Information about Dial H For Hero

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The cover of House of Mystery # 156. Art by Jim Mooney
Dial H for Hero is a comic book feature published by DC Comics about a mysterious dial that enables an ordinary person to become a superhero for a short time. The dial causes its possessor to become a new superhero with a different name, costume and powers each time it is used. These superheroes are usually brand-new, but on one occasion the dial caused its owner to become a duplicate of an existing superhero, Plastic Man.

Original series

The original series appeared in the House of Mystery comic book in the late 1960s, in issues #156-173. The art was by artist Jim Mooney, the stories by writer Dave Wood.The original owner of the dial was Robert "Robby" Reed, a teenager from Littleville, Colorado, who discovered the dial in a cavern. Resembling an old telephone dial, this device was hand-held and covered in unknown symbols (that somehow Robby was able to understand as modern letters.) Its origin is still unrevealed. By dialing the letters H-E-R-O, Robby would turn into a superpowered being; dialing O-R-E-H made him revert to his normal form. He quickly used it to protect Littleville under the guises of numerous superheroes. Robby Reed also appeared in a couple of other DC titles during this time.

Robby's H-Dial was once used by his foe, Daffy Dagan, who briefly became a supervillain known (rather unimaginatively) as Daffy the Great after dialing V-I-L-L-A-I-N. Robby's girlfriend Suzie also used the dial once, dialing H-E-R-O-I-N-E to temporarily transform into Gem Girl.

Robby lent the Dial to the Justice League on one occasion, allowing several of its members to transform into new superheroes to defeat the Injustice League at a time when they had learned how to defeat the Leaguers in their normal forms.

1980s series

The cover of Adventure Comics # 479, featuring Chris King and Vicky Grant. Art by Carmine Infantino and Bob Smith.
The second DIAL H FOR HERO series debuted in the 1980s, in a special insert in Legion of Super-Heroes No. 272, then ran in Adventure Comics #479-490 and continued in New Adventures of Superboy #28-49. A big feature of this new series was that the readers submitted new hero and villain characters, which were then used in the stories. The submitters were given credit for their creations (and a t-shirt with the series logo), but the characters became DC Comics' property. The original writer and artist in the series were Marv Wolfman and Carmine Infantino.

In this series, two other dials are discovered years later by teenagers Christopher "Chris" King and Victoria "Vicky" Grant of the New England town of Fairfax in a 'haunted' house. These dials -disguised as a watch and a necklace- only had the letters H-E-R-O on them, and worked only for an hour, after which they would not work for another hour. King and Grant began protecting Fairfax from a number of menaces. Unknown to them, most of these villains were created by a mysterious villain known only as The Master.

It must be noted that, while anyone could use Chris and Vicki's H-dials, they always turned the user into a hero, regardless of his or her personality; even The Master was temporarily made good by one. This fact has been ignored in later stories.

Eventually Chris and Vicki discover that a fellow student named Nick Stevens has been drawing up superheroes as a hobby--and somehow, the dials turned them into those heroes. With Nick's help, they find out that their dials were created by a being called The Wizard (who should not be confused with the DC Comics villain of the same name), whom the Master thought he'd killed years before. In truth, The Wizard faked his death while he looked for the original Hero Dial. With it, he merged with The Master--and transformed into Robby Reed, who explained that he had split in two using the dial years before so that he could disarm a dead man's switch, while his other self, the Wizard, defeated the villain who set it. However, the Wizard carried all of Robbie's inherent goodness, while the Robbie that remain possessed only evil impulses; the original Hero Dial was lost when this Robbie, renaming himself The Master, dialed "hide yourself", causing the dial to vanish along with The Master's and The Wizard's memories of their former life as Robbie Reed. While The Master learned genetic techniques that allowed him to create his army of super-villains, the Wizard was driven to create the new H-dials, unconsciously designing limitations into them to prevent what happened to Robbie from recurring (only heroic identities, a time limit, and the exclusion of letters other than H-E-R-O; the latter, however, did not prevent Chris from experimenting on one occasion and dialing H-O-R-R-O-R, with disastrous results.) With Nick developing the ability to actively influence the dials' results (rather than subconsciously as before), Robby passed his dial to Nick, and retired as a hero.

