< Fan Nickname
Fan Nickname/Comic Books
Comics have been around for decades and have a strong, devoted fanbase. Is it any wonder they've accumulated so many Fan Nicknames?
DC
Batman
- ASSBAR: All-Star Batman And Robin. Aside from the convenient acronym, the book is generally not held in high regard.
- AzBats: The Jean-Paul Valley version of Batman who took over as an Anti-Hero Substitute when Batman was paralyzed.
- Babsgirl- the nickname for the original Batgirl, Barbara Gordon.
- Bats - Batman
- Batsy! (Yes, he's been called that by some fans too.)
- Bat-Hat - The bat-eared Russian fur cap that Batman wears in the Elseworld Superman: Red Son. Also called the Sexy Bat-Hat, because general consensus is that it's the sexiest damn thing found in comics ever. (It is natural to want to touch a hat so sexy.)
- The Goddamned Batman - Batman, especially during his more sociopathic moments. Comes from an actual quote from the intentionally over-the-top title All-Star Batman & Robin.
- Some fans specifically refer to Frank Miller's version as The Goddamned Batman, to differentiate him from the
realmainstream version. For similar reasons, All-Star Batman & Robin is commonly referred to as ASSBAR.- The ASBAR Batman can also be "BINO" ("Batman in Name Only")
- Or Crazy Steve.
- The ASBAR Batman can also be "BINO" ("Batman in Name Only")
- The nickname has been used when referring to the (mildly) Darker and Edgier Nolan films, particularly TDK- occasionally 'Gosh Darn Batman' in reference to the... ambiguous PG-13 rating. (Mommy? I'm scared.)
- 'Gosh Darn Batman' has also been used as a parody of the name in an issue of Superman/Batman.
- Some fans specifically refer to Frank Miller's version as The Goddamned Batman, to differentiate him from the
- GunBats: Jason Todd's psychopathic gun-wielding Batman.
- He is also known as GatMan.
- Little Miss Ninja Goddess - Cassandra Cain
- Also frequently shortened to just "Cass".
- Bat-Dick: Dick Grayson, the new Batman. Can also be used to describe Bruce Wayne during some of his more paranoid and misanthropic moments.
- Also, "the Goddamn Batdick" in a one-two punch.
- Dick Grayson-as-Batman is also known as "Dickbats".
- Discowing: Dick Grayson in his first Nightwing costume.
- Flips-n-Shit: Any of the Batfamily's urban acrobatics, especially Nightwing's.
- Fingerstripes: Tumblr's (especially fyeahdickgrayson's) nickname for the two blue fingers of each hand of Nightwing's costume.
- Tumblr also refers to the Dick Grayson/Donna Troy friendship as "true platonic love".
- Condom Head: The Red Robin costume.
- The Swan Queen: The DCnU Red Robin costume. It is fabulous.
- Timmy Todd: Tim Drake in The New Batman Adventures.
Superman
- Superdickery - Anytime Superman does something that isn't exactly very heroic. Common occurrence in the Gold and Silver age comics. there's a Website of the same name chronicling all instances of this
- Note that this is different than the Super Dickery trope, which refers to when covers or previews show a good character apparently act like a dick out of context to intrigue readers/viewers.
- The Moral Dissonance version of the term Superdickery also has the derivatives Batdickery [1], Wonderdickery, Flashdickery, Lanterndickery, Guardiandickery, Arrowdickery, Wingdickery/Robindickery/Dickdickery, Spiderdickery, Fourdickery, Capdickery, Irondickery, X-dickery, Hulkdickery, and finally the catch-all terms "Herodickery" and... "Superdickery".
- Supermenso (lit. Supermoron in Spanish) - His nickname in the Mexican comic book fandom.
- Supes - Superman (pronounced like "soups").
- Also, "The Boyscout" and "Big Blue Cheese" (to match Captain Marvel's "Big Red Cheese"), which also occasionally get some canon use.
- Supertorso - The latest incarnation of Supergirl, specifically in her short-skirted, be-midriffed, whisper-thin Jerk Sue Dork Age.
