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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rco002_1664004946.jpg]] [[caption-width-right:350:They're a lot more than just sidekicks.]]
2->''"You're finished, Robin! If Kid Flash and Aqualad couldn't stop my fire-storm with their super-powers, what chance do '''you''' have?"''
3
4The most famous team of teenage {{Super Hero}}es in Franchise/TheDCU (but not [[ComicBook/LegionOfSuperHeroes the first]]). Often referred to as a "[[ComicBook/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica Justice Little League]]," though more often as a "Junior Justice League."
5
6The original series began back in MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks, with a one-shot story in ''ComicBook/TheBraveAndTheBold'' #54 (July, 1964), where three {{Sidekick}}s, ComicBook/{{Robin}}, [[ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} Aqualad]], and [[ComicBook/TheFlash Kid Flash]], teamed up. The issue sold notably well, and, after a few more tryouts and the addition of ComicBook/WonderGirl (despite that she was actually intended to be the original Wonder Woman as a girl, and not a contemporary sidekick) and [[ComicBook/GreenArrow Speedy]], became an ongoing series.
7
8The book depended heavily on TotallyRadical, with FadSuper villains like the Mad Mod and Ding Dong Daddy and hamfisted attempts to [[RippedFromTheHeadlines address the issues of the day]]. Nevertheless, it was lighthearted
9and fun. As the run continued, more teenage superheroes would join the team such as [[PsychicPowers Lilith Clay]], the first ever black superheroes Guardian and Bumblebee, the caveboy Gnaark, and ComicBook/HawkAndDove. The group eventually expanded into two sub-groups, the Teen Titans and the Titans West, made up of the aforemented Titans plus [[ComicBook/{{Batgirl}} the first Batgirl]], [[ComicBook/{{Hawkman}} Golden Eagle]] and Joker's Daughter. Eventually, though, it was cancelled in 1973, brought back in 1976, and re-cancelled in 1978. Altogether 53 issues were published.
10
11In MediaNotes/{{the Bronze Age|OfComicBooks}}, the series returned as ''The New Teen Titans'', launched in 1980. Written by Marv Wolfman and drawn by George Perez, this version of the series was the most successful and the most iconic (as well as being the version the [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003 2003 animated series]] is most based on). It brought back Robin, Wonder Girl, and Kid Flash, and teamed them up with new characters ComicBook/{{Cyborg}}, ComicBook/{{Raven}}, and ComicBook/{{Starfire}}, along with previously-established character [[ComicBook/DoomPatrol Beast]] [[ComicBook/BeastBoy Boy]], now renamed Changeling.
12
13The series moved into DarkerAndEdgier territory, and was a trendsetter in that respect; for instance, an [[ComicBook/TheJudasContract early storyline]] involved them going up against "ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}} the Terminator," a paid assassin, and being infiltrated by the [[TheMole not-so-innocent]] Terra. It was heavily character-based, with lots of conflict, romance, and soul-searching (that occasionally slipped into {{Wangst}}).
14
15This version was not only popular, but often considered DC's number one title at the time, a rival to the ComicBook/XMen (which they eventually [[IntercontinuityCrossover crossed over with]]), and a major definer of the tropes that came to be recognized as comics' Bronze Age. However, writer fatigue (aside from a very brief period in 1989 where he stepped away from the book, Wolfman wrote the comic for 16 years straight) and removal of the book from newsstands to prop up DC Comics' direct market line of books led to it collapsing into boredom and fan apathy.
16
17This led to an AudienceAlienatingEra for fans of the original 80s StatusQuo for most of the late 90s. The arrival of a new editor inspired Wolfman to shake up the book with the ''ComicBook/TitansHunt storyline'' involving the mysterious "Wildebeest Society" that went on [[ArcFatigue way too long]]. Fan favorite villain Deathstroke became a good guy and ally to the team, half the roster was slaughtered/turned evil/depowered, time-travellers from the near-distant future of 2001 arrived and were stuck in the past, and popular villain Terra was brought back in a sense as a clone.
18
19Around the time after ''ComicBook/TitansHunt'' finished began the ''Total Chaos'' storyline which saw the time-travelling teens attempt to kill Donna Troy's son, who in the future would become the villainous Lord Chaos. This spun off into DC's attempt at having teens in their Titans franchise as the aptly named: '''ComicBook/TeamTitans'''. The first half of the run dealt with stopping their bad future and discovering who they were in the present timeline with the second half of the run developing a story thread that would tie in to ''ComicBook/ZeroHour''. It would be revealed that the man responsible for sending the Titans to the future was, in fact, the future Hank Hall AKA '''[[ComicBook/Armageddon2001 Monarch]]'''. Revealing the the team was sent as sleeper agents so that his timeline would succeed, the team fought against Extant and won. As a result, the timeline began to mend itself with the team sacrificing themselves to save the present from it's future, fulfilling their original mission.
