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DC is full of overpowered characters who get a lot of spotlight, but there’s one that doesn’t get the credit he deserves: the Spectre. The ghostly hero was once a detective named Jim Corrigan, who was murdered by the mob and became the Spirit of Vengeance on Earth-Two. Over the years, the character has changed numerous times, but fit perfectly into the darker horror stories that were a hallmark of the publisher in the late Silver and Bronze Ages. The character had an amazing series in the ’90s, and has become an integral part of the cosmological powers of the universe. The Spectre is an amazing character, and it’s long past time DC started pushing him again.
The Spectre Has Grown Into a Complex and Entertaining Character

The Spectre started his existence like most other Golden Age superheroes โ committing horrific acts of violence against evildoers. Back then, the character hadn’t become God’s Angel of Vengeance, and was instead just a resurrected detective looking to clean up the city who killed him. He was powerful and simple, his white and green look a distinctive one on the Justice Society. DC’s Golden Age was full of heavy hitters, and the Spectre would prove to be one of the less popular members of the team, mostly because no one really knew what to do with him back then; there was already powerhouses like Superman, Green Lantern, and Doctor Fate. He felt like a surplus to requirements.
This would continue through the Silver Age return of the Justice Society, but it was during this period that the character started to morph into a more important aspect of the multiverse. 1966 would see the character move over to Showcase with issue #60, becoming a more and more powerful avenging spirit. He proved so popular he eventually got his own series in 1967, which was one of the legendary Neal Adams’s first works in the industry. The Spectre was the perfect way to tell horror stories in the more conservative comic industry of the ’60s and ’70s, with an Earth-One version of the character (at least, according to editor Joe Orlando) first appearing in Adventures Comics, and he would stick around as a powerful force in the world, becoming more and more esoteric and eventually becoming a servant of Heaven and Hell.