- Superbrat-Prime, Emoboy-Prime, Superbitch-Prime, Superboy-Primadonna: Superboy-Prime (who was technically Superman-Prime for a stretch, but "Superboy" fits him better.)
- Supermanboy-Prime?
- Superboy-Whine, Superprick-Prime, Cryin' Prime, Spasticboy-Prime, Whinyboy-Prime, Emobitch-Whine, Super-Manboy-Asshole-Prime... can do this all day, people...
- Superboy-Prime is often shortened to "SBP", and is thus also called "PMS".
- Given his depiction in Superman: At Earth's End, many call that Superman "Bearded Idiot" as a result of Linkara
- Not quite a nickname per se, but using his initials in the same context as Lois Lane's often crops up in discussions of Lex Luthor; e.g.: "the other L.L."
Wonder Woman
- "Wondy" is a common nickname for Wonder Woman, "Polly" for Hippolyta and "Temi" for Artemis. The current Wonder Girl, Cassie Sandsmark has a few...unflattering nicknames herself.
- "Shamazons" is the common nickname for the spectacularly misconcieved Amazons Attack.
- "Heinboot" is also the nickname for Wonder Woman's post-Infinite Crisis reboot by Alan Heinberg.
- Wonder Woman fans even have nicknames for various costumes."Bathing suit" and "star spangled panties" for the regular costume, "The Screaming Chicken Armor" for her Kingdom Come eagle armor, and "The Christmas Sweater" for Cassie Wonder Girl's current costume.
The Legion of Super Heroes
- Preboot - The Legion's original continuity, 1958-1994, 2007-present.
- V4 / 5YL / Glorithverse / TMK - "Five Years Later", the fourth volume of the preboot title, a Darker and Edgier continuation following (as the title suggests) a five-year Time Skip; this timeline was created by the time-controlling villain Glorith. The 5YL stories were mostly written by Tom and Mary Bierbaum and drawn by Keith Giffen, usually abbreviated to "TMK".
- SW6 - One of the most significant ongoing storylines from 5YL, involving a group of time-paradox duplicates of the early Legion (who went on to star in the Spin-Off Legionnaires until Zero Hour). The term comes from the cryptic labels of the People Jars ("Batch SW6") the duplicates were found in.
- Retroboot / Deboot / Johnsboot - The version of the original continuity Legion that appeared starting in 2007's "The Lightning Saga", branching off from the preboot continuity just before 5YL, masterminded by writer Geoff Johns.
- Postboot / Archie Legion - The Post-Zero Hour Continuity Reboot of the series, 1994-2004. It had a Lighter and Softer, less epic feel to the stories compared to previous runs, and Moy, the Legionnaires artist for the first run of the reboot, contributed a cartoony art style.
- DnA - The Darker and Edgier Retool of the Post-Zero Hour Legion, launched by writers Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning in the "Legion of the Damned" arc.
- Threeboot - The latest Continuity Reboot of the Legion, 2004-2009.
Assorted DC
- The Big Seven - Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, J'onn J'onnz, a Flash, a Green Lantern, and Aquaman/Hawkman/Hawkgirl (it depends); the most common members and iconic of the Justice League of America. More rarely, The Magnificent Seven, after the movie of the same name.
- The Brave and the Bold - Green Lantern and The Flash when they team-up. Is also referred to an old team-up book and, of course, Batman the Brave And The Bold.
- Similarly, Batman and Superman get "The Worlds Finest" when they team up. This is also used in-universe.
- The Trinity, the Big Three - Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman. "Big Three" is also used for Marvel's top heroes, see below.
- The Giant Yellow Space Bug: Parallax, after it was revealed that instead of "Parallax" being the name of the mass-murdering psychopathic super-villain Hal Jordan became after he lost his marbles over the destruction of his hometown, it was actually the name of the malevolent entity that possessed him, which was...well...a giant yellow space bug.
- Also now used as a label for any massive retcon-revelation that completely alters a past event in continuity.
