Issue | #0 |
Published | April 2008 |
Cover Price | 2.99 USD; 3.65 CAD |
Pages | 36 |
Editing | Michael Siglain; Harvey Richards (Assistant Editor) |
Notes | Cover is an homage to the cover of Zero Hour: Crisis in Time (DC, 1994 series) #4 |
Characters | Booster Gold; Blue Beetle [Ted Kord]; Blue Beetle [Dan Garrett]; Blue Beetle [Jaime Reyes]; Blue Beetle (from the 27th century) |
Genre | Superhero |
Pencils | Dan Jurgens (signed) |
Inks | Norm Rapmund (signed) |
Colors | Brian Miller (signed) |
Letters | typeset |
Notes | Cover is an homage to the cover of Zero Hour: Crisis in Time (DC, 1994 series) #4 |
Characters | Booster Gold; Blue Beetle [Ted Kord]; Blue Beetle [Dan Garrett]; Blue Beetle [Jaime Reyes]; Blue Beetle (from the 27th century); Extant [Hank Hall]; Parallax [Hal Jordan]; Justice League of America [Flash [Wally West]; Green Lantern [Kyle Rayner]; Batman [Bruce Wayne]; Superman; Wonder Woman [Diana]; Aquaman [Arthur Curry]; Martian Manhunter] (all in cameo); Jon Carter; Michelle Carter [Goldstar]; O.M.A.C.; Brother Eye |
Synopsis | After rescuing Ted Kord, Booster and the gathered Blue Beetles head into the timestream. There, they encounter Extant and Parallax during the events recounted in Zero Hour: Crisis in Time. They escape that battle, but the time sphere is damaged and they must land in the 25th century on the very day Booster throws a game to help his father pay his gambling debts, which led to his ouster from sports, and working at the Time Museum, where he stole the things he needed to go to the 20th century and become Booster Gold. The group steals the Time Museum's time sphere and all the Blue Beetles return to their own times, Dan Garrett and Jaime Reyes retaining no memory of this adventure. When Booster and Ted return to the present, however, they find a world over-run with O.M.A.C.s who want to terminate the pair. |
Genre | Superhero |
Script | Geoff Johns; Jeff Katz |
Pencils | Dan Jurgens |
Inks | Norm Rapmund (finished art) |
Colors | ? [as Hi-Fi] |
Letters | Randy Gentile |
Notes | Ted's final line -- "Oh boy" -- is the second time in the series that that line has been used to evoke the TV series Quantum Leap, which had a somewhat similar premise to this series. |