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Deathstroke

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Template:Infobox comics character and title Deathstroke the Terminator (also known as Deathstroke, his name Slade Wilson, or formerly the Terminator) is a comic book supervillain, and sometimes antihero, who appears in books published by DC Comics. The character was created by Marv Wolfman and George Perez. He is a mercenary and assassin who first appeared in The New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #2 (1980).[1] Wizard Magazine rated him the 84th greatest villain of all time and the 72nd greatest comic book character of all time.[2] Also, in 2009, Deathstroke was ranked as IGN's 32nd greatest comic book villain of all time.[3]

Publication history

Deathstroke the Terminator first appeared in 1980, in the second issue of the book New Teen Titans. He was originally introduced as "the Terminator", a mercenary who was completing the terms of a contract undertaken by his son Ravager and later in the series often allied with the Titans against mutual threats.

Due to his popularity, Deathstroke received his own series, Deathstroke the Terminator, in 1991.[4] It was retitled Deathstroke the Hunted for issues #0 and #41-45; and then simply Deathstroke for issues #46-60. The series was cancelled with issue #60. In total, Deathstroke ran for 65 issues (#1-60, plus 4 annuals and a special #0 issue).

Following his injury in DC Universe: Last Will and Testament, Deathstroke appears in one of the four Faces of Evil one-shots, written by David Hine. Hine has explained that the series is part of the set-up for future stories: "All of the characters in this ‘Faces of Evil’ series were selected for their potential as major players in the coming year."[5]

Even though the character of Deathstroke the Terminator predates James Cameron's film The Terminator by four years, the Slade Wilson character is now simply called Deathstroke, even by characters who had called him Terminator for years. The full title has not completely fallen out of use, having been referenced as recently as Justice League Elite.

Fictional character biography

Origins

Slade Wilson was sixteen years old when he first enlisted in the United States Army, having lied about his age. After serving a stint in Korea, he was later assigned to Camp Washington where he had been promoted to the rank of Major. In the early 1960s, he met Captain Adeline Kane who was tasked with training young soldiers in new fighting techniques in anticipation of brewing troubles taking place in Vietnam. Kane was amazed at how skilled Slade was and how quickly he adapted to modern conventions of warfare. She immediately fell in love with him, and realized that he was without a doubt the most able-bodied combatant she had ever encountered. She offered to privately train Slade in guerrilla warfare. In less than a year, Slade mastered every fighting form presented to him and was soon promoted to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. Six months later, Adeline and he were married and she became pregnant with their first child. The war in Vietnam began to escalate and Slade was shipped overseas. In the war, his unit massacred a village, which sickened him. He was also rescued by SAS member Wintergreen, to whom he would later return the favour.

Chosen for a secret experiment, the Army imbued him with enhanced physical powers in an attempt to create metahuman supersoldiers for the U.S. military. Deathstroke became a mercenary soon after the experiment when he defied orders and rescued his friend Wintergreen sent on a suicide mission by a commanding officer with a grudge.[1] However, Slade kept this career secret from his family, even though his wife was an expert military combat instructor. Indeed, she had been responsible for a significant portion of his early training.

A criminal named the Jackal took his younger son Joseph Wilson hostage to force Slade to divulge the name of a client who had hired him as an assassin. Slade refused, claiming it was against his personal honor code. He attacked and killed the kidnappers at the rendezvous. Unfortunately, Joseph's throat was slashed by one of the criminals before Slade could prevent it, destroying Joseph's vocal cords and rendering him mute.

After taking Joseph to the hospital, his wife Adeline Wilson enraged at his endangerment of her son tried to kill Slade by shooting him, but only managed to destroy his right eye. Afterward, his confidence in his physical abilities was such that he made no secret of his impaired vision, marked by his mask which has a black, featureless half covering his lost eye. Without his mask, Slade wears an eye-patch.

The Teen Titans

Cover to New Teen Titans (vol. 1) #2. The first appearance of Deathstroke (in the shadows). Art by George Pérez.

Slade has a long history as an enemy of the Teen Titans, beginning when his other son Grant received superhuman enhancements from the H.I.V.E., dubbing himself Ravager, and accepting a contract from them to kill or capture the Teen Titans. However, those enhancements proved fatal in the end, and Slade agreed to complete the contract. His first mission involved stealing the fictional element Promethium from S.T.A.R. Labs and selling it as the ultimate weapon. He then kidnapped the Titans and placed them in the path of a Promethium bomb to test his device for the buyers, effectively killing two birds with one stone. The Titans escaped and pursued Deathstroke, but he severely wounded Changeling in his escape. This would be the start to a lasting animosity between the two.

Deathstroke next appeared in New York, holding officials hostage in order to lure the Titans into confronting him. Terra, a new ally of the Titans, and Changeling were the only ones available to answer the call. Terra knocked Changeling out in an effort to prove herself worthy of being a Titan and fought Deathstroke single-handedly. Slade escaped as the other Titans arrived, but by then Terra had proven herself and the team offered her membership. Later that night, it was revealed that Terra and Deathstroke had conspired to fake the fight in a plot to infiltrate the team. It was also revealed that they shared an intimate relationship, despite Terra being fifteen years old.[1] The artist, George Pérez, noted that this technically constituted "statutory rape" even though Terra consented.[6]

Judas Contract

The Titans eventually entrusted Terra with all of their secret identities. Once Slade had this information, he used it to systematically take down each of the Titans, exploiting them at their weakest moments. Donna Troy was gassed at her photo studio, Changeling was poisoned with tainted envelopes while responding to fan mail, Victor Stone was electrically shocked by a chair in his own apartment, Koriand'r was ambushed with a device that affected her powers, and Raven was taken down by Terra herself. Nightwing was last to be attacked and he was confronted by Deathstroke himself. He narrowly avoided being captured and soon discovered that his teammates had already been taken. Nightwing arrived at Titans Tower to discover Slade's ex-wife and son. She told Nightwing that Terra was a traitor, how each of his teammates were captured, and related the origin of Deathstroke.

Nightwing, in order to confront Deathstroke and the H.I.V.E., joined Jericho (Joseph Wilson). During the confrontation, Deathstroke recognized Jericho as his son which caused him to hesitate. Jericho freed the Titans by possessing his father's body. Terra turned on Deathstroke, thinking he betrayed her as well. After her suicide, Slade was taken into custody.

Slade was put on trial for his crimes, but the trial was deliberately sabotaged by Changeling so that he could kill Slade himself, believing he was responsible for Terra's betrayal of the Titans. Slade agreed to the confrontation, but showed up out of costume. Changeling found himself unable to kill Slade, so instead they talked. Feeling some empathy for his grief, Slade explained his past with Terra, and Changeling realized Slade was not to blame for the choices Terra had made. The two men parted on peaceful terms, with Slade returning to Africa with Wintergreen.

Titans Plague

Months later, Slade encountered the Titans again while they were investigating mysterious attacks and disappearances. Donna Troy is attacked by a group of strange beastmen and barely survives the encounter. Meanwhile, while attending a fundraiser with his father, Gar Logan recognizes Slade trying to maintain a low profile. When he finally catches up with Slade, he finds him about to kill the host of the fundraiser Walter Lanier. He stops Deathstroke, but is surprised when Lanier turns into a bat-like creature and flies away. Slade reveals to the Titans that he was responsible for smuggling the drug the bestiamorphs were using to transform others, but did not realize what it was until it was too late. After Jericho and Raven were stricken by the plague, he aided them in destroying the beastmen and finding a cure for the contagion.

Titans Hunt

Shortly after this, he came to the Titans' assistance again during the Titans Hunt storyline. The members of the Titans, as well as many inactive members, all disappeared in a manner very similar to how they were abducted during the Judas Contract. Mento, an on-and-off member of the Doom Patrol, hires Deathstroke to find the missing Titans. He eventually discovers with Nightwing that the abductions were the work of the Wildebeest Society, and that their leader was none other than Titan member Jericho, Deathstroke's son.

