Justice League Dark
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Justice League Dark
Summary
Justice League Dark is a fictional group of characters[1]. It draws 395 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_group_of_characters category, ranking #21 of 78).[2]
Key Facts
- Justice League Dark is the creator of Jeff Lemire[3].
- Justice League Dark's instance of is recorded as fictional group of characters[4].
- Justice League Dark was published by DC Comics[5].
- Justice League Dark's language of work or name is recorded as English[6].
- Justice League Dark's country of origin is recorded as United States[7].
- Justice League Dark comprises Q5942295[8].
- Justice League Dark comprises Black Orchid[9].
- Justice League Dark comprises Doctor Mist[10].
- Justice League Dark comprises Frankenstein[11].
- Justice League Dark comprises John Constantine[12].
- Justice League Dark comprises Deadman[13].
- Justice League Dark comprises Madame Xanadu[14].
- Justice League Dark comprises Pandora[15].
- Justice League Dark comprises Phantom Stranger[16].
- Justice League Dark comprises Amethyst[17].
- Justice League Dark comprises Shade, the Changing Man[18].
- Justice League Dark comprises Swamp Thing[19].
- Justice League Dark comprises Timothy Hunter[20].
- Justice League Dark comprises Zatanna[21].
- Justice League Dark comprises Zauriel[22].
- Justice League Dark comprises Detective Chimp[23].
- Justice League Dark comprises Man-Bat[24].
- Justice League Dark comprises Wonder Woman[25].
- Justice League Dark's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Justice League Dark[26].
- Justice League Dark's from narrative universe is recorded as DC Universe[27].
Body
Designation and Status
Justice League Dark's instance of is recorded as fictional group of characters[4].
Cultural Significance
Things named for Justice League Dark include it: Apokolips War[28], an animated film[29], directed by Matt Peters[30] and it[31], an animated film[32], directed by Jay Oliva[33].
Why It Matters
Justice League Dark draws 395 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_group_of_characters category, ranking #21 of 78).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34]
Entities named for it include it: Apokolips War[28], an animated film[29], directed by Matt Peters[30] and it[31], an animated film[32], directed by Jay Oliva[33].