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Today, weโre going to give the Boy Wonder his due and take a look at seven of Robinโs best stories. To keep this from being a list about the best Batman stories of all time, weโre only counting stories where Robin is either the main character or plays so significant a role that removing him would fundamentally alter the theme of the story. For example, โThe Cult,โ which is one of Batmanโs best underrated storylines, features Jason Todd, but I canโt say heโs essential enough to qualify it as a Robin story, despite its greatness. With all of that established, letโs rank these Robinsโ storylines.
7) โYear of Bloodโ

Damian Wayne is easily the most controversial Robin, and thatโs saying a lot when Jason Todd exists. He was raised to be an assassin, and those tendencies and lack of empathy often had him clash with the Bat-Family in his early years. However, Damian eventually learned better and tried to redeem his past, which culminated in โYear of Blood.โ This story dug into Damianโs mindset and guilt during his time with his mother, presenting him and his uneasy ally, NoBody, as the broken children they were. They were both looking for love and forgiveness, and this storyโs tale of redemption is a wonderful superhero classic and foundational to who Damian is. So long as writers remember it exists, of course.
6) โA Lonely Place of Dyingโ

After Jason Toddโs death, Batman was in a bad place, but the introduction of Tim Drake pulled him back to the right path. Tim had the most unique Robin introduction, deducing Batmanโs identity himself and operating under the universal truth that he taught the heroes and the audience: Batman needs a Robin. He forced himself into the narrative and our hearts in the best way, and even redesigned the Robin costume for the first time. This story perfectly set the stage for Timโs career as Robin, highlighting that he is here to help Batman above all, just like a sidekick and partner should. This is foundational Robin reading, and very much still holds up.
5) Batman and Robin: Year One

This newly-minted origin for Bruce and Dickโs first year as partners is a breakout hit through and through. The pair struggles to build a proper relationship, with Batman unused to letting another person operate alongside him and Dick fighting to prove Robin deserves to exist. There are wonderful character moments and an intriguing mystery, although the plot gets a bit unsteady around the middle. Still, the final issue is one of the greatest endings in all of comics, perfectly encapsulating everything we love about Batman and Robin as the Dynamic Duo. This is a heartwrenching tale that reads like a modern take on the Golden Age with Silver Age optimism, and that is worth the price of admission alone.