20
21The events of '''ComicBook/TheDarkening''' attempted to have Dick and Kori finally married but due to ExecutiveMeddling had to be hastily canned due to the Bat offices, ultimately leading to the Batman editors taking back Nightwing from the Titans (Wolfman had the sole rights to him since 1980), to the horror of fans of the book.
22
23This ultimately led to Wolfman bringing Roy Harper, also known as Speedy, and reintroducing him as the new leader of the Titans as '''Arsenal'''. This coincided with a lot more ExecutiveMeddling, culminating in the "original" team formally disbanding in issue #114 with a brand new team being launched out of ComicBook/ZeroHour consisting of Arsenal, Changeling, Damage, Impulse, Mirage, Terra II, Characters/GreenLanternKyleRayner, Matrix!Supergirl and [[ComicBook/WonderGirl Darkstar]]. This era would see a few storylines such as [[ComicBook/ForeverEvil1995 Forever Evil]] and [[ComicBook/CrimelordSyndicateWar Crimelord-Syndicate War]]. The title eventually ended with the [[ComicBook/{{Meltdown}} Meltdown!]] storyline running through issues #127-130, ending in February 1996.
24
25The franchise was relaunched within a year. '''[[ComicBook/TeenTitans1996 Volume 2]]''' of the series was helmed by Creator/DanJurgens and Creator/GeorgePerez and saw a more sci-fi based spin on the title. 17 years ago, the H'San Natall race abducted women from Earth and impregnated them with their own DNA in order to create hybrid children. In the present day, these hybrid children, now teenagers, are abducted by the H'San Natall in order to indoctrinate them as sleeper agents before they invade Earth. With the help of an [[PlotRelevantAgeUp aged-down]] Atom, the mysterious '''Omen''', billionaire aide '''Loren Jupiter''' (a character from the Silver Age run) and Mad Mod, the teens successfully escape to Earth and become the newest iteration of the Teen Titans with the Titans aspect being that the H'San Natall were stationed at the Jovian moon Titan.
26
27The line-up would consist of: Atom, [[SuperToughness Risk]], [[ImaginationBasedSuperpower Argent]], [[PlayingWithFire Joto]] (later renamed Hot Spot), [[CrystallineCreature Prysm]], and [[HulkMashUp Fringe]]. Later on, the team would also be joined by Captain Marvel Jr. Overall, the series ran for 2 years before getting cancelled in 1998. The majority of the characters would continue to appear such as Argent being promoted into the new ''Titans'' comics and Risk became something of Creator/GeoffJohns's [[ComicBook/Titans1999 personal]] [[ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis punching]] [[ComicBook/SinestroCorpsWar bag]] (for reasons unknown)
28
29At this point, the idea of the Teen Titans split two ways. The events of ''JLA/Titans'' saw the creations of the late 90s series ''ComicBook/Titans1999'' which lasted quite a while (and featured most of the original team ''and'' the 1980s successful team, plus a few new characters), but was never a big seller, and eventually delved into some truly horrific storytelling by Jay Faerber (the "Jesse Quick sleeps with her mother's fiancee" storyline). The other idea took the original idea of a band of teenage heroes and {{sidekick}}s, and became ''ComicBook/YoungJustice''. The former tended even more toward the soul-searching of ''New Teen Titans'', while the latter went through mostly lighthearted adventures and character-based comedy.
30
31About this time, the aforementioned ''WesternAnimation/{{Teen Titans|2003}}'' animated series premiered. After it became popular, the PowersThatBe decided they wanted a ''Teen Titans'' comic that resembled the show. Thus, both ''Titans'' and ''Young Justice'' were cancelled, and the more marketable characters from the latter were brought together with the more nostalgic characters from the former in the dark-natured Creator/JuddWinick-written miniseries ''[[ComicBook/TitansYoungJusticeGraduationDay Graduation Day]]'', which led into a relaunch of ''Teen Titans'' written by fan favorite Creator/GeoffJohns. This series was reasonably popular, but involved several changes in characterization which annoyed long-time fans. Generally, the ex-''Young Justice'' characters were on the receiving end of this, being made DarkerAndEdgier as an attempt to invoke the ''New Teen Titans'' days and the more modern DC sensibility of dark storytelling. On a side note, the aforementioned {{animesque}} cartoon got [[RecursiveAdaptation its own comic book adaptation]], ''ComicBook/TeenTitansGo''.
