https://nerdist.com/article/10-greatest-teen-titans-comic-book-runs-ranked/
Since the 1960s, the Teen Titans, often just referred to these days as the Titans, have been a staple of DC Comics. In fact, they were once DC’s best-selling monthly title, even outselling Batman and Justice League. They’ve gone on to star in three animated series, a live-action show, and soon, a movie in James Gunn’s DCU. But with 17 different series featuring these iconic young heroes, which ones are the best of the best? We’ve narrowed down their greatest and most influential comic book series over the past six decades.
The original Teen Titans series, which began in the ‘60s, ran out of steam and ended up cancelled in 1973;’s issue #43. But DC decided to try again in 1976, with a relaunched title by writer Bob Rozakis, picking up at issue #44. Now, these comics are definitely of their time. It had the Titans running a disco called “Gabriel’s Horn,” and Speedy in a rock band called The Great Frog. They also fought ridiculous villains like the Rocket Rollers, that cashed-in on popular trends at the time like skateboarding. But to writer Bob Rozakis’ credit, this run on Teen Titans elevated the female heroes more than the previous run did. That counts for something.
Also on the plus side, this run introduced new characters like the Joker’s Daughter and Bumblebee, DC’s first African-American superheroine. Both characters are still around in new and improved forms today. The concept of a Titans West spin-off team was born in this run too, years before Marvel did their own West Coast Avengers. Yes, the dialogue is kind of cringe throughout this run, and the artwork is not always that great. But this very brief era of Teen Titans is fun and charming regardless. For the Teen Titans, however, it was the third time that proved to be the charm. But we’ll get to that.
In many ways, this is an extension of Marv Wolfman’s earlier New Teen Titans run. But since the series got a title change, we’re counting it as its own distinct era. In 1988, New Teen Titans needed a bit of a kick in the pants. So DC decided to let the now-adult heroes drop the “Teen” from their name, and rebranded as The New Titans. After an absence of several years, New Teen Titans co-creator George Pérez returned, to reimagine the origin of Wonder Girl for a post-Crisis era. They followed that epic up with a Batman crossover which introduced the third Robin, Tim Drake, into the DC mythos, called “A Lonely Place of Dying.”
When Pérez left after a year, Wolfman teamed up with an up-and-coming artist named Tom Grummett. Their year-long saga “Titans Hunt” saw all of the team captured by the Wildebeest Society. Only Nightwing manages to escape. So Dick Grayson has to put together a new group of misfits to find his missing comrades. This run is very soapy, with twists and shocks and character deaths in each issue. And it was fun as hell to read month-to-month. After “Titans Hunt,” things got very sloppy, leading to New Titans‘ eventual cancellation in 1995. But from ’88-’92, Marv Wolfman proved that after a decade on Titans, he could still do some darn good, meant n’ potatoes comic book yarn spinning.
New Titans #50-130 (1988-1995)
It’s hard to know what the final ranking for this series is, if only because it’s still running. But we’re pretty confident in placing writer Tom Taylor’s current Titans run in this spot, even though it’s not finished yet. After the events of Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths, the Justice League disbanded. As a result, Superman left the Earth in charge of the Titans for protection, believing it was finally their time to shine. Tom Taylor first proved he understood Dick Grayson as a character in his Nightwing run. Now, he proves he understands his best friends as well with this current series.
Among the great stories so far in this run include Beast World. Last year’s crossover event saw Beast Boy weaponized against the Earth, and the resulting public turn against the Titans. Also, Raven’s current turn to the dark side is providing for some fun reading. (Even if this storyline has kind of been done to death already). The initial art by Nicola Scott is gorgeous, as are the pencils from follow-up regular artist Lucas Meyer. With Taylor wrapping up his writing duties on Titans this fall, it’s ultimately a far too brief run. But one worth mentioning.
Titans (vol. 4) #1-15 (2023-2024)
After a chilly reception to a rebooted Teen Titans series by Dan Jurgens in 1996 with all new characters, DC decided to go back to basics. After Grant Morrison’s massively successful JLA relaunch, the company reunited the original five Titans, now all adults with new codenames. Writer Devin Grayson took the original five members and brought back Starfire and Cyborg from New Teen Titans, Jesse Quick from Mark Waid’s Flash comics, the teen hero Damage, and Argent, from Dan Jurgens’ previous and little-loved Teen Titans run. Somehow, this hodgepodge team mostly worked.