Other appearances

As an epilogue of sorts to the Chris King/Vicki Grant Dial H series, which ended in The New Adventures of Superboy #49, issue #50 of that series featured a story in which the watch once used by Chris King was stolen from the Space Museum of the Legion of Super-Heroes' time period by a thief named Nylor Truggs, who fled with the dial to the ambiguous late 1960s/early 1970s era-Smallville of the original (Earth-One) Superboy by altering the dial's functions in some unexplained manner that allowed him to travel in time. Truggs further altered the H-dial to break the restriction that users would only transform into heroic identities, changing the "H" in the center of the dial to "V" for "villain". Truggs also made the dial capable of changing individuals other than himself into villains if he desired; those transformed would then be under Truggs' control. Truggs transformed several of Clark Kent's high school friends this way and used them, as well as a temporary alliance with a teenaged Lex Luthor, in a scheme to plant seismic devices in their time period so that Truggs could use those devices against the people of his own future time upon his return. Truggs' plan was foiled by Superboy, several members of the Legion (who had travelled to that time period to apprehend the thief), and Superboy's Kryptonian pet, Krypto the Superdog, the latter of destroyed the stolen H-Dial by tearing it from Truggs' wrist and crushing it in his jaws. (Note that this story was published before the events of the mini-series Crisis on Infinite Earths radically altered the established history of the DC Universe. Though most, if not all, of the Chris King/Vicki Grant stories were incorporated into post-Crisis continuity, the Earth-One Superboy was eliminated, and the Legion's history was altered several times over. Thus, in post-Crisis continuity, the above story likely did not happen.)

Chris King and Vicki Grant in New Teen Titans vol. 2, #46 [1988
Years later, Victoria and Chris gained the ability to transform without the dials -apparently because of their extensive use- but it started causing them mental problems. Vicky joined a cult, where she was physically and mentally abused, deranging her even more. With help from the Teen Titans, Chris rescued her.

In the 1990s series Superboy and the Ravers Hero Cruz finds an H-dial in the lair of Scavenger. Later in the series, he is attacked for it by Victoria Grant, but manages to talk her down. She was last seen in the care of the Forces, a family of metahumans.

In a Legion of Super-Heroes story published at around the same time (but taking place 1000 years in the future) Lori Morning used an H-dial that was given to her by the Time Trapper.

In the early 2000s series H.E.R.O., Written by Will Pfeifer and featuring art by Kano, a similar dial is found by various other people, who each gain super powers in a similar manner to Reed, King, and Grant. Eventually, Reed appears in this series as well, raising the possibility that the dial featured in the series was in fact Reed's original dial.

In a One Year Later storyline the H-Dial fell in Father Time's hand, who hoped to clone the device and create an entire army of "one man Justice Leagues". However the device got stolen, and the reformed Green Lantern villain called to act as a profiler and retrieve the missing item, Johnny Mimic, duped Alan Scott into killing him while holding the device, busting it for good.

Also, in Adventure Comics #484, a mention was made by the editor about ABC creating a Dial H For Hero cartoon series, but nothing more was ever mentioned of this. It is unknown if a pilot for such a series was ever created, much less aired.

In Amalgam Comics, Dial H for Hero is combined with Husk to form Dial HUSK.

Ben 10

Ben 10 is loosly based on Dial H for Hero. The ways in which they are the same are:
  • The obvious comparison is that both the Omnitrix and the Dial are devices.
  • Ben is limited to a certain amount of time when he is in an alien form and it takes a while until the Omnitrix is ready to transform Ben into an alien again just like how Robbie and the others have to do with the Dial.
  • Both the Dial and the Omnitrix turn a human being into something with superpowers. For Ben, it's alien species, for the Dial H for Hero gang, it's superheroes.

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A comic book is a magazine or book containing sequential art in the form of a narrative. Comic books are often called comics for short. Although the term implies otherwise, the subject matter in comic books is not necessarily humorous, and in fact it is often serious and
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DC Comics

Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York

Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
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superhero (also known as a super hero) is fictional character "of unprecedented, physical prowess dedicated to acts of derring-do in the public interest.” [1]
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Plastic Man (Patrick "Eel" O'Brian) is a fictional comic-book superhero originally published by Quality Comics and later acquired by DC Comics. Created by writer-artist Jack Cole, he first appeared in Police Comics #1 (August 1941).
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The House of Mystery is the name of several horror-mystery-suspense anthology comic book series published by DC Comics from 1951 to 1983. It had a companion series, House of Secrets.
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Centuries: 19th century - 20th century - 21st century

1930s 1940s 1950s - 1960s - 1970s 1980s 1990s
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964
1965 1966 1967 1968 1969

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Their 1960s decade refers to the years from 1960 to 1969, inclusive.
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Jim Mooney

Born 1919

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Inker

Notable works Spider-Man
Supergirl

Jim Mooney
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Justice League, sometimes called the Justice League of America or JLA for short, is a fictional DC Universe superhero team.