It was revealed that Jericho had been possessed by the corrupted souls of Azarath as they were using him to capture the Titans and use them as physical hosts in order to survive. During the transfer process, Jericho's true self resurfaced briefly, begging his father to kill him. To spare his son any more pain and save the remaining Titans, Slade was forced to drive a sword through Jericho's heart, seemingly killing him. This act still haunts him to this day.

Afterward, Slade continued his life as a mercenary, but also acted as an occasional hero, aiding the Titans or acting on his own to help others, most notably during the Total Chaos storyline when the Team Titans arrived in the 20th Century to assassinate Donna Troy before she could give birth to her son, who in their timeline had grown up into the tyrannical despot, Lord Chaos. Slade also met Pat Trayce, a tough former cop who would become the new Vigilante. Pat Trayce and Slade quickly became lovers, and began a tumultuous on-again/off-again relationship.

Family business

After Slade thwarted an assassination attempt on the President of the United States, he was subsequently framed for the murder of a U.S. Senator. The man responsible had taken on the identity of the Ravager and was hunting down Slade's friends and loved ones. Eventually, with the help of the Titans and Sarge Steel, Slade was able to prove his innocence and the true culprit was revealed to be Steve Dayton, under the alias of the Crime Lord, who had again succumbed to mental instability caused by his Mento helmet.

Meanwhile, Slade's relationship with his estranged wife Adeline took a tragic turn as Slade underwent a process to gain the ability of physical regeneration, allowing him to survive any wound so long as his brain is intact (but this power is limited as Slade cannot regenerate his lost eye because that injury happened before he gained his healing factor). After gaining this power, Slade was forced to give his wife a blood transfusion to save her life, resulting in her gaining a similar healing factor which manifested itself as a form of immortality. This alteration of her DNA drove Adeline insane, shaming Deathstroke into going into a semi-retirement state.

In Titans (vol. 1) #12, Deathstroke teamed up with the Titans to face his wife Adeline, who in her insane state had revived the H.I.V.E. and sought to rid the world of all superhumans, blaming them for Jericho's apparent death. During the battle, interrupted by Vandal Savage and a band of villains that he had organized from recent Titans battles, Adeline's throat was slit. In a brief return of sanity, she begged Slade to kill her, requesting him to reunite her with "my... our children..." because her version of the healing factor would not heal the wound, but only allow her to live in spite of it. Deathstroke refused, but Koriand'r shocked her teammates and Deathstroke by using her starbolt blast to disintegrate her completely, per Adeline's wishes. This was a turning point, as Deathstroke renounced all ties with the Titans as a result of Starfire's act.

It was then revealed that Jericho managed to transfer his consciousness into Deathstroke in the instant before his death. Taking control of his father, Jericho forced Deathstroke to murder his longtime butler, mentor and companion Wintergreen. He then launched a series of attacks against the current Teen Titans, most notably shattering Impulse's knee with a shotgun blast, before leaving his father's body. Deathstroke has since manipulated his one remaining child Rose Wilson into the mercenary business as the new Ravager, in order to find and kill Jericho, using a specially designed serum to heighten her hostility and push her over the edge. Unfortunately, the process also resulted in her being driven at least partially insane, to the extent that she cut out her own left eye in an attempt to prove to her father that she was just like him.

Nightwing and Birds of Prey

Deathstroke appeared in Nightwing #23 as a mercenary against Black Canary and Conner Hawke as part of the "Brotherhood of the Fist" tie-in to the No Man's Land story arc.[7]

Deathstroke also appeared in Birds of Prey #22-24, where he was sent to Gorilla City by Blockbuster to get an ape-heart. He is accompanied by Lady Vic, Grimm, and Black Canary, who is posing as Oracle.

Identity Crisis

In the Identity Crisis miniseries, Deathstroke was enlisted as a bodyguard for Doctor Light, who was being pursued by the Justice League of America as a suspect in the murder of Sue Dibny. In the ensuing battle, Deathstroke nearly beat the team of Elongated Man, Flash, Zatanna, Hawkman, Green Arrow, Black Canary, Atom and Green Lantern. He systematically took out every member except for Rayner, whom he had the potential to disable through trying to usurp his ring's energies using his own formidable willpower. Fortunately, before the outcome of this conflict with Green Lantern ended, Green Arrow stuck an arrow in Deathstroke's right eye socket, enraging him. Slade went ballistic, which derailed his pre-planned strategy and began to beat Green Arrow, but was stopped when the majority of the team tackled Deathstroke to the ground. Dr. Light used his powers to allow the two to escape. Near the end of Identity Crisis, Deathstroke confronts Green Arrow on a rooftop. Arrow sees his reflection in the windows of a nearby building, but when he turns to confront Slade, Deathstroke is gone. Instead, Green Arrow finds Slade's cowl and a note stuck to the wall by the very arrow he stabbed in Slade's eye socket. The note reads "This is yours - We're not done.".

Infinite Crisis

Deathstroke was a founding member of Lex Luthor's Secret Society of Super Villains in the Infinite Crisis storyline. He was seen in Infinite Crisis #1, hiding in a warehouse south of Metropolis waiting to ambush the Freedom Fighters with several other members. The battle didn't last long, and by the end, Deathstroke had killed the Phantom Lady. Slade is also the one who landed the final stroke on Uncle Sam by shooting him in the back (and leading to his apparent death).[1]

He was the employer of Nightwing, whom he hired to train his daughter Rose. However, after the two had a confrontation with Superman, Deathstroke discovered that Nightwing had been teaching Rose the values of heroism. He could not kill Grayson in front of his daughter, because doing so would undo all of Slade's teachings. Nightwing offered a deal: he would stay away from Rose if Slade would keep the metahuman villains out of Blüdhaven. The deal held for 34 hours until Infinite Crisis #4, when Slade, under the orders of Alexander Luthor, Jr., the real leader of the Society, went with several villains (including old Titans and Doom Patrol foes and Brotherhood of Evil members Monsieur Mallah and Brain) to drop Chemo, another fellow villain who appeared to be a nearly brainless monster made of pure energy and radioactive chemicals, on Blüdhaven, killing over one-hundred thousand people. Slade gave the explanation to the Brotherhood that Nightwing should be made to believe that he can never go home again.

Nightwing took the first of his revenge by bursting in on Deathstroke and Rose's training session, revealing to the latter that the Kryptonite that Deathstroke had implanted in place of her missing eye was radioactive and deadly to humans as well as to Kryptonians (as revealed by Luthor's old possession of a Kryptonite ring that forced him to transfer his brain to a cloned body). Angered, Slade went after Nightwing with a grenade, only to have Rose try to stop him. Amid the smoke of the resulting explosion, Rose fled, telling her father that she hated him. Nightwing disappeared as well, but not before leaving a note for Slade warning him that he would be back to make him pay for Blüdhaven.

At the climactic Battle of Metropolis at the conclusion of 'Infinite Crisis', Slade was confronted by Batman, Robin and Nightwing. During the struggle, he was questioned regarding his motives for aiding the Secret Society. His claims of monetary motivation were deemed unsatisfactory; Batman accused him of having forsaken his code of honor, and Nightwing said it was because his family had abandoned him. Enraged, Slade said that was because of Nightwing, and that it was always because of him, before Batman told him to take responsibility for his actions and he was rendered unconscious.

One Year Later

Cover to Teen Titans #43: Titans East Part 1. Art by Tony Daniel.