Devin Grayson got the family dynamic right off the bat, writing the core five heroes as people who literally grew up together. They also integrated well with the newer generation of heroes, even if stalwarts like Raven and Beast Boy were very missed. Some of the villains introduced in this series, like the group Tartarus, should still be around (others, like the Marilyn Manson lookalike named Goth, can stay in 1999). The artwork from pencilers like Mark Buckingham were not often flashy, but always solid. After Grayson left, writers Jay Faerber and Tom Peyer continued her storylines. Overall, this was a fun run that really cemented the Titans as adult heroes in their own right, something that continues to this day.
JLA/Titans: The Technic Imperative #1-3 (1998) The Titans #1-50 (1999-2003)
The New 52 era rebooted the Teen Titans as kind of extreme, ‘90s-style versions of the characters, making them almost unrecognizable to fans. When the classic DC continuity returned in 2016’s DC Rebirth era, DC relaunched the team yet again, only with a Robin who had never been a Titan before—-Batman’s son, Damian Wayne. Robin recruits a team that, at least superficially, resembled that animated Teen Titans TV series roster. Only difference, Kid Flash Wallace West replaced Cyborg, who was in the Justice League.
Damian Wayne needed a new Titans roster to fight his grandfather, Ra’s al Ghul, and his lethal League of Assassins. Benjamin Percy writes an appropriately cocky Damian, who despite being much younger than his teammates, always thinks he knows better than they do. His learning to truly appreciate working and relying on others is a highlight of this version of the Titans. The artwork from pencilers Jonboy Meyers, and later, Khoi Pham and Scott Eaton, was modern and dynamic. The book eventually ran out of steam, but it’s one of the better modern Teen Titans series.
Teen Titans: Rebirth #1, Teen Titans (vol. 5) #1-19 (2016-2018)
This was a very brief and fairly recent run, one that went under the radar, written by Alan Scott: Green Lantern writer Tim Sheridan. And it certainly wasn’t celebrated nearly enough. In Teen Titans Academy, the now-adult ’80s Titans members decided to train the next generation of younger heroes, and turn Titan’s Tower into a school, the Roy Harper Academy, named for the then-dead founding Titan Arsenal. (He’s much better now). Yes, it’s very X-Men as a concept. But at the time, the school aspect of X-Men had been dropped, so this filled a niche. The book focused on teen heroes with names like Megabrat and Gorilla Greg, with the adult faculty taking more of a backseat.
The ongoing mystery of the series, just what was the true identity of the mysterious student Red X, never really sticks the landing. Still, it was so fun to see these younger student characters refer to their teachers as “Mr. Nightwing” and “Ms. Starfire,” etc. The series ended prematurely with the school burned to the ground, and all of the students leaving. But someone needs to revisit this concept at some point. (It’s also odd the adult Titans have seemingly forgotten they ever tried to run a school in their new series). We hope more fans discover this hidden gem of a Titans series in the future.
Teen Titans Academy #1-15, Teen Titans Academy 2012 Yearbook (2021-2022)
Ok, this is technically not a Teen Titans book. But only technically. In the late ’90s, Incredible Hulk writer Peter David and artist Todd Nauck were tasked with giving the new generation of teen sidekicks like Robin (Tim Drake), Superboy (Conner Kent), Impulse (Bart Allen), and Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandsmark) their own series. DC considered the name “Teen Titans” toxic at the time, thanks to the previous few years of failed attempts at launching a new series, so they received a new name—Young Justice. But different name or not this was essentially the Teen Titans in everything but name. The core four eventually added new members, like The Secret, and Arrowette.
Young Justice operated out of the Justice League’s old mountain base. There, they found a mentor in the android JLA member, the Red Tornado. This series had the traditional mix of humor, soapy drama, and adventure that Peter David was known for in series like X-Factor for Marvel. Todd Nauck’s art was wonderfully whimsical, and actually made the kids look like, well, kids. And fans ate it up. The series ran a respectable 53 issues with this creative team, and it remains beloved to this day. Another reason we feel comfortable regarding this as a Teen Titans series? All the members went on to become the core of the Teen Titans in the 2003 revival just a few years later.