- "Cap" usually refers to Captain Marvel or Captain Atom. In a broader sense, any superhero with "Captain" in his or her name can be called Cap. (Over at Marvel, Cap is Captain America).
- Crabface, Crabmask - Kyle Rayner, the only Green Lantern from 1994 to 2004. Because his mask looks like a crab. Kind of. Sort of. If you tilt your head, squint, and have head trauma.
- Jobberseid - Darkseid, of The DCU. Often used in reference to his more recent incarnations where he loses to almost every superhero on the DC roster, despite supposedly being a threat to the entire universe.
- "Couchseid", "Darksofa", "Mr. Couch-Sitter" (among numerous variations), from the infamous scene in Countdown to Final Crisis.
- The Superbuddies - the Giffen/DeMatties Justice League International
- Boostle - Ted Kord and Booster Gold, especially in their more touchy-feely moments.
- The Three Old Men - Green Lantern (Alan Scott), Flash (Jay Garrick) and Wildcat (Ted Grant), the three remaining JSA members from its 1940s origins. Occasionally, Hawkman is the fourth old man, but due to the various retcons and reimaginings of his origins, he may not still count as the same 1940s incarnation.
- Incidentally, Hawkman is sometimes referred to as "Hawk-Snarl".
- Rage Cat/Rage Kitty - Dex-Starr, the blue "talking" cat that's a member of the Red Lantern corps from Green Lantern. The Red Lanterns are powered by their rage and hatred. Scans Daily has dubbed him "Ruffles". Sometimes the names are combined into "Ruffles the Rage Kitty".
- Also "Pukecat" (because Red Lanterns puke blood as a weapon).
- "Magnus Robot Fucker" is a sometimes used nickname for DC Comics scientist Will Magnus. It's a pun on the title Magnus, Robot Fighter and a comment on Magnus's relationship with Platinum.
- "Starro the Barbarian" - the recently revealed true form of Starro the Conqueror.
- "Gay for Justice", the name given to the much-maligned "Justice League Cry for Justice" miniseries that amidst its other terrible decisions made the first word of its subtitle look very much like "gay" due to capitalization and font.
- DC Nation posters refers to "Cry for Justice" as "Cry for Good Writing"
- Countdown to Final Crisis is so reviled it defies having a nickname. It's name is simply pronounced in a tone of withering disgust, conveyed through the internet with italics, emphatic ellipses, or is preceded by notation such as *seethes* or *grinds teeth* or *groans*
- Peej refers to Power Girl, based on the acronym PG. The nickname is frequently, but not always, used by fans who are annoyed that a woman who is at least in her mid-twenties is referred to as "girl."
- Stick Boy and Anger Girl: Paco and Brenda
- Dat ass: the gratuitous outlining of any spandex-clad male superhero's rear.
- DCnU: The 2011 reboot, more officially known as the "New 52". A portmanteau of "nu DCU"
Vertigo
- The big blue junk - Dr. Manhattan's... erm... equipment in Watchmen
- Downtown Manhattan, Lower Manhattan, the manhattan meatpacking district...
- Interestingly, an in-universe Fan Nickname exists for his ability to teleport anyone anywhere, "The Manhattan Transfer".
- Before the evil author finally wrote in the names of Snow and Bigby's children in Fables, some of them had fan nicknames. Most common was "Puff" for the seventh, an invisible wind-sprite to the point where there was even a filk about "Puff the Magic Wind Cub." Eventually, his name was revealled to be "Ghost." Apparently, Bigby wants his kiddies names to sound cooler.
Marvel
Captain America
- Cap - Captain America (comics). Has been canon for awhile, but still one of the most popular nicknames fans use for him.
- Cap's Kooky Quartet - The all-new, all-different Avengers lineup from 1965 consisting of Captain America and then newly reformed ex-villains Hawkeye, Quicksilver, and the Scarlet Witch.
- Bucky Cap - Bucky in his role as the current Captain America. Another ascended nickname.
- Robo-Arm of Doom - Bucky's bionic left arm.
