. Doc himself is presumed slain.

In the recent Omega Men mini-series, it had been revealed that upon returning to the remains of Tamaran with Ryand'r (who was not part of the team in the Adam Strange mini-series), the Omegans are attacked by the Darkstar zombies of Lady Styx and all but five of them died.

The Omega Men have been seen fleeing L.E.G.I.O.N. robots during a hostile takeover ousting Vril Dox. [6]

Alternate versions

An alternate future has the Earth taken over by a new Nazi movement. A division of Omega Men participates in a rescue mission and all are killed. [7]

Current members

Founding members

Later members

Deceased members

Other members

The New 52

In The New 52, a modified version of the Omega Men dubbed The Omegas was introduced. The new group consists of young aliens under the tutelage of Zealot. Each of the aliens' parents were enslaved by Lobo, and they are united in seeking revenge on the marauder. [8]

The Omegas members

DC You

In 2015, as part of the "DC You" revamp of the DC Comics, a new Omega Men series was launched. The new series, which lasted 12 issues, retroactively replaced the previous "New 52" Omega group in canon.

The series, written by Tom King, rebooted the entire story of the Omega Men. In the new canon, the Citadel is now an interplanetary corporation. The Citadel, exploiting the chaos from the destruction of Krypton, has begun selling thousands of worlds rare metal that can be used to "stabilize planetary cores" to prevent a world from exploding ala Krypton. The rare, planetary core stabilizing metal, is only available in the Vega Star system. The planets of the Vega Star system as a result, have been wholesale enslaved by the alien corporation. Several worlds, whose inhabitants resisted the Citadal, were subjected to genocide: survivors of the genocide from these worlds, became the Omega Men. The group is led by Primus, recast as a wealthy pacifist who was imprisoned by the Citadel to silence him.

Due to the power and influence over thousands of worlds, the Citadel has framed the Omega Men as terrorists and murderers. The reach of the Citadel even ascends to Earth: after making contact with the US Military, to broker a deal to sell them metal from the Vega Star System, the US Government secretly sends Kyle Rayner to broker a deal with the Citadel at the start of the twelve issue series. However, the head of the Citadel corporation forces Kyle to surrender his white power ring upon meeting him (for "security" reasons; in truth, due to him coveting the ring for his own selfish desires). Shortly afterwards, Kyle is kidnapped by the Omega Men, who fake his death and then force Kyle to join them on a tour of the Vega Star System so he could see the evil of the Citadel and expose their sins.

Kyle eventually realizes the truth about the Citadel and with the Omega Men's help, crash an interview with the head of the Citadel, in order to air recorded footage of the Citadel destroying an entire populated planet that had been mined dry of the rare metal. The move clears the Omega Men's good name but fails to stop the Citadel's activities in the Vega Star System. A final battle between the Citadel and the Omega Men then ensues, ending in the death of the Citadel's leadership caste. Meanwhile, Kyle, who had assumed the alias of "Green Man" during the time with the Omega Men, regains his White Lantern ring and is ultimately banished back to Earth by the Omega Men when he fails to convince them to spare the leaders of the Citadel.

The Omega Men members

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References

  1. Manning, Matthew K. (2010). "1980s". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 193. ISBN   978-0-7566-6742-9. DC's newest science-fiction franchise, a band of over one hundred aliens called the Omega Men. They gave Green Lantern a run for his money in this issue written by Marv Wolfman, with art by Joe Staton, and the Omega Men went on to gain their own ongoing series in 1983.
  2. Dan Didio on R/T: Holy War and Reign in Hell [ permanent dead link ], Newsarama, 2-09-2008
  3. Andersen Gabrych on Omega Men [ permanent dead link ], Newsarama, June 9, 2006
  4. Alpha & Omega: Gabrych talks "The Omega Men", Comic Book Resources, August 17, 2006
  5. Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 222. ISBN   978-1-4654-5357-0.
  6. R.E.B.E.L.S. #1
  7. Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #38-40 (June–August 2010)
  8. Deathstroke #9

Sources