32
33The series was revamped again multiple times during that third volume, introducing new {{Legacy Character}}s (such as ''Franchise/SailorMoon''-esque Miss Martian and the cynical Bombshell), and attempting to be both LighterAndSofter and DarkerAndEdgier, killing off even ''more'' characters. Such gore-filled editorial mandates led to writer Sean [=McKeever=] to quit the book in protest, and things spiralled further down the drain, to the extent that DC reunited the 80s New Teen Titans into their own book ''Titans'' (''again'') and the Teen Titans went through even more change. After two years, the various team members were "graduated" to the Justice League (Red Arrow and Troia), "demoted" back to the Teen Titans book (Beast Boy and Raven) or killed off (Tempest). ''Titans'' became a book about a Deathstroke-lead team of villains, while the simultaneous run on "Teen Titans", by comic newcomer Felicia Henderson, had few champions, even amongst the most rabid fans.
34
35Around the start of 2011, J.T. Krul took over writing volume 3, with fan-favorite Nicola Scott on art, and their run was fairly well-received compared to the previous writers. Yet this too would not last. Both ''Titans'' books were cancelled in August as part of DC's reboot; these were replaced in September with a single book, written by Creator/ScottLobdell and drawn by Brett Booth, as part of DC's ComicBook/{{New 52}} relaunch. The starting line-up consisted of Red Robin, Kid Flash, Wonder Girl, and Solstice, along with with two new characters, Skitter and Bunker. Superboy eventually joins the team as well, while maintaining a solo series. This led into The Culling, a crossover with [[ComicBook/LegionOfSuperHeroes Legion Lost]], during which both groups face off against N.O.W.H.E.R.E.. The series would later tie into ''ComicBook/ForeverEvil2013'' in a story that explored Kid Flash's origins. After about 30 issues, the book was cancelled. This series was considered a pretty bad era for both the Teen Titans and the individual characters in the team, and much of that was attributed to the unlikeability of the main characters.
36
37The series was relaunched in July 2014 with a new #1, written by Will Pfeifer with Kenneth Rocafort as artist. The starting lineup had the returning Red Robin, Wonder Girl, Bunker and Raven, along with newcomer Beast Boy. Later on, a new ComicBook/PowerGirl would join the team. This series was also not well-received for the same reasons as the last.
38
39In late 2014 the first volume of ''Creator/JeffLemire'' and Terry Dodson’s ''ComicBook/TeenTitansEarthOne'' was released. The book re-imagining and updating the 80’s team in a contemporary setting, confirmed in ''ComicBook/TheMultiversity'' to be in continuity with both ''ComicBook/SupermanEarthOne'' and ''ComicBook/BatmanEarthOne''.
40
41In 2015, a 12-issue mini-series titled ''[[ComicBook/TitansHunt2015 Titans Hunt]]'', written by Dan Abnett, introduced past Teen Titans history into the post-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} DC Universe. Principle characters include Dick Grayson, Donna Troy, Garth, Roy Harper, and Lilith. The series Retcons in that the original Teen Titans did indeed exist, and removes the new, negatively received characterisations of Donna Troy and Garth.
42
43In 2016, as part of the ''ComicBook/DCRebirth'' event, two Titans series are being published. ''ComicBook/{{Titans|Rebirth}}'' began in June and follows up on a major plot point from ''DC Universe: Rebirth'' #1 and is also a continuation of ''Titans Hunt''. It features the reunited original Teen Titans, now all adults. ''[[ComicBook/TeenTitansRebirth Teen Titans]]'' was also announced, and features a Damian Wayne-led team of younger heroes. The line-up consists of the aforementioned Robin, Kid Flash, Raven, Beast Boy and Starfire. The two series crossed over with ''ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}'' in ''ComicBook/TheLazarusContract'', which will feature Deathstroke trying to resurrect his son Grant, and also serve to clear up the ContinuitySnarl of the Titans' history post-Flashpoint.
44
45Both titles were see a StatusQuo shake-up due to the events of ComicBook/JusticeLeagueNoJustice: ''Titans'' got a new line-up featuring Nightwing, Troia, Beast Boy, Raven, Steel II and Miss Martian (although Nightwing eventually got booted off the book, promoting Troia as leader and bringing in Characters/GreenLanternKyleRayner) focusing on the monsters formed from the Source Wall breaking and eventually culminating into another attack by the Brotherhood of Evil. ''Teen Titans'' became more DarkerAndEdgier with Damian adopting a more deadly approach towards villains by caging them. A new line-up would be formed with Robin V, Kid Flash III, Red Arrow II, Crush, Djinn and Roundhouse.