Slade appears in the Green Arrow series after the one year jump in DC Comics' storylines. Apparently in hiding, he nearly murders a crony of several Star City businessmen who want to hire him for a murder. Before finishing his violent refusal, he asks the name of the target. When informed that it was to be the mayor of Star City, Oliver Queen (whom Deathstroke knows is secretly Green Arrow), he spares the lackey and decides to take the job.[8]

However, things do not quite go according to plan, with Green Arrow using the resources of both his identities, trapping him within a ring of armed National Guardsmen.[9] The fight ends with Deathstroke's arrest[10] and subsequent conviction and incarceration;[11] however, this is revealed as a ploy to gain access to Constantine Drakon, another jailed foe of Green Arrow who has information on the hero's activities in the lost year,[12] which include Green Arrow studying under Natas, an assassin who once trained Deathstroke himself.[13]

Deathstroke is also active behind the scenes in Teen Titans, currently in the process of organizing a counter-team of teen superhumans that will be known as Titans East. The current Titans team included Ravager, who now wanted nothing to do with her father. Deathstroke seemingly intended to "reclaim" Ravager and a recently resurrected Jericho from the Titans or, if that failed, to crush them along with the rest of the team. For these reasons, he specially selected each member of Titans East, believing that, overall, each member would successfully counteract every member of the current Teen Titans line-up.

As indicated over the course of the subsequent issues, Deathstroke was manipulating every member of his new team in one way or another. He had blackmailed former Titan Risk while at the same time offering him an outlet for his rage; was drugging Batgirl with the same serum he had used on Rose; and supplied Inertia with a formula which granted superhuman speed to compensate for the loss of the Speed Force following the initial battle with Superboy-Prime. His team, however, slowly fell apart over the course of the attack, as Robin managed to free Batgirl of his mind control serum and Raven convinced Duela Dent to switch sides. Slade and his remaining Titans subsequently faced off against both the current Titans and a group of old Titans led by Nightwing. Although he was defeated, he still managed to escape with the aid of Inertia. In the end, however, it was revealed to the readers that Slade's real mission was to provide his children with something he could never offer them: a real family, in the form of the Teen Titans. By attacking the Titans, he insured that Rose and Jericho would become more trusted by their associates, and thus grow closer to the team.

Recently, Deathstroke took credit for somehow twisting (through unknown means) the powers of Geo-Force, the half-brother of the original Terra, into the same powers as his traitorous sister. Using this leverage, Deathstroke offered to reverse the process only if Geo-Force became his own personal spy within the Justice League. Unfortunately for Deathstroke, Geo-Force alerted Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman of Deathstroke's scheme, which culminated in Geo-Force alerting the League that Deathstroke (whose rivalry with Green Arrow has reached vendetta-level proportions) planned on using an army of supervillains to crash Green Arrow and Black Canary's wedding. Weeks later, Geo-Force was tortured by Gorilla Grodd after the League was kidnapped by the Injustice League, and ultimately transferred to Batman's newest incarnation of the Outsiders afterward, robbing Deathstroke of his potential pawn.

Deathstroke can be seen as a member of Libra's Secret Society of Super Villains.

Deathstroke is gravely injured with his own sword by Geo-Force in DC Universe: Last Will and Testament. Following his injury, he is recuperating at Belle Reve while doctors labor to save him. Deathstroke dreams of his family members and all of the people that he has let down. When he awakens, he vows that he will never again be haunted by the past.

Ravager comes to visit him, but in fact, wants to finish her father off. She tries to strangle him with a plastic wire, but Deathstroke is recuperated enough that he can fend off her attack. He escapes from the facility and steals a helicopter. Later, Deathstroke finds a young street urchin that he decides to take under his wing.[14]

Blackest Night

In the Teen Titans (vol. 3) tie-in to the Blackest Night crossover event, Deathstroke is living in the deceased Wintergreen's house and reading his journal, when he is attacked by Rose again. During the fight, the two are attacked by their deceased relatives Grant, Wade, and Adeline, who, along with Wintergreen, have all been reanimated as Black Lanterns. Deathstroke and Rose are forced to work together and fight for their lives against the Black Lanterns.[15]

The two hopelessly fight the regenerating Black Lanterns until Jericho, cured from his earlier insanity, arrives and turns the tide of the fight. During the course of the battle, Deathstroke confesses to his children that part of the reason why he menaced the Teen Titans for so many years was that he felt that by forcing his children to hate him, they would have a chance of escaping the sorrow and pain a life with him would entail. Just as Slade is overwhelmed and about to be killed, Jericho somehow uses his abilities to sever the connection between the Black Lanterns and their power rings, permanently sending them back to the grave. After realizing that her mother was not reborn as a member of the Black Lantern Corps, Rose comes to the conclusion that she must somehow still be alive, and leaves after threatening to kill Slade if he tries to stop her. Jericho chooses to stay with his father, reasoning that only Slade would have the courage to kill him if he were to ever return to madness.[16]

Batman and Robin

Recently, Deathstroke has been seen working with Talia al Ghul, controlling the body and physical actions of the current Robin in order to kill the recent Batman. Deathstroke is able to control Robin's actions thanks to a neural-implant inserted into Robin's spine by his mother while it was being surgically replaced. Batman defeats Deathstroke by taking advantage of the two-way connection between him and Robin by using a taser on Robin, the resulting electric shock overwhelming Deathstroke's enhanced senses. He then tracks Slade down and attacks him in his hospital bed for controlling Robin and for the Chemo attack, informing Slade that what happened then, is just a 'trailer' for what he will do later.[17]

Titans: Villains for Hire

Following the encounter with the Black Lanterns, Deathstroke recruits a team of supervillains consisting of Tattooed Man, Cheshire, Osiris, and the new character Cinder following the launch of Brightest Day. The team ambushes Ryan Choi in his home, and then battles him. This ends with Deathstroke driving his sword through Ryan's chest, killing him. He then gives the deceased hero's body to Dwarfstar.[18]

Following the assassination of the Atom, Deathstroke and the Titans are hired to kill Lex Luthor during his stay in Midway City. The attack is revealed to be a ruse crafted by Slade and Luthor in order to draw out a traitor on Luthor's security staff who is revealed to be a shape-shifting assassin named Facade.[19] After the Titans capture Facade and turn him over to the scientists at LexCorp, Luthor rewards Slade by examining technology that he had earlier ordered Tattooed Man and Cheshire to steal. Slade claims that this will bring him one step closer to his true goal: the ability to somehow cheat death itself. He also succeeds in recruiting Arsenal, a former member of the Teen Titans and Justice League, into the team.[20] Shortly after inducting Arsenal into the team, Slade accepts a mission to rescue a child from a drug lord named Elijah. After discovering that Elijah is using the bodies of kidnapped children to create an addictive drug called Bliss, the Titans promptly kill the gangster and shut down his operation. As the Titans are preparing to return to the Labyrinth, Cheshire notices that Slade has tied up DJ Molecule, a powerful metahuman who was working for Elijah as a bodyguard. When asked what he is doing with the young man, Slade cryptically responds by saying that he only accepted the mission in order capture Molecule for some unknown purpose.[21]

Afterward, Slade and his team arrive at South Pacific Island to kill cult leader Drago over the arena production of blind warriors; however, his team, Arsenal, and Cheshire betray him, revealing that they had been working with Drago. While Slade is held captive, Drago arrives and reveals to him that he is actually Slade's old friend, Corporal Daniel Rogers, who abandoned him during the civil war in Afghanistan. Drago then gouges out Slade’s left eye making him blind.[22] Slade is then imprisoned along with Arsenal and begins to tell him about his past with Drago.[23] Later, Drago takes a trip down memory lane with Slade, explaining how he lost his sight, and basically re-telling his origin and how it involved Jeremiah, right before he throws Slade beneath the complex to fend for his life against a crazed subhuman.[24] During the fights, Slade's left eye was restored due to his metahuman healing factor, and the Titans arrive to rescue him. Slade and the Titans break into Drago's mansion in attacks. Slade drugs him that he cannot focus his telepathic mind. When Drago was defeated, Slade allows him to live and the Titans then leave from his island. While returning to the labyrinth, Slade and the Titans are approached by the Atom and the Justice League attempt to arrest them for the murder of Ryan Choi.[25]