- The Mighty Shield - Carried by Captain America (comics). Never referred to as such in the comics. Often referred to as such on fan discussion boards. Comes from the theme song to a '60s cartoon: "When Captain America throws his mighty shield!"
Iron Man
- Shellhead - Affectionate nickname for Iron Man, used by his allies.
- Also often referred to as "Tin-Man", though less frequently.
- Der Eisenfuhrer - Tony Stark, after leading the effort to throw fellow heroes into the Negative Zone prison camp and becoming head of the Initiative. Usually used derisively by fans as a reference to bad writing (see also: Batdickery).
- Also known as "Bureaucrat in Chief" during his 'Director of SHIELD' era
- When his armour became sentient and insanely possessive it became known as Tony's "Abusive Boyfriend".
Spider-Man
- Spidey - Spider-Man, though this one has been canon for a while.
- Iron Spider/Iron Spidey - The name for the suit worn by Spider-Man during the Civil War. It was designed by Iron Man and even used the same colour scheme.
- Action figures based on the suit are named 'Iron Spider-Man', giving the name some official status.
- The name is given to Spidey's alternate costume in Ultimate Alliance 2 giving it more official backing.
- In the same comic condeming Clor to Ragnarok, guys dressed in copies of the "Iron Spider" suit are referred to as "the Scarlet Spiders." This is fitting, considering that they're clones like the original SS, though not of Spidey himself.
- Action figures based on the suit are named 'Iron Spider-Man', giving the name some official status.
- "Douchebag Spidey" or "Jerkass Spidey": post-Brand New Day-Spider-Man, according to some.
X-Men
- Claremazon - Quite a few female characters (including but not limited to Storm, Sage, Shadowcat, and Psylocke) when written by Chris Claremont. Let us just say that undue Chickification is not a flaw in his writing.
- Earlier than that the term "Claremont woman" had already been quite popular, applying not just to superheroines, but also some supporting characters, e. g. because of a famous scene where Moira MacTaggert joined a battle with an assault rifle. It was the opposite of a "Stan Lee girl" or "woman", i. e. the females who tended to play a subdued role in battle and were frequently used as damsels in distress during the Silver Age.
- Claremontization: the accumulation/development of increasingly entangled continuity complications such as Kudzu Plots, Continuity Snarls, Retcons, Tangled Family Trees and Love Dodecahedrons over the course of a run on a title. Claremont is possibly the most famous instigator of this effect, during his X-Men runs.
- Boobilie/Boobilee- Jubilee of the X-Men. The Decimation event making her lose her superpowers seemingly granted her the Most Common Superpower in exchange by the time she appeared in the latest New Warriors revamp, hence the name.
- Wondra Bra has also been coined in relation to her new codename and, erm, assets.
- Pooky - Apocalypse. Mostly given the cute nickname due to how often he jobs.
- Also "Pocky" and "Ole Pokey Lips", the latter of which was coined by Deadpool (and Apocalypse does have some gigantic blue lips).
- Nimbo - Psylocke of the X-Men in her ninja incarnation. Portmanteau of "Ninja" and "bimbo", inspired both by her Leotard of Power and her playing the Femme Fatale trying to seduce Cyclops in the '90s. The term has been used for similar characters (e.g. Zealot of the Wild C.A.T.s).
- Sniktbub - Wolverine; coined on Image Boards from his two favorite catchwords, with inspiration from Pokémon-Speak.
- Sniktdud (when people didn't like him much) and Sniktpunk (in reference to his hair)
- Sniktling - for Wolverine's son Daken. May also be used for X-23, as a general term for Wolvie's spawn.
- Trollverine has become the popular name for Daken.
- Sniktboob or Sniktloli for X-23, Wolverine's genderswap clone
- Also just "Wolvie" or "Our li'l Berserker-rager".
- X-Men Corrections: Given to Chris Claremont's Word of God Fix Fic X-Men Forever, which attempts to convey how Claremont would have handled the X-Men franchise had he not departed the X-Books in the 1990s.