46
47In 2021, the two ongoings would be combined with the Titans forming a brand new academy in order to train the new generation of teenage superheroes with the then-current Teen Titans joining as the senior cohort in ComicBook/TeenTitansAcademy.
48
49In 2013, a new animated series about the Teen Titans was released called ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'' which featured things from the 2003 series (such as the character's designs and certain powers -- not to mention all of the voice actors reprising their roles) and the comics (such as Raven having feelings for Beast Boy and her hair being black, Terra being straight up evil), but made DenserAndWackier.
50
51In 2018, a live-action adaptation titled ''Series/Titans2018'' was released on DC’s streaming service, with a noticeably DarkerAndEdgier take on the Titans, with Robin, Raven, Starfire, and Beast Boy, as well as the addition of Hawk and Dove making up the main roster, and additional cameos from Jason Todd and Donna Troy.
52
53This page has [[Characters/TeenTitans a character sheet]].
54
55See [[Franchise/TeenTitans franchise page]] for the list of pages realtive to storylines and specific characters.
56
57!!Here are the different incarnations of the Teen Titans so far:
58* '''The Original/"Fab Five"/Silver Age Team''': The founding team, from 1964, mainly consisted of the main sidekicks of the Justice League members also known as the "Fab Five": '''[[Characters/NightwingDickGrayson Robin I]]''', '''Aqualad I''', '''[[Characters/TheFlashWallyWest Kid Flash I]]''', '''[[Characters/WonderGirlDonnaTroy Wonder Girl I]]''' and '''[[Characters/ArsenalRoyHarper Speedy I]]'''. The team would later be joined by a few more members such as the ginger precog '''Lilith Clay''', the hallmark Black teenage superhero couple '''Guardian''' and '''Bumblebee''', the caveboy '''[[Characters/TeenTitansOriginalTeenTitans Gnarrk]]''' and the [[IHaveManyNames daughter of many villains]], '''The Joker's Daughter'''.
59** '''Titans West''':
60* '''The New Teen Titans'''
61* '''The New Titans'''
62* '''Arsenal's New Titans'''
63* '''The Alien Hybrids'''
64* '''The Titans Reborn era'''
65* '''Graduation Day Teen Titans'''
66* '''Post-Massacre Teen Titans'''
67* '''The Terror Titans'''
68* '''The New 52'''
69* '''DC Rebirth'''
70* '''The Teen Titans Academy students'''
71
72----
73[[foldercontrol]]
74
75[[folder: General/Pre-New 52]]
76* AbortedArc
77** Mal Duncan abandoned his Hornblower identity and went back to being the Guardian after the Gabriel Horn was stolen, and the plot was never resolved. Had the book continued, it would have been revealed that Mal had hidden it himself because he subconsciously did not want to be a superhero anymore.
78** There was the ill-fated Titans L.A. spin-off that was planned. The group was first hinted at in the ''Beast Boy'' mini-series, the seeds were planted in a ''Titans Annual'', and the team finally assembled in the ''Titans Secret Files'' one-shot only to... never appear again. ComicBook/{{Cyborg}} later confirmed that the team had disbanded with a HandWave line of dialogue. Then it's revealed that Terra II was apparently the ''real'' Terra all along. Terra II fell into obscurity before this could go anywhere, and ended up being killed off the next time she made a significant appearance. The whole reveal was later {{retcon}}ned itself, as it turned out Terra II was indeed an impostor, albeit one with IdentityAmnesia. Although, this explanation in turn is similar to Marv Wolfman's original intent for the character, before the later ''New Titans'' editor (Pat Garrahy) had mandated a story to imply the two Terras were the same (which Geoff Johns and Ben Raab intended to expand upon with their reveal).
79* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: The original five have this kind of thing going on. Donna could choose between the nice and shy Aqualad, funny Kid Flash, dashing Robin, and badboy Speedy. Guess who did wind up with her? Note, back then, Dick Grayson was pretty clean cut. Ironically, in modern stories, one of the biggest reasons Dick is a ChickMagnet of extreme proportions is actually because of his NiceGuy charm.
80* AllMythsAreTrue: The {{Elseworld|}} ''Titans: Scissors, Paper & Stone'' features a character who has this trope as a superpower. Jamadagni Renuka is a magician who is able to cast spells from any system of magic - even systems that explicitly contradict each other, or aren't commonly perceived as magic. She knows this, and she doesn't actually ''believe'' in any of it, but everything still works for her. [[spoiler: The entire story of the crossover is her attempt to stop a disaster she foresees by invoking a super team origin -- specifically, the start of the Wolfman-Perez ''Titans'' -- because that would mean the good guys would win.]]
81* AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs: The Second Titans Tower was designed to address this problem with the whole above ground building being a hologram to attract enemies intending mayhem.
82* AlliterativeTitle: '''T'''een '''T'''itans.
83* AlphabetArchitecture: The headquarters of the Teen Titans, both in the animated series and eventually carried over into the comics, is shaped like a big capital T.
84* AmazingTechnicolorPopulation: The comic has gold/orange Starfire, red Kid Devil, and green Beast Boy and Miss Martian. Of course, both Starfire and Miss Martian are aliens, Beast Boy is a mutant, and Kid Devil was turned into a demon.
85* AmbiguouslyJewish: Kid Devil, aka Eddie Bloomberg.
86* AnimalThemedSuperbeing: Beast Boy and Robin.
87* AnyoneCanDie: The Titans seem to have a higher rate of mortality than other super teams. Even former Titans are prone to dying. No wonder the Titans memorial hall is so crowded. In chronological order.
88** Tara Markov/Terra I: Dies in ''ComicBook/TalesOfTheTeenTitans'' Annual #3
89** Gnarrk/Caveboy: Mentioned to have died before the events of ''ComicBook/TalesOfTheTeenTitans'' #50. Post-Crisis has him die in ''ComicBook/NewTitans'' #56. Gets revived in the New 52 before "dying" in ''ComicBook/HeroesInCrisis'' #1 before revealing to have been alive all along in ''ComicBook/TheFlashInfiniteFrontier''
90** Don Hall/Dove I: Dies in ''ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' #12
91** Aquagirl/Tula: Dies in ''ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' #12. Shows up alive in the New 52 universe in ''ComicBook/ThroneOfAtlantis''
92** Kole Weathers: Dies in ''ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' #12. Alive as of DC Rebirth.
93** Jason Todd/Robin II: Dies in ''ComicBook/BatmanADeathInTheFamily''. Later gets revived in ''ComicBook/UnderTheHood''
94** Hank Hall/Hawk I: "Dies" in ''ComicBook/Armageddon2001'' #2 when he becomes Monarch before formally dying as Extant in ''ComicBook/{{JSA}}'' #15. Later revived in ''ComicBook/BlackestNight'' #8.
95** Dawn Granger/Dove II: "Dies" in ''ComicBook/Armageddon2001'' #2 before being revealed to have been alive the entire time in ''ComicBook/{{JSA}}'' #14
96** Charley Parker/Golden Eagle: "Dies" in ''ComicBook/NewTitans'' #72 in the ''ComicBook/TitansHunt'' storyline. Revealed to be alive in ''[[ComicBook/Hawkman2002 Hawkman (2002)]]'' #37
97** Danny Chase/Phantasm: Dies in ''ComicBook/NewTitans'' #84 in the ''ComicBook/TitansHunt'' storyline. Supposedly alive as of the New 52 in ''Justice League of America's Vibe'' #7.
98** Rachel Roth/Raven: Her physical self was destroyed in ''ComicBook/NewTitans'' #84 in the ''ComicBook/Titans'' storyline.
99** Joey Wilson/Jericho: Jericho supposedly "dies" in ''ComicBook/NewTitans'' #84 as his father stabs him in order to stop the Wildebeest Society. ''ComicBook/TeenTitans2003'' #3 reveals that Joey had in fact jumped his consciousness into his father's body. Joey formally gets his body revived in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans2003'' #40. He's also alive as of the New 52.
100** Phantasm II: Dies in ''ComicBook/NewTitans'' #121 as part of the ''[[ComicBook/ForeverEvil1995 Forever Evil (1995)]]''
101** Isaiah Crockett/Joto/Hotspot: Supposedly dies in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans1996'' #15 before getting revealed to have been alive all along with his life essence in Prysm's body in issue #23. He also "dies" in the DC Rebirth universe in ''ComicBook/HeroesInCrisis'' #1 before revealing to have been alive all along in ''ComicBook/TheFlashInfiniteFrontier''
102** Lilith Clay/Omen: Dies in ''ComicBook/TitansYoungJusticeGraduationDay'' #2. Revived temporarily as the undead "Mother Mayhem" during the ''Life and Death'' storyline of ''ComicBook/TeenTitans2003'' and later as a Black Lantern in ''[[ComicBook/BlackestNight Blackest Night: Titans]]''. Turns up alive in the New 52 universe.