During the battle of Slade's Titans against the Justice League in Khandaq, the battle was stopped by Isis, who forces them to choose between leaving or continuing the fight and starting World War III. The Justice League chose to retreat and Slade retrieves from Supergirl's Kryptonian blood. Upon returning to the labyrinth, with his workers, Doctor Sivana and Doctor Impossible, Slade reveals to the Titans that their efforts support creation of a diabolical invention call the "Methuselah Device" for his dying son Jericho.[26]

The machine successfully heals Jericho, and Slade offers its abilities to all the Titans, offering to restore their deceased loved ones as payment for their services. All agree but Cinder, who does not want her brothers to live forever, as she claims to be doing. She attacks Cheshire and Osiris, and is then joined by Tattooed Man and Arsenal. As the Titans come to blows, Deathstroke attempts to take Jericho and leave, but Jericho, disgusted at what his father did to achieve his restoration, takes over his body, intending to destroy first the Methuselah Device, then himself and Deathstroke.[27] While the Titans fight over the Methuselah Device, its power source, a metahuman named DJ Molecule, is released. DJ Molecule blasts Slade, knocking Jericho out of his body. Arsenal then attacks him for stealing the Titans legacy. Slade escapes and the Methuselah Device is destroyed by Cinder. Afterwards, Slade berates himself and becomes Deathstroke once more.[28]

The New 52

Deathstroke

In The New 52 (a reboot of the DC Comics universe), Deathstroke is known as a top mercenary around the world.[29] Deathstroke is hired by a man named Cristoph for a mission that forces him to work with a team of younger mercenaries known as the Alpha Dogs. Their target is Jeffrey Bode, an arms dealer traveling on a plane. After discovering that the weapons Bode is trafficking are clones of the villain Clayface, Deathstroke and the other mercenaries are able to dispatch them, killing Bode in the process and retrieving a suitcase he had in his possession. Deathstroke subsequently betrays and kills the Alpha Dogs, enraged by the notion that his employers feel he is unable to accomplish his tasks alone. Deathstroke then begins to take on increasingly dangerous missions in an effort to prove his worth but is also spurred on by the contents of the suitcase he retrieved from Bode - namely the mask and knife belonging to his son Grant, both of which were stained with fresh blood indicating that he may be alive.[30] During this time, Deathstroke is pursued by a new villain known as Legacy.[31] Deathstroke kills Legacy, but another Legacy, donning the same colors as the last one, appears again, and again. It turns out the parents of one of the Alpha Dog members have hired multiple mercenaries to kill Deathstroke, all donning the green and purple color, to get revenge on him. Deathstroke tracks them down, but is confronted by his son Grant. It is revealed that all of this has been a plot to lure Deathstroke to him. Although Deathstroke manages to kill both the parents, Grant defeats him, claiming superior of Deathstroke. Grant is about to finish Slade, but he hesitates, and leaves. Recovering from his injuries, he takes another contract, happy that his son has become a better warrior than him, and then visits his father's hospital bed to mention he has grown up to be a greater man than him.

Slade takes a contract from Harvest, to bring the Ravagers back to the colony. He does this in exchange for his daughter Rose and Terra. It turns out that Lynch, the leader of Team 7 had needed Terra to stop a rampaging Majestic, who was thought to be killed by Dinah Drake's sonic scream. For a plan B, to Slade's dismay, he calls in Joseph Wilson, now going by the name Jericho, with Adeline and Grant, to stop Majestic. Instead of stopping Majestic, Jericho takes control of Majestic, Adeline, Grant, and Terra to kill his father. Adeline dies, buried in the rubble caused by Majestic's stampede. Jericho momentarily loses control by this, and Slade, Rose, and Terra manages to restrain Majestic, with the help of Rose's Gen-factor. However, Jericho retains control over Grant and Terra. When Slade knocks Terra unconscious, a cornered Jericho threatens to stab himself and Grant with a sword. Deathstroke, without hesitation, drives the sword into both of them, killing them instantly. But a later scene suggests Jericho has escaped, since there is shown a worker with glowing green eyes walking out of the clean-up scene, strongly implying Jericho has possessed the man to flee.

Origins

Deathstroke's altered origin is introduced in Deathstroke #0. The fact that he participated in the military at 16 and met Adeline has not changed. Already a legend in the army, Slade was drafted into Team 7 and went on many missions. In one mission, Slade was gravely injured and had to go under an operation that enhanced his abilities, making him virtually a super-human. After this, he married Adeline and had two sons, Grant and Joseph. Around this time, Slade received intel that informed his best friend, Wintergreen was caught in Somalia. He donned a mask and flew to Somalia to rescue Wintergreen, slaughtering all the captors. Deathstroke the Terminator was born. As his fame grew, his enemies did too. An attack targeting his house seemingly killed Joseph and Adeline. With evidence that the attack was from North Korea, Slade vengefully killed a pack of North Korean soldiers, but lost his right eye in the process. It is later shown that Joseph and Adeline are still alive.

This origin was again changed in Teen Titans: Deathstroke #1. After a mission that involved detonating a children's hospital which Slade was unaware of, he quit the army. After Team 7's termination, Slade started to operate under the Deathstroke identity. He took Grant on his mission, considering him as not only his son, but as a business partner, and the only person he could trust. But during in a mission in North Korea, their refuge was infiltrated and North Korean soldiers barged in, firing into the house. Grant was shot, and as Slade looked backwards at his son, a bullet penetrated through his right eye, blinding it. Enraged, Slade went on a massacre and slew the soldiers. However, Grant was presumed dead. Now, Slade works for the sake of his daughter Rose, as he knows the only thing that will keep Rose safe after he's gone, is money. It is unclear if Rose's mother is Adeline or not.

Team 7

Five years before taking the contract from Harvest, before taking the name Deathstroke, Slade once operated with Team 7. With metahuman threats rising, The Majestic Project, a plan to control future metahuman threats was schemed by John Lynch. And to secure the project, Team 7 was created and Slade was recruited. The first mission was retrieving the Eclipso Gem, where Slade was possessed by Eclipso and Alex Fairchild had to drive a sword through his chest to save him. Their next mission site is the Advanced Prosthetic Research Center. Dr. Henshaw is tasked into reactivating the android Spartan. But the Spartan Subject is activated, infecting everyone in the center to be turned into mindless cyborgs including Caitlin Fairchild. Team 7 is sent to the spot. Pilot Summer Ramos is killed by a cyborg. The team breaks into the facility, intending to bottleneck them. Caitlin appears out from a door. Relived to see his daughter, Alex Fairchild rushes to her and hugs her, but actually infected, Caitlin stabs her father to death. In a fit of rage, Slade chases after her and dispatches her. Then from behind, Henshaw, temporarily free of the Spartan virus, explained that this was a distraction by the Spartan Subject to target agent James Bronson, currently at his home. A Spartan Cyborg breaks into his apartment, and attacks, activating Majestic. Majestic actually turns out to be agent Bronson's gen factor, which was activated when the Kaizen, the dictator of the island nation of Gamorra sent the cyborg to trigger the Majestic Persona. It is later explained by Lynch that another purpose of Team 7 was to activate potential meta-genes in the agents to create powerful human weapons, which would make America invincible to other nations. Agents like Slade, Dinah Drake, and Cole Cash had gained their meta-human abilities by Lynch. Bronson was planned to be Majestic, but the activation of the gene just then had been unexpected.

