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* BlueMeansSmartOne: Mr. Terrific's son, Fairplay, is wearing a light blue and black costume, plays 5-D chess with a fellow smart kid, surrounded by piles of books and inside their laboratory.
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* ShoutOut: In issue #5, Judy and Jay go to Brazil to meet Dr. Mid-nite, who refers to Jay as "Joel Ciclone". "Joel Ciclone" was Jay's name in Brazilian comics when Jay's issues were intially published.
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* ShoutOut: In issue #5, Judy and Jay go to Brazil to meet Dr. Mid-nite, who refers to Jay as "Joel Ciclone". "Joel Ciclone" was Jay's name in Brazilian comics when Jay's issues were intially initially published.
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* ShoutOut: In issue #5, Judy and Jay go to Brazil to meet Dr. Mid-nite, who refers to Jay as "Joel Ciclone". "Joel Ciclone" was Jay's name in Brazilian comics for a long while.
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* ShoutOut: In issue #5, Judy and Jay go to Brazil to meet Dr. Mid-nite, who refers to Jay as "Joel Ciclone". "Joel Ciclone" was Jay's name in Brazilian comics for a long while.when Jay's issues were intially published.
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: Quiz Kid and Fairplay are introduced in the comic playing 5-D chess againt each other and commenting about analysing prof. Stein's (another scientist) Firestorm Matrix formula.
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: Quiz Kid and Fairplay are introduced in the comic playing 5-D chess againt each other and commenting about analysing prof. Stein's (another scientist) Firestorm Matrix formula.
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* BlackAndNerdy: In issue #3, Mr. Terrific leads the Garricks and Stargirl through his labs, and recruits the services of his son Fairyplay to help them. Fairplay is introduced having a 5-D chess match with Quiz Kid and both surrounded by piles of books.
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* BlackAndNerdy: In issue #3, Mr. Terrific leads the Garricks and Stargirl through his labs, and recruits the services of his son Fairyplay Fairplay to help them. Fairplay is introduced having a 5-D chess match with Quiz Kid and both surrounded by piles of books.
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* BlackAndNerdy: In issue #3, Mr. Terrific leads the Garricks and Stargirl through his labs, and recruits the services of his son Fairyplay to help them. Fairplay is introduced having a 5-D chess match with Quiz Kid and both surrounded by piles of books.
* BollywoodNerd: In issue #3, Mr. Terrific leads the Garricks and Stargirl through his labs, and recruits the services of Quiz Kid to help them. Quiz Kid is introduced having a 5-D chess match with Terrific's son Fairplay and both surrounded by piles of books.
* BollywoodNerd: In issue #3, Mr. Terrific leads the Garricks and Stargirl through his labs, and recruits the services of Quiz Kid to help them. Quiz Kid is introduced having a 5-D chess match with Terrific's son Fairplay and both surrounded by piles of books.
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* InfoDump: Issue #4 is a big one, with Dr. Hughes's diary explaining the origin of the Garricks' powers.
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* ShoutOut: In issue #5, Judy and Jay go to Brazil to meet Dr. Mid-nite, who refers to Jay as "Joel Ciclone". "Joel Ciclone" was Jay's name in Brazilian comics for a long while.
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* MakeItLookLikeAnAccident: [[spoiler:The "accident" that gave Jay his powers was deliberately engineered by Professor Hughes, who installed a mechanism that could tilt one of the lab tables on command so that its contents would spill on Jay.]]
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* BearsAreBadNews: In the second issue, Judy and Courtney are attacked by Ro-Bear, a cybernetically-enhanced bear from the Golden Age.
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* BearsAreBadNews: In the second issue, Judy and Courtney are attacked by Ro-Bear, a cybernetically-enhanced cybernetic-enhanced bear from the Golden Age.Age.
* CerebusRetcon: [[spoiler:In the original version of Jay's origin, Professor Hughes was just his boss and mentor. In this version, Hughes was obsessed with gaining superpowers, profiled Jay in order to determine that he was unlikely to be missed, and deliberately arranged the events that gave him powers. When he failed to replicate the conditions that turned Jay into the Flash, he became the villain Doctor Elemental in order to study Jay and figure out why the experiment worked on him but not on any of the other test subjects.]]
* CerebusRetcon: [[spoiler:In the original version of Jay's origin, Professor Hughes was just his boss and mentor. In this version, Hughes was obsessed with gaining superpowers, profiled Jay in order to determine that he was unlikely to be missed, and deliberately arranged the events that gave him powers. When he failed to replicate the conditions that turned Jay into the Flash, he became the villain Doctor Elemental in order to study Jay and figure out why the experiment worked on him but not on any of the other test subjects.]]