103** Donna Troy/Troia: Dies in ''ComicBook/TitansYoungJusticeGraduationDay'' #3 before getting revived right before ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'' in ''ComicBook/TheReturnOfDonnaTroy''.
104** Rosabelle Mendez/Pantha: Dies in ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'' #4. Turns up alive in the Infinite Frontier universe in ''[[ComicBook/Titans2023 Tales of the Titans]]'' #4
105** Wildebeest: Dies in ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'' #4
106** Ryuko Orsono/Bushio: Dies in ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'' #4
107** Conner Kent/Kon-El/Superboy: Dies in ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'' #6 before getting revived in ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis: ComicBook/LegionOfThreeWorlds''. The New 52 version created by N.O.W.H.E.R.E. disappears in ''[[ComicBook/TeenTitansDCYou Teen Titans (DC You)]]'' #11. The Jon Lane Kent version ceased to exist in ''ComicBook/SuperboyNew52'' #34. (Yeah, there's a bit of a ContinuitySnarl that happens with Kon during the New 52)
108** Amon Tomaz/Osiris: Dies in ''ComicBook/FiftyTwo'' #43, later revived in ''ComicBook/BlackestNight'' #8.
109** Tara Markov/Terra II: Dies in ''[[ComicBook/FiftyTwo World War III]]'' #3
110** Young Frankenstein: Dies in ''[[ComicBook/FiftyTwo World War III]]'' #3
111** Amy Allen/Bombshell: Supposedly dies in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans2003'' #43 before revealed to be alive in ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis'' #3
112** Duela Dent/Joker's Daughter/Harlequin: Dies in ''ComicBook/{{Countdown}}'' #51 which sets up the events of the title.
113** Bart Allen/Impulse/Kid Flash II/The Flash IV: Dies in ''[[ComicBook/TheFlashFastestManAlive The Flash: Fastest Man Alive]]'' before being revived in ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis: ComicBook/LegionOnThreeWorlds'' #3
114** Power Boy: Dies in ''[[ComicBook/Titans2008 Titans East Special]]''
115** Molecule: Dies in ''ComicBook/TerrorTitans'' #1
116** Eddie Bloomberg/Kid Devil/Red Devil: Dies in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans2003'' #74
117** Holly Granger/Hawk II: Dies in ''[[ComicBook/BlackestNight Blackest Night: Titans]]'' #1
118** Garth/Tempest: Dies in ''ComicBook/BlackestNight'' #2
119** Quinn Nash/Enigma: Supposedly dies in ''[[ComicBook/BatmanEyeOfTheBeholder Batman]]'' #712. Revealed to be alive in ''ComicBook/BatmanUrbanLegends'' #21.
120** Richard Grayson of Earth-3/Talon: Dies in the ''ComicBook/ForeverEvil2013'' tie-in of ''ComicBook/JusticeLeague2011''
121** Roy Harper/Speedy I/Arsenal/Red Arrow: Dies in ''ComicBook/HeroesInCrisis'' #1 (and, in extension, ''ComicBook/TheFlashInfiniteFrontier'' 2021 Annual), revived in ''ComicBook/InfiniteFrontier'' #0.
122** Cody Driscoll/Risk: Dies in ''ComicBook/NightwingInfiniteFrontier'' #89
123** Brick Pettirosso: Dies in ''ComicBook/TeenTitansAcademy'' #12
124* AnArmAndALeg: Risk loses an arm fighting Superboy-Prime in ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis''. He then loses the other arm in a later battle with Superboy-Prime during the ''ComicBook/SinestroCorpsWar''. He's absent for a long time after that, then comes back in ''ComicBook/NightwingInfiniteFrontier''... only to be [[BackForTheDead killed off]].
125* ArchEnemy:
126** Trigon and Deathstroke for the entire group. Brother Blood I was a recurring ArcVillain.
127** Blackfire for Starfire.
128* AristocratTeam: Zigzagged. The Team, especially during Marv Wolfman's run, is generally thick with the sons and daughters of wealth and royalty, including various Robins, Garfield Logan, Starfire, Donna Troy, etc. Wally West is a notable exception to the trend, being from a blue collar background.
129* BackFromTheDead: Zigzagged with Terra II. She was originally meant to be a normal girl that was surgically operated on to resemble Tara Markov. An editor later told Marv Wolfman to hint at her possibly being Tara resurrected, by showing the original Terra's grave to be empty (and having the Time Trapper suggest she was from this timeline). Geoff Johns seemed to be heading in that direction, but nothing came of it. Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti went back to the idea that she was a separate entity. So, it turned out the real Terra truly was dead and the second Terra was revealed to be a member of an underground race called the Stratans, who decided to send out a liaison to the modern world in a guise people would've been familiar with, using DNA implants to make it look like Tara Markova came back. The Stratans admit this was a poorly thought out move considering what a sociopath Tara turned out to be, but that was nothing compared to when the Time Trapper got his hands on her and warped her memories.