Team 7's last mission was to salvage Pandora's Box. The Team, with new pilot Steve Trevor is sent to Gamorra. The Kaizen, who possessed Pandora's Box, prepared to unleash its power. When they reach the Kaizen's palace, the child precogs show the Team a future where Kaizen Gamorra has opened the Box, and the whole world is going off the rails. Hearing the precogs say the Kaizen had to be stopped to prevent this fate, Majestic flies up into space, and impacts the coast of Gamorra with the force of a comet, creating a massive tidal wave, annihilating five million residents. But the Kaizen's palace stood however, and the team couldn't defeat him, until Majestic burst in. The Kaizen explains that Majestic is the key to opening the box, which also explains why he targeted Bronson in the first place. Majestic kills the Kaizen with a single blow. But he subdues to the Box's power, and starts attacking the team. Dinah lets out a canary cry that destroys the entire palace. In the chaos, Lynch is possessed by the box, but Amanda Waller knocks the box from his hands and tells Dinah to take the box away as far as possible. Lynch tries to take down the helicopter containing Dinah and the remaining team agents, but Waller shoots him from behind, seemingly killing Lynch and leading to Team 7's dissolution.

Forever Evil

During the Forever Evil storyline, Steve Trevor encounters Deathstroke, Copperhead, and Shadow Thief at the White House when he is looking for the President.[32] Later, the party turns up in Wayne Industries with Power Ring to fight BatmanLex Luthor, and other heroes and villains who are against the Crime Syndicate. Deathstroke has Lex Luthor's life in his hands, but Lex Luthor persuades him that it will do him no good if the Syndicate takes over the Earth. Slade has a change of mind and shoots Copperhead in the head, killing him. After they defeat the rest of the gang, Deathstroke remarks that Lex Luthor ought to pay him a big fat check after this is over.[33]

Powers and abilities

Deathstroke possesses various enhanced abilities stated to be almost superhuman according to DC Bios and Comic bios.[citation needed] These include the strength of ten men and heightened speed, agility, stamina, and reflexes.His enhancements granted him to lift at least 2,000 pounds. He has the capacity to use up to 90% of his brain at any one time, making him a tactical genius, adept at turning opponents' own abilities against them; this can also be attributed to his years in the military and combat with various heroes. Deathstroke also possesses a healing factor in his blood that enables him to heal from physical injury much faster than a normal person; however, it does have limitations, as he could not heal his missing eye and cannot regenerate entire limbs. This enables him to recover from what would otherwise be fatal injuries, though recovering from such injuries renders him insane and animalistic for a short period. Deathstroke is also a very formidable opponent in hand-to-hand combat. He has also shown multilingualism, being able to speak various languages such as Russian, Japanese, and Korean.

Green Arrow (vol. 4) #66 claims that an assassin known as Natas taught Deathstroke "almost everything he knows" (a retcon of his origin in The New Teen Titans: Judas Contract, where his future wife, Adeline Kane, trained him while he was in the military). Deathstroke is also skilled in the use of many weapons including guns, rifles, and swords, which are usually among his current weapons of choice. His signature weapon is a power staff that fires lethal and non-lethal energy blasts from both ends. The staff can also be used to strike using energy at each end. In some humanistic versions of Deathstroke, his staff fires bullets and miniature cannonball-like pellets instead of energy blasts. His staff can bend and stretch to include both of his martial art forms. He is also seen with a wide array of swords (often two at a time), including giant broadswords and katana swords. [34] Typically in combat, he will use his other weapons (guns, knives, swords) until those are useless, saving his best weapon as backup. Without his staff, he is depicted as a poor fist fighter. In such depictions, his mask also contains tactical vision similar to Batman's "Detective Mode." [35] His body armor is composed of a mesh-woven, kevlar, chainlink mail, capable of stopping small arms fire. Most of the metal he wears and uses is Promethium. However, in the New 52, he wears a full suit composed of Nth metal. This armor allows him to absorb blows from some of the mightiest DC beings, as evidenced by it being able to absorb numerous blows from Lobo.

Other versions

Deathstroke: Journey's End

The Deathstroke annual for 1994 was an elseworlds story featuring Deathstroke in a post-apocalyptic world. Deathstroke fights a legion of mutants and desperately tries to help humanity rise from the ashes of its ruined civilization.[36]

Uncanny X-Men/Teen Titans

In the intercompany crossover The Uncanny X-Men and The New Teen Titans, Deathstroke meets his equal in the form of Wolverine; the two fight to a near standstill. At the same time, however, he proved skilled enough to defeat Colossus in a one-on-one fight despite the latter's superior physical strength. Colossus, however, isn't known for his fighting prowess on the level of Wolverine and Deathstroke.

Amalgam Comics

In Amalgam Comics, Deathstroke is combined with Marvel's Daredevil to become "Dare the Terminator," real name Slade Murdock. Unlike Wilson and Murdock, Dare is a woman. Though Dare is legally blind, she wears an eye-patch because of her mangled right eye. She also has horns surgically attached to her forehead. She uses a sword in combat.[37]

Tangent Comics

In Tangent Comics, Deathstroke is an armored supervillain and a member of the Fatal Five. This version exists on Earth-97 of the Old Multiverse and Earth-9 of the New Multiverse.

Mash-Up

In the Superman/Batman storyline "Mash-Up," elements of Slade are combined with parts of Doomsday, creating the villain "Doomstroke."[38]

Flashpoint

In the Flashpoint reality, Deathstroke is a pirate, searching with his crew formed by Sonar, whom he broke out of a floating prison, Icicle, Fisherman, Clayface, Machiste and the Eel for any sunken loot to steal in the flooded remains of Paris, and also for his daughter Rose, who has been kidnapped by persons unknown.[39] Deathstroke and his crew were however soon attacked by Aquaman and his brother the Ocean Master.[40] Aquaman stabs Deathstroke in the chest with his trident telling Ocean Master "no survivors".[39] After the attack, Deathstroke was saved from death by Sonar, who demanded to be made second-in-command in return. While continuing their journey, the pirates were ambushed by the fleet of Warlord and forced to surrender, but are then saved by Jenny Blitz who destroyed one of Warlord's ships.[41] Afterwards, Blitz agrees to join Deathstroke in searching for his daughter and developed a relationship in-between. Soon Deathstroke and Blitz were alerted that his crew were planning a mutiny. Deathstroke and Blitz fought and killed the treacherous crew, but Sonar manage to contact another pirate fleet under the leadership of the Caretaker before Deathstroke shot him. Later, Deathstroke and Jenny approaches the Caretaker's fleet and discovers Rose is being held captive. Deathstroke formulates a plan by offering to exchange Caretaker with a stasis-like Jenny for Rose's freedom. However, the Caretaker double-crosses on their deal and have his crew to attack him. But Deathstroke unleashes Jenny from her stasis upon Caretaker's fleet. During the battle, Deathstroke ignited a grenade at a weapon stockpile which destroyed Caretaker's ship and its crew with it. Deathstroke and Blitz were rescued by Rose. Reunited with his daughter, Deathstroke sails towards an unknown destination.[42]

