Robert Venditti would write the remainder of the series. Green Lantern volume 5 (2011-2016) This New 52 series continued where the previous one left off, and wrapped up Geoff Johns' run as writer.Concluded with two mini-series, Lost Army (2015-2016) and Edge of Oblivion (2016). The rest of the Corps made up the continually evolving cast of characters in the series. Guy Gardner was usually the human lead character, with John Stewart and Kyle Rayner often sharing that role. Green Lantern Corps (2006-2011) and (2011-2015) ran alongside the main Green Lantern title and crossed over with major storylines like The Sinestro Corps War and Blackest Night.Probably the most popular and successful Green Lantern era in the history of the characters. Green Lantern volume 4 (2005-2011) Written by Geoff Johns, restores both Hal Jordan and the Corps, and is known for the Sinestro Corps War and Blackest Night storylines.John would become a Guardian at the end of the series, a plot thread that would be dropped and not addressed again until Infinite Frontier. Green Lantern Mosaic (1992-1993) The first solo title for John Stewart as he watches over and explores the "Mosaic" of alien cities trapped on the surface of Oa.Then the Emerald Twilight storyline occurs, the Corps is destroyed, Hal becomes Parallax, and the remainder of the series stars Kyle Rayner as the last Green Lantern. Green Lantern volume 3 (1990-2004) The first 50 issues primarily star Hal Jordan.With issue 200 the book was retitled Green Lantern Corps. Both Guy Gardner and John Stewart first appear within the pages of this series. Introduces most of Hal's classic supporting cast and villains, along with the Green Lantern Corps. Green Lantern volume 2 (1960-1986) Hal Jordan's first ongoing series, which spans both the Silver and Bronze Ages.Green Lantern (1941) (1941-1949): The first volume of Green Lantern, focusing on Alan Scott.The Indigo Lanterns are all former criminals forced to feel unending depths of compassion and empathy, while Larfleeze’s Orange Lantern Ring captures the souls of those it murders and turns them into constructs. The Ultraviolet Ring controlling someone and making them do something against their will isn’t exactly an entirely new concept, as several of the rings in the visible Emotional Spectrum have similar properties. While we don’t see how the Ultraviolet Power Ring works or even what emotion it’s powered by, it seems to be able to control people to a certain degree as Sinestro sends John Stewart, now the first Ultraviolet Lantern, to attack his colleagues in the Justice League and while Sinestro may be the discoverer and founder of the Ultraviolet Corps, John Stewart introduces himself as its head and orders his teammates to die. RELATED: DC’s Multiverse Has Less Than a Year To Live, and Nobody Seems to Care Sinestro tells John that he wore those colors following his exile from the Green Lantern Corps because he was searching for the power of the Invisible Emotional Spectrum, and now he’s unlocked it he’s going to make John Stewart his first recruit. Now wielding an Ultraviolet Power Ring, Sinestro notes that he has been looking for the Invisible Emotional Spectrum for a long time and his return to the classic purple and black costume isn’t merely nostalgia for Super Friends on Snyder’s part. While flying through space on a top-secret mission for the Guardians of the Universe, John Stewart is accosted by the man who has unlocked one of these hidden forces, and of course it’s Sinestro. RELATED: The Colors of DC’s Lantern Corps Spectrum, Explained Ultra-ViolenceĪccording to Lex Luthor, there are seven hidden forces of the universe and thanks to the fall of the Source Wall, they’re no longer hidden. This week’s Justice League #2 not only introduces the first of these new Lantern Corps, but we learn that there’s a long history behind the search for them and their leader is someone very familiar. Now, thanks to the destruction of the Source Wall at the end of Dark Nights: Metal, the heroes of the DC Universe are being exposed to new cosmic forces making their presence known in their reality, including entirely undiscovered spectrums of power an Invisible Emotional Spectrum.
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