First appearing in The Brave and the Bold
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The Injustice League is the name of two fictional teams of supervillains in the DC Comics Universe.

Fictional team history

Original League

The original Injustice League was the brainchild of the interplanetary conqueror, Agamemno.
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Adventure Comics was a comic book series published by DC Comics from 1935 to 1983. It ran for 503 issues (472 of those after the title changed to Adventure Comics), making it the fifth-longest-running DC series, behind Detective Comics,
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Marv Wolfman

Wolfman at the 1982 Comic-Con
Birth name Marvin A. Wolfman
Born May 13 1946 (1946--) (age 61)
Brooklyn, New York City, New York


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Carmine Infantino

Born May 24 1925 (1925--) (age 82)
Brooklyn, New York City

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Editor


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The Wizard is the name of a fictional DC Comics Golden Age supervillain.

History

Born approximately 1913, William I. Zard grew up living a life of crime. As a gun man for various crime bosses, he ultimately ended up in jail.
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Legion of Super-Heroes is a DC Comics superhero team created by writer Otto Binder and artist Al Plastino. The original Legion first appeared in Adventure Comics #247 (April 1958) and was the first super-team of the Silver Age of Comic Books.
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First appearance
Jerry Siegel
Joe Shuster
Don Cameron

Characters

Superboy is the name of several fictional characters that have been published by DC Comics, most of them youthful incarnations of Superman.
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Lex Luthor (Alexander Luthor) is a fictional DC Comics supervillain and is the primary antagonist of the Superman franchise. Created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, he first appeared in Action Comics #23 (1940).
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Krypton

From Superman Returns Prequel #1, Art by Ariel Olivetti
Statistics
Universe DC Universe

Notable locations Kandor
Argo City

Notable races Kryptonians
Notable people Superman
Supergirl
Jor-El
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Krypto, also known as Krypto the Superdog, is a fictional character; he is Superman's pet dog in the various Superman comic books published by DC Comics. Krypto's first appearance was in a Superboy story in Adventure Comics #210 in July 1955.
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Crisis on Infinite Earths was a 12-issue American comic book limited series (identified as a "12-part maxi-series") and crossover event, produced by DC Comics in 1985 to simplify their then-55-year-old continuity.
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Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication dates (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol.
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Centuries: 19th century - 20th century - 21st century

1960s 1970s 1980s - 1990s - 2000s 2010s 2020s
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999

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First appearance
Jerry Siegel
Joe Shuster
Don Cameron

Characters

Superboy is the name of several fictional characters that have been published by DC Comics, most of them youthful incarnations of Superman.
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Hero Cruz is a fictional African American superhero owned by DC Comics who exists in that company's DC Universe. He first appeared in Superboy and the Ravers (September 1996), and was created by Karl Kesel and Steve Mattsson.
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The Scavenger is the name of two DC Comics supervillains, with no known connections. The first Scavenger was an Aquaman villain who debuted in Aquaman vol. 2 #37 (January 1968), and was created by Henry Boltinoff and Nick Cardy.
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Lori Morning is a fictional character in DC Comics' Legion of Super-Heroes.

Early Appearances

She first appeared as part of the Underworld Unleashed
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The Time Trapper is a fictional character and supervillain who appears in stories published by DC Comics. The Time Trapper's main foe is the Legion of Super-Heroes. The Time Trapper first appeared in Wonder Woman #101 (October 1958), and was first mentioned as Ty. M.
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Centuries: 20th century - 21st century - 22nd century

1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

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The 2000s is the current decade, spanning from 2000 to 2009.
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H.E.R.O. was a comic book published by DC Comics that started in 2003 and ran for 22 issues. The series' focus was the "H-Dial" that DC had first introduced in "Dial H for Hero" in House of Mystery in the 60s.
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