In other media

Television

File:Slade Wilson (arrow).png
Manu Bennett as Slade Wilson in Arrow.
  • Slade Wilson aka Deathstroke appears in Arrow, played by Manu Bennett. This incarnation is of Australian descent (and an ASIS Agent). He also has a son named Joe. Unlike most incarnations of Deathstroke this one starts as a protagonist in his introduction in the mid point of season 1 until the mid point of season 2 where he is the second season's primary antagonist. Slade and his partner Bill Wintergreen in the flashbacks both wear Team-7 uniforms similar to the Deathstroke costume but Slade's is grey and Billy's is black. Both costumes include a mask similar to Deathstroke's, though unlike Billy, Slade has so far only worn it once. In the present day sequences, Slade has an eye patch on his right eye and slightly grayed hair. Slade also wears a far more accurate Deathstroke costume and mask. Sometime before Oliver's arrival on the island, Slade and Billy were tasked with rescuing Yao Fei from the island of Lian Yu and uncovering the plot of Edward Fyers but their plane was shot out of the sky and both were captured. Fyers gave an offer for both men to join his cause which Billy joined but Slade declined and was held captive for at least a year but escaped with Yao Fei's help and takes refuge inside the wreck of his plane. Slade eventually meets Oliver Queen, a young man shipwrecked there recently sent to his plane wreck by Yao Fei to become his partner in order for both to escape. Slade continues to train Oliver to fight and has various encounters with Fyers' men, one of which Slade takes revenge against Billy and kills him, and also gain the help of Yao Fei's daughter Shado as they try to learn Fyers' plan, though Yao Fei eventually gives them up, to stop Fyers' from killing them and discovers his plan: To destroy China's economy by destroying commercial airlines from China with a missile launcher and have Yao Fei take the fall and is killed by Fyers' though Slade, Oliver and Shado escape and kill Fyers' and stop his plan. 5 months after Fyers' death the three continue to live in the plane but Slade has developed romantic feelings towards Shado. However the three are attacked and separated by bombardments from Dr. Ivo. Slade is badly injured which leaves him with severe burns which causes his face to resemble the iconic Deathstroke mask. Slade and Shado eventually rescue Oliver and Sara Lance from Ivo and embark on a mission to save Slade with the Mirakuru serum created by the Japanese in WWII to amplify human performance on a submarine. They succeed but without a sedative Slade appears to die. However minutes later he wakes up but when he gets outside he discovers his new abilities on Ivo's men but finds Shado dead by Ivo's hands and vows revenge. After Shado's death Slade becomes more angry and hateful toward Oliver and Sara as a side effect of the Mirakuru and takes off after Ivo with the rest of the serum, even trying to destroy Ivo's ship with Fyers' missile launcher until Oliver makes him see reason. Slade, Oliver and Sara then launch an attack on Ivo's freighter and free the prisoners which results in a massive fire-fight on the deck. However Slade arrives on the bridge in time to discover the truth about Shado's death from Oliver and Ivo. As everyone attempts to escape the ship Slade stops Oliver and puts him back in a cell while Slade begins to torture Ivo out of vengeance while announcing bigger plans for Oliver. Slade begins to torture Oliver aboard the ship and brads the same tattoo on his back that Shado had, to forever taunt him. Slade then returns both Oliver and Ivo to the island in exchange for Hendrick, an engineer to get the ship moving and begins to see Shado in his mind who manipulates him. At some point in between Ivo's ship Oliver apparently killed Slade by shooting an arrow in his eye but somehow survived unknown to Oliver and became a mercenary that A.R.G.U.S. would name Deathstroke and posses as a businessman during the day using the wealth from his missions to back up his claims. In "Three Ghosts" it is revealed that Slade is alive in the present and is the true leader of the Blood Cult led by Sebastian Blood who seeks to kill Oliver and destroy everything he stands for and everyone he cares for, using the Mirakuru in his blood. In "Blind Spot," he becomes angry by Blood's inability to hide his past from Arrow and despite making his lackey, a police officer, take the fall, Slade kills three of Blood's men in a frightening display of skill and in his Deathstroke persona. He then warns Blood if he disappoints him again, he will die. In "Heir to the Demon," he confronts Blood about Moira Queen's decision to run against him for mayor of Starling City. Rather than allowing Blood to deal with the issue, Slade tells Blood that he will handle it himself. In "Time of Death", Slade personally visits Moira at the Queen Mansion, who introduces Slade to Oliver when he returns, much to Oliver's shock and horror. In "The Promise" Slade continues to socialize with Moira and Oliver revealing that has given a donation towards Moira's mayoral campaign. Oliver even attempts to discretely kill Slade but is stopped when Thea comes home and Slade is then taken on a tour of the house, secretly placing cameras all over the house, but tensions between Oliver and Slade rise, especially after Sara and Roy Harper arrive and Slade is forced to leave as Oliver walks him out. Outside Slade then takes responsibility for Brother Blood and Cyrus Gold before reminding Oliver of his promise which he vows to fulfill. Slade is later seen at his lair viewing all the house cameras. In "Suicide Squad" Slade continues to taunt Oliver by stalking him on rooftops in Deathstroke armor, leaving the Deathstroke mask from the island beach on another roof, leaving a video of Shado playing in his office when Oliver finds it. Slade's mercenary history as Deathstroke is also revealed by Amanda Waller to Oliver, who seems to know about Oliver's past with Slade. In "Bird of Prey" Slade in his limo finds Thea walking a dark road and offers her a ride home. In "Deathstroke" Slade has Thea kidnapped by Brother Blood and as Deathstroke broadcasts the abduction during Moira and Blood's political debate. Oliver, Sara and Roy then appear in his office and Slade is knocked out when Oliver injects him with snake poison but because of lack of evidence he is released. It is also revealed that Isabel Rochev is actually working with Slade to take over Queen Consolidated and succeeds. Later Slade gears up and pursues a prison bus while leading Oliver to a false trail. Deathstroke kills the prison bus guards and recruits the prisoners for Mirakuru experiments. He later argues with Sebastian about his campaign support failing because of Moira. Later he releases Thea but tells her that Malcolm Merlyn is her real father and later shows up at Laurel Lance's house, after Slade is publicly exposed for being Thea's kidnapper, and reveals to Laurel that Oliver is the vigilante.
  • In the Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman episode "Bob and Carol and Lois and Clark," an assassin by the name of Deathstroke (played by Antonio Sabàto, Jr.) appeared. The only commonality is the fact that he is an international assassin known as Deathstroke. Deathstroke is a former scientist when an accident in the lab exposed him to magnetic particles, permanently altering his body and granting him magnetic powers (an ability more reminiscent of DC Comics' Dr. Polaris). His assistant becomes his wife (Sydney Walsh) and helps by creating a special suit to contain his powers and keep metal from being drawn to him while out in public. The suit even has a symbol of its own resembling the force lines of a magnetic field, forming a stylized figure eight. After this, he becomes an assassin, murdering his targets with his powers, first by drawing the target to him, then by magnetizing the iron in their blood cells, causing a figure-eight mark on the chest as the person dies of a heart attack. He and his wife rationalize their actions as being the result of the accident, leaving them with no other way to make a living and rendering him a "freak." The couple take the name Bob Stanton and Carol Stanton when they arrive in Metropolis. They become friends with Clark Kent and Lois Lane as they discover that Lois is going to be interviewing an eccentric reclusive billionaire. The couple plan to assassinate the billionaire before he goes public, taking his identity and thus his fortune. The plan is foiled when Superman interferes, destroying Deathstroke's containment suit, which causes him to be magnetically drawn to a steel pillar until the police arrive. Very much like Superman, this Deathstroke kept a secret identity by wearing a pair of glasses.
  • Slade Wilson appears in the tenth (final) season of Smallville, portrayed by Michael Hogan. This version is a United States Army Lieutenant General that is behind the anti-superhero Vigilante Registration Act legislation that he has propagated while under Darkseid's influence. In order to find out what Slade has planned, Oliver Queen volunteers to register. Lois Lane meanwhile confronts Slade and discovers that Slade is a suspected war-criminal known for torture and illegal methods of torture and interrogation. But is too late to warn Oliver to be captured A.C. by Slade in a holding facility which is equipped with holding cells that can adapt to the heroes' abilities. Clark Kent and Mera free Oliver and A.C., but Slade sets off the base's self-destruction. He survives the explosion but at the cost of his right eye, and having advanced healing abilities (described as "advanced Military tech"). Having uncovered a significant amount of information about the Justice League, Wilson attacks Lois at LuthorCorp and tries to force her to lead him to Clark and the group's secret headquarters. Although Hawkman saves Lois by fighting Slade using his signature Katana, Hawkman dies saving her life. After surviving an explosion which would have killed a normal human, Wilson tells Clark that he is 'beyond Death's stroke now' so Clark uses a Kryptonian crystal to send him to the Phantom Zone later saying that he would release him to stand trial after the VRA is repealed. However, Zod sends Slade back to Earth albeit unconscious and with no memory of his time away through the Phantom Zone portal in an attempt to lure Clark into there for revenge.
File:SladeTTanimated2003.jpg
Slade in the Teen Titans animated series.
  • The character appears in the Teen Titans animated series, voiced by Ron Perlman. This incarnation simply goes by his first name "Slade," as "Deathstroke" was not considered suitable for a series aimed at children. As a nod to his comic counterpart, his mask only has one eye-hole, though his 'true' face is never shown. At one point, he wore a disguise that closely resembles his face from the comics. Underneath his mask, his face was silhouetted by a shadow (with brightly colored slicked back hair) and later a scar running through his right eye socket. He appears to have access to extremely advanced technology and various secret hideouts, nearly unlimited resources, and a vast army of robot minions. However, Slade's most notable quality is that he is a master of manipulation and psychology, allowing him to get his foes to do almost anything he wants through shrewd manipulation. Although most of his operations are purely scientific in nature, he seems to possess some knowledge of ceremonial magic. Slade has enhanced strength, an enhanced healing factor, a degree of super speed, and well-trained in many forms of combat. However, he was easy to anger which was eventually taken advantage of. He is also changed from a mercenary and assassin to an enigmatic criminal mastermind, dispatching slews of super villains and android ninjas to kill the Teen Titans instead of directly coming after them himself. Slade is shown to be ambitious, calculating, and incredibly sadistic. But his underestimating of the bonds that exist between all the Teen Titans and his fury over not being able to sever those bonds have often led to his undoing. His main goal is apparently to kill the Titans and possibly conquer the world. Slade appears in seasons one, two and four. In the first season, Slade seeks out Robin as an apprentice when he coerces into working for him by threatening to kill the other Titans with nanobots. But when Robin is almost killed with Slade's nanobots, Slade gives in and is then defeated by the Titans. In the second season, Slade seeks Terra as another apprentice due to her desire for control and acceptance which he preys on. However, Slade is killed when Terra drops him into a lava-filled pit. Although he was mostly absent in the third season with Brother Blood acting as the main villain, hallucinations of Slade appears harassing Robin due to a chemical reagent released from his mask but Robin eventually figures this out and overcomes the hallucination. In the fourth season, Slade returns as an undead servant of Trigon. Now enjoying working for someone else, he is empowered with vast pyrokinetic abilities, superhuman strength and durability, flight, regeneration, phasing, electricity generation, teleportation, and other supernatural powers to harass Raven. Slade entered into the deal in exchange for being brought back to life, but was predictably betrayed. Intent on getting his due, he helps Robin find Raven, locating the source of power which restores his mortal form along the way. He aids the Titans in defeating Trigon afterward and escapes capture after the world is saved. In the fifth (and final) season, Slade appears when Beast Boy is searching for answers on why a girl who appears to be Terra that seems to have lost all memory of her past and superpowers. Slade confronts Beast Boy denying anything to do with Terra's sudden return and stating that if Terra does not remember her past, it is because she does not want to remember and that he should leave her in peace. Infuriated by his speech, Beast Boy attacks Slade only to find out that it is just another robot duplicate. He is also the only main Titan villain still at large at the end of the series.
  • Deathstroke appears in Young Justice: Invasion, voiced by Wentworth Miller (the first appearance) and Fred Tatasciore (the second appearance).[43] This version has long white hair worn in a ponytail and a patch over one eye. In the episode "True Colors", he appears as the Light's new enforcer and intercepts an assasaination attempt on Black Manta by Sportsmaster who escapes onto a helicopter piloted by Cheshire. In the episode "The Fix", Black Manta enlists Deathstroke and Tigress to capture Miss Martian in order to restore Aqualad's mind. Deathstroke and Tigress interrupt a discussion between Miss Martian and Lagoon Boy at a junkyard. Deathstroke easily defeats Lagoon Boy and successfully captures Miss Martian. Black Manta then has Deathstroke monitor Miss Martian's procedure, prepared to set off an explosive charge in Miss Martian's inhibitor collar in case she tries anything. In "Complications", Deathstroke is unaware that Aqualad has being healed, and he and Tigress are concocting a plan to help Miss Martian escape. When Sportsmaster and Cheshire infiltrate the sub, Miss Martian takes the opportunity to escape, whilst Deathstroke comes to blows with Sportsmaster, revealing a desire to become a member of the Light's commanders. He is temporarily immobilized by Miss Martian, allowing Sportsmaster and Chesire to escape without blowing Tigress' cover. In the episode "The Hunt", Deathstroke infiltrates the Warworld to steal the Key that operates it when he is sent there by Lex Luthor. In the episode "Summit", Deathstroke is present at a meeting between The Light and The Reach, but was revealed to be Miss Martian in disguise. After the ensuring fight between The Light, The Reach and The Team, Nightwing is overheard congratulating Aqualad for defeating Deathstroke.