130* BackForTheDead: Wolfman made a big story with Brother Blood that ended with him amnesic and left in a forgotten church to farm. Many years later, the Outsiders visit the Church, and discover the evil hidden base below it. Brother Blood unleashes his master plan... and gets murdered at the end of it, so that his son became the new Brother Blood ([[KarmicDeath something that Blood had done himself]], [[LegacyCharacter as well as his father, his grandfather]] [[OlderThanFeudalism and all the way to the time of Crusades]]).
131* BadassNormal:
132** Each Robin, Speedy and Batgirl to join the team falls under this.
133** Averted with Eddie Bloomberg (Kid Devil and later Red Devil), who feels anxious and inadequate in the presence of people with superpowers, and actually signed a DealWithTheDevil for powers of his own.
134* BandOfBrothers: The various Titans teams are just as much a surrogate family as they are a crime-fighting team. This is especially true of the "Original Five": Robin, Wonder Girl, Kid Flash, Speedy, and Aqualad.
135* BattleCry: "Titans Together!"
136* BigBad: Trigon the biggest and baddest the Titans have ever faced and, to a lesser extent, Deathstroke who is Nightwing's and Arsenal's ArchEnemy.
137* BrainwashedAndCrazy: Virtually every Teen Titan has succumbed to this trope at least once.
138* CanonDiscontinuity:
139** Judd Winick threw out all of Geoff Johns' work to redeem Jericho and bring him back to life.
140*** J.T. Krul tried to fix that, only for Eric Wallace to undo it himself just so ''he'' could fix Jericho.
141** In a similar case to the Jericho situation, J. Torres attempted to redeem Cassie Sandsmark of her aggressive attitude in the "Wonder Girl" miniseries and have her come to terms with Kon's death-- only for Sean [=McKeever=] to derail her back only so he could put his OWN fix and explanation for her behavior. And then after Kon was resurrected, writers such as Henderson just simplified her back down to a clingy jealous girl that was condescending to her teammates.
142** Titans comics following Marv Wolfman's run ''refused'' to acknowledge the GainaxEnding of ''The New Titans'', and in particular the part where [[spoiler: the second evil version of Raven conspired with the Psions and helped annihilate Tamaran]].
143* CaptainErsatz: In-universe. In the time between the Doom Patrol and the Teen Titans, Logan worked in the TV series "Space Trek". He used a RedShirt, and worked for "Captain Tim". The program was sued for plagiarizing ''Franchise/StarTrek'', and the green guy was unemployed again.
144* CartwrightCurse: Starfire's relationships, and all three of her weddings, have ended [[http://www.titanstower.com/starfire/ disastrously]].
145* CatchphraseInterruptus: General Zahl said "Heil... Hit..." and died.
146* CerebusSyndrome: ...[[ReverseCerebusSyndrome and back]]. The 1980s were the good kind of "Angst-ridden super-heroes", so much that they (along with the X-Men) pretty much ''defined'' the trope for comic books, but even that got bad after a point. Various other runs have fallen into this as well.
147* CircusEpisode: In ''[[https://comicvine.gamespot.com/teen-titans-6-the-fifth-titan/4000-8995/ The Fifth Titan]]'' (December 1966), the Teen Titans go undercover at a circus that they believe is brainwashing its audience.
148* CleverCrows: ComicBook/{{Raven}} is a DarkIsNotEvil hero (when not being [[GrandTheftMe possessed]] or [[BrainwashedAndCrazy mind-controlled]] by her EldritchAbomination father) whose magical powers often use a corvid motif.
149* CListFodder: It's a comic series made up mostly of teenage characters, many of them forgettable. They may as well have bullseyes on their heads. Their "Hall of the Dead" is now ridiculously huge, featuring Kole, Aquagirl I, the aforementioned trio, Kid Devil and half a dozen others.
150** Pantha, Baby Wildebeest and Bushido were casually murdered by Superboy-Prime in one page of ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis''.
151** Risk got his arm ripped off (which later became a running gag).
152* ComicBookTime: When Dan Didio took the helm at DC, the ''Titans'' franchise got locked into a sort of perpetual youth, with even some of the oldest veterans and regulars (Beast Boy, Raven) presented as being roughly at the same age and maturity level as new up-and-comers (Young Justice transplants, Miss Martian, etc.).