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* {{Expy}}: With his armor-and-tunic costume and resentment of Jay, Doctor Elemental bears a strong resemblance to ComicBook/DoctorDoom.
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added tropes
* BearsAreBadNews: In the second issue, Judy and Courtney are attacked by Ro-Bear, a cybernetically-enhanced bear from the Golden Age.
* DiscoStu: Judy still talks and dresses like she's from the fifties. In the second issue, Courtney takes her to the mall in hopes of updating her civilian wardrobe.
* DiscoStu: Judy still talks and dresses like she's from the fifties. In the second issue, Courtney takes her to the mall in hopes of updating her civilian wardrobe.
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* RememberTheNewGuy: Judy was created for DC's "New Golden Age" initiative in 2022, but is treated as though she's a long-lost sidekick from the original Golden Age.
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* LetHerGrowUpDear: As Jay constantly frets over Judy's safety, Joan insists on a lighter hand, allowing Judy to have an afternoon at the mall with Courtney so that she can have more experience being a normal teenager.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Judy was born sometime in the late forties or early fifties, but looks and acts like a fourteen-year-old.
* RememberTheNewGuy: Judy was created for DC's "New Golden Age" initiative in 2022, but is treated as though she's a long-lost sidekick from the original Golden Age. The series also introduces several "forgotten" villains from the Golden Age, including Doctor Elemental and Ro-Bear.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Judy was born sometime in the late forties or early fifties, but looks and acts like a fourteen-year-old.
* RememberTheNewGuy: Judy was created for DC's "New Golden Age" initiative in 2022, but is treated as though she's a long-lost sidekick from the original Golden Age. The series also introduces several "forgotten" villains from the Golden Age, including Doctor Elemental and Ro-Bear.
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Adding Image
[[quoteright:999:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jay_garrick_the_flash_vol_1_1.jpg]]
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!!This series contains examples of:
* GenerationXerox: Judy's costume is most just a feminine version of her dad's costume, except with a bandana instead of the helmet, a nod to the fact that she would have come of age in the sixties.
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* GenerationXerox: Judy's costume is
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* YearInsideHourOutside: Time moved differently on the island where Judy was held captive, and thus she is shocked to discover that seventy years have passed and she and her dad are no longer the world's only speedsters.
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* YearInsideHourOutside: Time moved differently on the island where Judy was held captive, and thus she is shocked to discover that seventy years have passed and she and her dad are no longer the world's only speedsters.speedsters.
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created work page
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''Jay Garrick: The Flash'' is a six-issue miniseries by Jeremy Adams and Diego Olortegui. It is published by Creator/DCComics as part of the ComicBook/DawnOfDC initiative. It also spins off from ''ComicBook/JusticeSocietyOfAmerica2022'' and ''ComicBook/StargirlTheLostChildren''.
Decades ago, Judy "The Boom" Garrick, daughter of Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick, was one of several young sidekicks kidnapped by the Childminder and was enslaved to power machines that kept her and the other sidekicks suspended from time. Now freed by Stargirl, Judy returns to the normal world to find that her parents have grown old and barely remember her or the adventures they once shared. This is a non-inconsiderable problem, because it turns out that they've also forgotten Doctor Elemental, Jay's old archnemesis, and he's been taking advantage of his obscurity to plan revenge.
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!!This series contains examples of:
* GenerationXerox: Judy's costume is most just a feminine version of her dad's costume, except with a bandana instead of the helmet, a nod to the fact that she would have come of age in the sixties.
* RememberTheNewGuy: Judy was created for DC's "New Golden Age" initiative in 2022, but is treated as though she's a long-lost sidekick from the original Golden Age.
* YearInsideHourOutside: Time moved differently on the island where Judy was held captive, and thus she is shocked to discover that seventy years have passed and she and her dad are no longer the world's only speedsters.
Decades ago, Judy "The Boom" Garrick, daughter of Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick, was one of several young sidekicks kidnapped by the Childminder and was enslaved to power machines that kept her and the other sidekicks suspended from time. Now freed by Stargirl, Judy returns to the normal world to find that her parents have grown old and barely remember her or the adventures they once shared. This is a non-inconsiderable problem, because it turns out that they've also forgotten Doctor Elemental, Jay's old archnemesis, and he's been taking advantage of his obscurity to plan revenge.
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!!This series contains examples of:
* GenerationXerox: Judy's costume is most just a feminine version of her dad's costume, except with a bandana instead of the helmet, a nod to the fact that she would have come of age in the sixties.
* RememberTheNewGuy: Judy was created for DC's "New Golden Age" initiative in 2022, but is treated as though she's a long-lost sidekick from the original Golden Age.
* YearInsideHourOutside: Time moved differently on the island where Judy was held captive, and thus she is shocked to discover that seventy years have passed and she and her dad are no longer the world's only speedsters.