Film

Animation

  • Slade Wilson appears in the DC Universe Animated Original Movie Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, voiced by Bruce Davison. This incarnation is a parallel universe counterpart and the President of the United States in the world controlled by the Crime Syndicate of America. Although he still retains his white hair and eye-patch (except on his left eye as opposed to his right), he never pursued the path as an assassin but rather tries to work for the betterment of the American people through his political career. Nevertheless, he was a former soldier keeping in line with his mercenary counterpart's backstory but considered as a respectable war hero. He is also shown needing a cane for support, implying that he has health problems and never took the serum that would have given him his superhuman abilities. His daughter Rose Wilson publicly speaks out against the Crime Syndicate and was nearly assassinated by the Archer but was saved by the Martian Manhunter. It was also heavily implied that Ultraman assassinated Slade's wife. He is initially reluctant to wage war against the Syndicate due to his concerns for his daughter and the country's safety. However, after Ultraman's last threat and Rose's attempted murder, Wilson decides to strike back at the Syndicate with the Justice League's aid, along with that of his world's Lex Luthor, and personally leads the United States Marine Corps into the battle. After the Syndicate leaders' defeat, Slade orders the National Guard to work with law enforcement agencies to arrest the remaining members of the CSA.
  • Deathstroke appears in Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox, with Ron Perlman reprising his role.[44] In the distorted timeline of the 'Flashpoint' event, Deathstroke the Terminator is the captain of the ship, the Ravager. He and Lex Luthor set out to find Aquaman's 'Doomsday Device', but the ship is suddenly attacked by an Atlantean army led by Aquaman. Deathstroke, with his superior fighting skills, cuts through hoards of Atlanteans before confronting Aquaman. He manages to overpower Garth and Kaldur'ahm but afterwards is presumably killed by Black Manta's optic blasts.
  • Deathstroke will appear as the main antagonist of Son of Batman with Thomas Gibson voicing the character.[45]

Live action

On December 2, 2013 David S. Goyer announced that a Deathstroke movie is in development as well as a Booster Gold and a Suicide Squad movie.[46]

