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Fictional dimension in the DC Universe From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Phantom Zone is a prison-like parallel dimension appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. It is mainly associated with stories featuring Superman. It first appeared in Adventure Comics #283 (April 1961), and was created by Robert Bernstein and George Papp.[1] It was frequently used in the Superman comics before the continuity was rebooted in the 1980s, after Crisis on Infinite Earths, and has appeared occasionally since.
Phantom Zone | |
---|---|
First appearance | Adventure Comics #283 (April 1961) |
Created by | Robert Bernstein (writer) George Papp (artist) |
In-universe information | |
Type | Prison Dimension Interdimensional realm |
Publisher | DC Comics |
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Trimming and several unsourced statements. (November 2024) |
The Phantom Zone is a "pocket universe" used as a humane method of imprisonment due to Krypton abolishing the death penalty years prior.[2] The inmates of the Phantom Zone reside in a ghost-like state of existence from which they can observe, but cannot interact with, the regular universe.[3][4] Most have a particular grudge against Superman because his father Jor-El discovered the Zone and was often the prosecutor at their trials.
In the 1982 miniseries The Phantom Zone, the Phantom Zone is revealed to be the home of Aethyr, a malevolent deity who presides over it and manifests as a disembodied, dog-like head.[5][6][7][8]
In post-Crisis continuity, various species have independently discovered the Phantom Zone and given it different names. It is called the "Buffer Zone" by the Bgztlians, the "Still Zone" by the White Martians, the "Stasis Zone" by Loophole, the "Ghost Zone" by Prometheus, and the "Honeycomb" by Queen Bee.[9][10][11][12]
Supergirl #16 shows a form of life native to the Phantom Zone. They are enraged over the use of their universe to house criminals and seek revenge on the one responsible.[13]
In the "New Krypton" storyline, the Kryptonians in Kandor capture Superman's enemies to throw them into the Phantom Zone, including Parasite, Silver Banshee, and Toyman.[14] They are later freed by Superman.[15]
In 52, Mister Mind consumes the Phantom Zone after transforming into the Hyperfly.[16][17] In Adventure Comics (vol. 2) #11, Chameleon Boy and Superman restore the Phantom Zone.[18]
In The New 52, Jor-El uses the Phantom Zone in a failed attempt to escape Krypton's destruction.[19][20]
In DC Rebirth, Superman theorizes that the Phantom Zone is a permeable membrane between the main universe and the Dark Multiverse.[21]
Throughout the Silver Age of Comic Books, the following inhabitants of the Phantom Zone have been depicted. Based on this list, at least 34 Kryptonians were projected into the Phantom Zone on Krypton over a period of less than 256 Kryptonian days.[22] The entry on the Kryptonian Calendar shows the details on the relationship between Kryptonian sun-cycles and Earth years.
The following were imprisoned in the Phantom Zone:
In the Elseworlds tale Superman & Batman: Generations, Superman is sentenced to the Phantom Zone in 1989 when he is stripped of his powers in a confrontation with the Ultra-Humanite that ends with his foe's death, after the Ultra-Humanite's actions led to the death of Superman's wife Lois Lane and his son Joel being tricked into killing Superman's daughter Kara before Joel dies himself, as well as arranging various 'accidents' for Clark Kent's other remaining loved ones. The judges reason that even if Superman feels that he may have killed his foe deliberately after the deaths of his family and friends, putting him in a conventional prison without his powers would be dangerous and solitary confinement was too extreme given his past deeds, selecting the Zone based on the suggestion of the new Batman, Bruce Wayne Junior. Superman is released in 1999 by the now-rejuvenated Bruce Wayne as Bruce returns to the role of Batman - Bruce noting that he is ending the sentence a few months early but is certain that nobody would object to early release "for good behavior" - although Superman was briefly able to appear as a phantom in the real world in 1997 to distract a foe who was about to kill Knightwing (Superman's grandson, adopted by Batman's son after the deaths of Superman's children).
The Phantom Zone appears in Kevin J. Anderson's novel The Last Days of Krypton.[85]
There had been similar Zones that were in comparison to the Phantom Zone:
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