Assorted Marvel
- Marvel comics deserves special mention in that it propagated the use of nicknames to refer to many of its own characters with their "next issue" blurbs. For the record, Iron Man is Shellhead, Daredevil is Hornhead, Thor is Goldilocks, Hulk is Greenjeans, Jade Jaws, or the Jade Giant, Spider-Man is Webhead, the Webslinger, and Wallcrawler, etc, etc.
- [Adjectiveless] Avengers - The main Avengers title (as opposed to the New Avengers, Young Avengers, Secret Avengers, Dark Avengers...)
- The Big Three - Captain America (comics), Iron Man, and Thor; generally considered the cornerstones of the Avengers.
- Namor, the original Human Torch and Captain America (comics) when referring to Timely Comics (Marvel's Golden Age precursor).
- Bleedball - When Speedball had his powers changed during Marvel's Civil War crossover event, to the extent where he had to wear a iron-maiden-esque suit and was renamed "Penance". This wasn't well received by comic fans, when a otherwise happy-go-lucky character got changed so that he needed to feel pain for his powers to work.
- King of Everything - For Norman Osborn when the US Government decided he should be in charge of everything concerning supers.
- Rulk (the Red Hulk) was originally a fan nickname but has since gained official status in the books.
- Before even being confirmed as a real deal, a group of the most powerful villains in Marvel Universe Including Molecule Man, the Beyonder and Mephisto that appeared at the last page of Dark Avengers #10 were nicknamed The League Of Ultimate Evil And Enchantress.
- Shulkie - She Hulk. Amusingly, the official writer that coined the term later went on a huge rant about people using fan nicknames like "Bats" and "Supes", saying it was disrespectful. This from the guy that nicknamed one "Shulkie".
- To be fair, it would hardly be the only example of rampant hypocrisy stemming from one of Byrne's rants against anything and everything he finds wrong with the comic world.
- Let's not forget "I've come to enjoy being called Polly," from Hippolyta. At least Jen is a deliberately playful character who doesn't take herself particularly seriously. The Queen of the Amazons, less so.
- The Juggernaut, Bitch - The Juggernaut, based on the parody. Some people actually refer to him by this in full.
- Clor - The clone Thor, from Marvel's Civil War.
- This one may have since gained semi-official status, as Spider-Man has recently been cited as referring to him in universe as such.
- At one point, Joe Quesada threatened to have him officially named "Thone" (i.e., "Thor Clone"). His canon name has since been established as Ragnarok.
- Earth-666: the Marvel Zombies reality.
- The Marvel Zombies official, canon reality number is actually 2149, as stated by the official website. Absolutely no idea where Earth 666 has come from.
- "Earth 666" is a play on "Earth 616", which is the mainstream Marvel Universe. Sources have been mixed as to why it's "616" but it generally is thought to do with the first publication date of Fantastic Four (In 1961, in the 6 month (June))". Generally, Marvel Universes are labeled by arbitrary numbers, though most have a connection to the publication date of the first comic to to take place in that Universe, though this isn't always the case.
- The Marvel Zombies official, canon reality number is actually 2149, as stated by the official website. Absolutely no idea where Earth 666 has come from.
- Iävengers - The 'evil' Avengers from the Marvel Cthuluverse as seen in Realm Of Kings.
- On a similar note to Darkseid (see DC), The Juggernaut since his Heel Face Turn has been known as Jobbernaut, though since he got his powers back and it is implied that he will make a Face Heel Turn, the name may soon be nonapplicable.
- Subby - Namor The Submariner. Also used in-universe.
- Fightbolts, Ellisbolts, Cagebolts - Various incarnations of the Thunderbolts, referring to the decried retool of the original series, Warren Ellis' run and Jeff Parker's current team led by Luke Cage.
- Cosmic Avengers - The Annihilators, an alliance of Marvel's space heroes. Started when the team was teased but an official name hadn't been released yet.
- Rainbow Dash - Julie Power, a.k.a. Lightspeed of Power Pack, who leaves a rainbow trail behind her when she flies.