Video games

  • On August 20, 2008, Ed Boon announced Deathstroke as one of the DC villains who would appear in Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe,[47] played by Chris Matthews and voiced by Patrick Seitz. He is a counterpart of Baraka. In the story, Deathstroke appears in Metropolis where he beheads a thug who paid him the money he owed Deathstroke late. Then Deathstroke is attacked and defeated by Flash. When in Gotham City, he attacks Sub-Zero (who is trying to hunt down Scorpion) seeing this new assassin as an enemy. Sub-Zero wins the battle, but does not bother finishing off Deathstroke fearing the essence of the Netherrealm that leads to Scorpion would become too weak to follow if he wasted any more time. Later, Deathstroke teams up with Lex Luthor and the Joker. He helps Joker try to take on Sonya Blade and Kano. Joker fights Sonya while Deathstroke battles Kano. In the middle of his fight, Deathstroke is pushed aside by Joker who defeats Kano and turns on Deathstroke when the Combat Rage takes over Joker. Deathstroke's game ending has him realizing that other-worldy assassins are seen as unwelcome competition. As a caution, he creates an army of assassins in his image, becoming the leader of the "Deathstrike Clan" (the DC Universe's version of the Lin Kuei).
  • Deathstroke appears in DC Universe Online, voiced by Tracy W. Bush. He is a member of the Secret Society of Super-Villains, and appears in multiple Instances and Alerts. During the Batman story quest line, he is sent by the Joker to assassinate the Riddler for informing the heroes of the source of Joker's new venom. In the Villain's campaign, he will join the player in a fight against Bruno Mannheim to steal the Bible of Crime. Players that use a Hero character will also encounter Deathstroke and Killer Croc on the Cape Carmine Lighthouse duo. In the Smallville alert, he appears as part of a Strike Force alongside Killer Frost, Bizarro and Solomon Grundy sent to aid Villain players in their battle against Doomsday.
  • Deathstroke appears in Injustice: Gods Among Us as a playable character,[48] voiced by J. G. Hertzler.[49] The mainstream version is hired by Lex Luthor to spring the Joker from Arkham Asylum but is defeated by Batman. The alternate incarnation is seen in Ferris Aircraft being tortured by the Regime's Cyborg and Raven until Green Lantern appears and escapes during the fight. Later on, he joins up with the Insurgency and helps the mainstream version of Cyborg into taking control of the Watchtower's teleportation system. In his game ending, after the alternate version defeats Superman, new governments start to form to replace Superman's. With new governments comes new orders for assassinations, insurrections to cause and revolutions to support, too much for even Deathstroke to handle. Using his skills to hunt down hidden Regime soldiers, Deathstroke forms a clan of the world's most successful political assassins called the New Titans. A Red Son-in game exclusive skin was released as part of DLC.
  • Deathstroke appears in Batman: Arkham Origins, voiced by Mark Rolston.[50] He is among the eight assassins hired to kill Batman by the Joker. He appears in Penguin's ship, the Final Offer, attacking Batman while he is interrogating Penguin about Black Mask and his connection to the assassins. Despite proving a difficult opponent, even being capable of countering Batman's attacks, Deathstroke is ultimately defeated, with his remote claw gadget being confiscated by Batman. He is encountered later in the game, being incarcerated in Blackgate Prison during the Joker's uprising, still confined to his cell. He claims Joker refused to release him because he was "afraid of him" and goes on to state that he has no interest in facing Batman again unless he is hired to do so.[51] After completing the game, Deathstroke is once again shown in a special post credits scene in which Amanda Waller gives him a confidential file marked "Suicide Squad" and offers him the choice to stay in prison or work for her.[52] Deathstroke is also a playable character in the game's challenge maps, through a pre-order bonus and DLC, with two alternative skins inspired by the Judas Contract story arc and the video game Injustice: Gods Among Us.

Toys

Deathstroke had few action figures, but most of them in the same line. He got a New Teen Titans figure, which is unmasked. Later on he got an unmasked and masked figure in the Dc Universe Infinite Heroes Crisis line. Another Deathstroke figure from the same line got a collector edition 75 years of super powers action figure. He also got a Dark Knight Figure (even though he was not in the movie), and finally an Injustice Gods Among Us Green Arrow two pack.

Miscellaneous

  • Slade was seen in Teen Titans Go! #16. His daughter Rose also made an appearance. A painting of Slade, without his mask, is briefly seen in the comic book.[citation needed]
  • In the videogame Borderlands 2, the Maliwan Grace costume for the character Zer0 is a reference to Deathstroke's color scheme.

Collected editions

Part of the eponymous series has been collected into a trade paperback:

  • Deathstroke the Terminator: Full Cycle (collects Deathstroke the Terminator #1-5 and New Titans #70, ISBN 978-0-930289-82-9)
  • Deathstroke Vol. 1: Legacy (collects Deathstroke (vol. 2) #1-8, ISBN 978-1-401234-81-2)
  • Deathstroke Vol. 2: Lobo Hunt (Deathstroke (Vol. 2) #0, #9-20)

References

  1. ^ a b c d Beatty, Scott (2008). "Deathstroke the Terminator". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). The DC Comics Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 97. ISBN 0-7566-4119-5. OCLC 213309017.
  2. ^ Wizard #177
  3. ^ "Deathstroke is number 32". IGN.
  4. ^ Manning, Matthew K.; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1990s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 250. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. "Slade Wilson began his impressive sixty-issue run with the help of writer Marv Wolfman and artist Steve Erwin. {{cite book}}: |first2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Renaud, Jeffrey (November 12, 2008). "David Hine on Deathstroke's Return". Comic Book Resources.
  6. ^ Nolen-Weathington, Eric. Modern Masters Volume 2: George Pérez. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 128. ISBN 978-1-893905-25-2. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Nightwing #23
  8. ^ Green Arrow #60 (May 2006)
  9. ^ Green Arrow #62 (July 2006)
  10. ^ Green Arrow #63 (August 2006)
  11. ^ Green Arrow #64 (September 2006)
  12. ^ Green Arrow #65 (October 2006)
  13. ^ Green Arrow #66 (November 2006)
  14. ^ Faces of Evil: Deathstroke
  15. ^ Teen Titans (vol. 3) #77 (November 2009)
  16. ^ Teen Titans (vol. 3) #78 (December 2009)
  17. ^ Batman and Robin #9 (February 2010)
  18. ^ Titans: Villains for Hire Special #1 (May 2010)
  19. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #24-25
  20. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #26
  21. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #27
  22. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #33 (March 2011)
  23. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #34 (April 2011)
  24. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #35 (May 2011)
  25. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #36 (June 2011)
  26. ^ Titans Annual 2011 (July 2011)
  27. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #37 (July 2011)
  28. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #38 (August 2011)
  29. ^ Deathstroke #1
  30. ^ Deathstroke #2
  31. ^ Deathstroke #5
  32. ^ Forever Evil: A.R.G.U.S. #1
  33. ^ Forever Evil #5
  34. ^ Batman: Arkham City Lockdown
  35. ^ Batman: Arkham Origins
  36. ^ Deathstroke Annual #3 (1994)
  37. ^ Assassins #1
  38. ^ Superman/Batman #60
  39. ^ a b Flashpoint: Deathstroke and the Curse of the Ravager#1 (June 2011)
  40. ^ Flashpoint #2 (June 2011)
  41. ^ Flashpoint: Deathstroke and the Curse of the Ravager #2 (July 2011)
  42. ^ Flashpoint: Deathstroke and the Curse of the Ravager #3 (August 2011)
  43. ^ "MTV Geek – SDCC 2012: Kevin Smith Presents 'Beware the Batman' and 'Teen Titans Go!' Reveals at the DC Nation Panel". Geek-news.mtv.com. July 16, 2012. Retrieved October 18, 2012.
  44. ^ Siegel, Lucas. "UPDATE: FLASHPOINT PARADOX Reveals Reverse Flash, Director". Newsarama.
  45. ^ First Look: It's Father's Day for the Dark Knight in Son of Batman
  46. ^ Deathstroke, Booster Gold and Suicide Squad films in development
  47. ^ McWhertor, Michael (August 20, 2008). "Wonder Woman, Raiden Two of Four New Kombatants". Kotaku.
  48. ^ Aquaman, Sinestro, Shazam & Doomsday Confirmed For INJUSTICE: GODS AMONG US
  49. ^ [1]
  50. ^ ‘Batman: Arkham Origins’ What Deathstroke And The Silver Age Could Mean
  51. ^ [2]
  52. ^ [3]