Young Justice #1-53 (1998-2003)
One of comics’ longest-running teams started off as not much more than a gimmick. “What if the Justice League’s kid sidekicks formed their own group?” DC teamed up Robin, Kid Flash. and Aqualad for an adventure in a 1964’s The Brave and the Bold #54, and its sales justified a spin-off team. In 1965, Teen Titans launched, written by their creator Bob Haney. The three boys teamed up with Wonder Girl, and eventually, Green Arrow’s partner Speedy, as DC’s “Fab Five.” This was smack in the middle of the Batman ’66 era, and Teen Titans piggybacked off that success. They even got a short-lived cartoon a mere few years after their first issue hit stands.
The original Teen Titans stories are very silly, generally revolving around the Titans just hanging out in their HQ, hassling each other in a typical teenage way, and having one-off adventures. The middle-aged writers trying to write the youth lingo of the era comes across as painful, probably even at the time. There are a lot of “Daddy-O’s” and such. They were so ’60s, they even fought a villain called “Mad Mod.” The artwork, usually by Nick Cardy, pales in comparison to what Marvel was doing at the time. But it gets the job done. The Titans never called each other by their real names, had any real problems, and “character development” was non-existent. But it had a fun energy to it that was undeniable, and its light tone later informed the very successful Teen Titans animated series.
Teen Titans (vol. 1) #1-43 (1965-1973)
After their triumphant ‘80s run, the Titans as a concept fell on hard times. A 1996 reboot didn’t find any traction, and the adult 1999 The Titans series run didn’t exactly set sales records either. But with an animated series on the horizon in 2003, DC decided to reboot the concept for comics with writer Geoff Johns and artist Mike McKone. In what would become a Geoff Johns trademark as a writer, especially on Green Lantern, he celebrated DC’s rich history and forged a new future for the franchise at the same time. Teen Titans vol. 3 was a very big success, reviving the franchise in a big way.
The members of Young Justice graduated at last to Teen Titans status. Meanwhile, several members of Wolfman and Pérez’s team were now the older mentors. This fusing of two eras worked like gangbusters. Johns added new layers to characters like Superboy Conner Kent, and he grew up the immature speedster Impulse into Kid Flash. He also re-established Deathstroke as the Titans’ greatest enemy, and created a link between the Titan’s nemesis Brother Blood and team member Raven. While the first couple of years remain the book’s peak, when penciler Mike McKone was mostly drawing it, Johns’ entire fifty-issue run gets what makes the Teen Titans tick more than almost any other.
Teen Titans (vol. 3) #1-50, (2003-2007)
The New Teen Titans by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez, not only rescued the franchise, it helped rescue DC Comics overall. After a middling attempt at a revival in the late ‘70s, DC hired Marvel creators Marv Wolfman and George Pérez to relaunch the title a third time. They took the X-Men approach to this reboot—keep a few key characters from the previous run (Robin, Wonder Girl, and Kid Flash) and introduce vibrant new heroes like Raven, Cyborg, and Starfire. They even took a forgotten hero named Beast Boy and made him the comic relief of the team as Changeling. Thanks to more serious storytelling, real pathos for the characters, and stunning art for Pérez, The series was a runaway hit, infusing DC with a Marvel-esque storytelling that outsold every other comic at DC at the time, five-to-one.
During this era, Wolfman and Pérez introduced iconic villains Deathstroke, and Trigon, and they transformed Robin from a joke “kid sidekick in peril” character into Nightwing, an adult hero in his own right, not just Batman’s junior partner. Their two-year storyline “The Judas Contract” saw the introduction of Terra, a young female hero who ultimately betrayed the team and broke their hearts. It remains one of superhero storytelling’s fines arcs. Perez’s art was detailed and incredible, doing career-best work here, elevating the artform. Because of this success, DC launched a second monthly book, Tales of the Teen Titans. DC eventually gave Wolfman and Pérez allowed them to reboot the DC universe in Crisis on Infinite Earths. And the rest, as they say, is history. But it wouldn’t have happened without the success of The New Teen Titans. Still, and probably always, the gold standard of Teen Titans series.
New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #1-40, Tales of the Teen Titans #41-59, Tales of the New Teen Titans #1-4, New Teen Titans (vol. 2) #1-49 (1980-1988) New Teen Titans: Games OGN (2005)
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