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Teen superheroes had been around since the Golden Age, but unlike DC, Marvel didn’t have nearly as much success. Their first foray into teen heroes was way back in the Golden Age, as Bucky and Toro led the Young Allies in back up stories. Later, Amazing Fantasy #15 would introduce Spider-Man, the most successful teen superhero ever, and X-Men #1 would give us the teen X-Men. However, the X-Men didn’t take off until Giant-Size X-Men #1, when the team consisted of adults, so they were never as popular with readers like the Legion of Superheroes and later the Teen Titans were. In the early ’80s, Marvel would introduce the New Mutants, who would become the publisher’s most popular teen team (and would birth spin-off teams like the Fallen Angels and the X-Terminators). However, Marvel had mostly ceded the teen superteam to DC, so the New Warriors were the first salvo in Marvel trying to take them back. The New Warriors don’t have the cache that other teen teams do, but they are still something special.
The New Warriors Were Teen Superheroes in the Mighty Marvel Manner

The New Warriors made quite a splash, helping Thor defeat the Juggernaut. Marvel stacked the deck for the team by mostly using heroes that fans knew. Nova’s The Man Called Nova series ran for 25 issues from 1976 to 1979. Firestar had first appeared in the Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends cartoon before coming to the comics and getting involved with her fellow mutants. Marvel Boy was the present version of Vance Astro, the future leader of 30th century Guardians of the Galaxy (his history is fascinating and deserves its own article), and was a telekinetic mutant. Namorita was the cousin of Namor, and Speedball had hung out with Spider-Man back in the day.
They were actually pretty popular right off the bat, which lead to their own series in 1990, a book that gave future X-Men writer Fabian Nicieza and future Spider-Man legend Mark Bagley their first major credits at Marvel. It was a pretty standard superhero book, but there was a pretty interesting story arc in the book’s second year, featuring Marvel Boy. His father hated mutants, and abused his son, and Vance accidentally killed him with a telekinetic blast, leading to him being arrested and put on trial. It was the kind of story you could only get from Marvel.









