Youngblood (comics)

Youngblood
Cover to Youngblood #1 (April 1992)
by Rob Liefeld
Publication information
PublisherMegaton Comics
Image Comics
Awesome Comics
Arcade Comics
Terrific Prod. (IP owner only)
First appearanceRAMM #1 (May 1987)
Created byRob Liefeld
Hank Kanalz
In-story information
Base(s)Pentagon
Member(s)Badrock
Doc Rocket
Sentinel
Shaft
Suprema
Vogue
Former members:
Big Brother
Brahma
Chapel
Combat
Diehard
Cougar
Task
Dutch
Johnny Panic
Knightsabre
Masada
Photon
Psi-Fire
Psilence
Riptide
Troll
Twilight
Scion

Youngblood is a superhero team that starred in their self-titled comic book series, created by writer/artist Rob Liefeld.[1][2][3] The team made its debut as a backup feature in RAMM #1 (May 1987) before the next month appearing in the one-shot Megaton Explosion #1 (June 1987) before later appearing in April 1992 in its own ongoing series as the flagship publication for Image Comics and the wider Image Universe. Youngblood was originally published by Image Comics, and later by Awesome Entertainment. Upon Rob Liefeld's return to Image Comics, it was revived in 2008, 2012, and 2017. In 2019, Liefeld revealed that he has not owned the rights to Youngblood for several years.

In most of its iterations, Youngblood is a high-profile superteam sanctioned and overseen by the United States government. Youngblood's members include Shaft, a former FBI agent who uses a high-tech bow; Badrock, a teenager transformed into a living block of stone;[4] Vogue, a Russian fashion model with purple-and-chalk-white skin; and Chapel, a government assassin.

  1. ^ "New Blood: Joe Casey talks 'Youngblood' – Comic Book Resources". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  2. ^ "Rob Liefeld Talks 'Youngblood: Bloodsport'". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  3. ^ Ginocchio, Mark (July 3, 2013). "Gimmick or Good? – Youngblood #1". Comic Book Resources.
  4. ^ Upon Youngblood's debut, the character's name was originally "Bedrock". Liefeld would later change the character's name to "Badrock" to avoid confusion and legal threats from Hanna-Barbera, who owned the copyright to The Flintstones, which is set in the fictional town of Bedrock.[citation needed]