Independent Comics
- Right Hand of Doom - Hellboy's Red Right Hand
- Helldad - Hellboy's demon father, who is a demon prince, rather than the devil, in the comics. His name is most likely Azzael, but this is not revealed until many issues after his first appearance.
- Phone books - the Two Thousand AD trade paperbacks published by Rebellion, which have similar physical dimensions to phone books. Also frequently used to describe the trade paperbacks that Cerebus the Aardvark was reprinted in, even by the actual creator.
- Rohmagol - The fan theory that "Rohlan Dyre" in the Knights of the Old Republic comics, starting with issue 14, is actually Demagol in his armor, posing as him.
- Tower Head Girl - the so far nameless super who has a 5-foot cylinder of greebled metal growing out of her head in Empowered.
- The Moose - the monster in the wall in Jt HM. So called because one character says it sounds like either rats in the walls or possibly a moose, and later there's a note saying 'definately not a moose'.
- In Brazil, Michonne from The Walking Dead is often called Machona/Machonna (something like "manly girl").
People/Other
- The Big Two - Marvel and DC.
- The King - Not Elvis, but Jack Kirby, comic book writer and artist who co-created 90% of the Silver Age Marvel Universe with Stan "The Man" Lee, and created Darkseid and the New Gods, along with many other characters and concepts, over in The DCU. Owing to this, many other fan nicknames derive from his name.
- Stan Lee claims to have coined both the "King" nickname as well as "Jolly Jack" for Kirby. He indeed coined many such nicknames, usually of the rhyming or alliterative type to make Marvel's employees more well-known and "accessible" to the fans, and more than a few were taken up by the fans, including "Smilin' Stan" Lee, "Sturdy Steve" Ditko (a nickname Ditko himself disliked), Gene "the Dean" Colan, and "Jazzy Johnny" Romita (Sr., aka John "Ring-a-Ding" Romita).
- Alan Moore's Top Ten referenced Kirby's style several times, as well as referring to a version of him existing within Top 10 continuity known as "King", who painted murals of Science Heroes in a similar manner to Norman Rockwell painting murals of people.
- Kirby hats - Jack Kirby designed a number of characters with weird helmets. Galactus is a good example.
- Kirby tech - Machinery that is covered with a mess of buttons, wires, tubes, and other visually interesting details.
- Kirby Dots - Stylistic manner of depicting energy.
- Also known as "Kirby Krackle".
- D'n'A/DnA - Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, writing partners for Marvel's cosmic line in the 2000s and (for at least some period time) The Authority.
- Joephisto - Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Joe Quesada, thanks to the spectacularly misconceived One More Day storyline in Amazing Spider-Man, which retconned Spider-Man's marriage by having him make a deal with the Marvel Universe's resident Devil, Mephisto. J. Michael Straczynski, who was writing Amazing at the time, asked to have his name removed, but was eventually talked out of it. Quesada was completely for this change, despite earlier promising not to mess with Spider-Man's history via a "magic retcon".
- Other fan nicknames include "Joe Quesadilla", "Big Joey Cheese", and "That Bastard".
- Joe Skrullsada has also gained some popularity.
- Also 'He Who Shall Not Be Named'.
- The Didiot - Dan DiDio, his DC counterpart. Alternatively, Didiocy, for the stuff that is often wrought by him, though he isn't as bashed as Joephisto on this wiki.
- Some of his detractors also know him as Dankor, because he bears a strong resemblance to Krankor, the villain of Mystery Science Theater 3000 film Prince of Space. One webcomic draws Dan Didio in an identical outfit.
- Michiyamenotehi Funana - Pat Lee, as a result of some poorly chosen katakana he once used
- Frequently shortened to Superstar Funana, based on Dreamwave hyping him as a "superstar artist".
- "Distinguished Competition" - a phrase occasionally seen in Marvel comics. Guess whom they mean.
- Stan would also refer to his competitors in the '60s as "Brand Echh"
- Marvel artist John Romita Jr. has sometimes been known as JRJR.
- ↑ which can refer to dickery committed by Batgirl, Oracle, or Tim Drake's Robin too
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