153* ContinuitySnarl: Donna Troy had so many problems over the years that she got [[ContinuitySnarl/DonnaTroy her own page]]. Notably, it was the initial creation of the ''Teen Titans'' comic that started the snarl - the comic was initially conceived as a team-up of all the JLA members' kid sidekicks, and the writers wrongly assumed that "Wonder Girl" was Wonder Woman's teen sidekick instead of Wonder Woman as a teenager in flashback stories.
154* CruelMercy: Trigon. Psimon, who betrayed him and secretly aided the Titans to stop Trigon, was sentenced to a FateWorseThanDeath. But his servant Goronn, who spreads terror in his name since time immemorial, and was defeated for the first time, does not deserve such punishment. No, a quick and painless death is enough for his failure!
155* DarkerAndEdgier: The title swings this way pretty frequently.
156** The renewal of the original series was generally much heavier and more dramatic than the original series, and actually had the Titans take a vow to ''quit being superheroes'' after they failed to save a certain life, afterwards becoming a team of superpowered special agents for a time.
157** The New Teen Titans as a whole was a successful attempt at integrating Marvel-style drama and personalities into the franchise, which would eventually spread to DC as a whole.
158** New editor Jonathan Peterson kicked off the 90s with a bang by organizing what would eventually be known as ''ComicBook/TitansHunt'', which brought the series fully into MediaNotes/TheDarkAgeOfComicBooks. ''Titans Hunt'' was BloodierAndGorier than anything put in the series so far, killing off countless side-characters and even a few old Titans.
159* DatingCatwoman: Speedy and Cheshire, Changeling and Terra
160%%* DealWithTheDevil: Beast Boy makes a metaphorical one with the Brain in order to save his friends from Zahl
161* DeathOfAChild: The only three living children of the Titans are Jai and Iris West, and Mirage's daughter Julienne. And even then, the West twins were brought back from the dead, and Julienne is the product of rape. And now thanks to the New 52 reboot, all three characters are wiped from existence. [[spoiler: Thanks to ''{{ComicBook/Convergence}}'', the pre-Flashpoint universe is implied to have been fully restored, meaning the West Twins and Julienne do exist once more. Also, Lian Harper's death is undone during the event when she's pulled out of the timestream by Dreamslayer of the Extremists.]]
162* ADickInName: There's Richard "Nightwing" Grayson, who usually goes by "Dick". Things like [[http://static.comicvine.com/uploads/original/9/98764/1899884-loves_dick.jpg this]] can't be an accident. In one issue of Titans, he insists the team can't reveal their secret identities to the newbies, even when they're just hanging out. Tempest calls him a real... and Arsenal interrupts that they can't use his real name.
163* DistaffCounterpart: Miss Martian (for ComicBook/MartianManhunter) and Bombshell (for ComicBook/CaptainAtom), and Power Boy for ComicBook/PowerGirl.
164%%* DragonLady: Cheshire.
165* DysfunctionJunction: Team members tend to devolve into in-fighting and conflict from time to time, which has caused the Teen Titans to disband more than a few times. Especially when team members start dating each other which actually made fighting during team meetings a normal occurrence.
166-->''Jesse Quick:'' When you told me the Titans were like a family -- I guess I thought you just meant in the '''nice''' way -- closeness, you know, '''loyalty'''. But you're also a family in all the '''worst''' ways. You may all be great in your '''own''' right -- I know, I've studied some of you -- but together you're '''disorganized''', '''reactionary''', and '''incestuous'''.
167* EmotionlessGirl: Raven, though later writers have tried to emulate her animated counterpart's surly DeadpanSnarker personality.
168* EnergeticAndSoftSpokenDuo: Quiet Raven and spunky Beast Boy started out platonically in the 1980s ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'' comics. In the early 2000s, they were given a RelationshipUpgrade and have stayed on-and-off love interests ever since.
169%%* EyepatchOfPower: Ravager
170* FaceHeelTurn: Averted with Terra, who was really [[EvilAllAlong bad all along]], and acted like it. But other Titans have played this straight, in a trope that's used quite a lot for the series.
171* FadSuper: As mentioned above, Mad Mod and Ding Dong Daddy are prime examples.
172* FamilyOfChoice: The Titans support each other in all the good ways of a family, but they're also a family in all the worst ways with all the conflicts you'd usually suspect from living together like one. They do have some disagreements, but it always leads into more character depth.
173* {{Fanservice}}: To an insane degree. Though notably, both Wolfman and Perez gave a bit of equal ground -- Dick Grayson was MrFanservice personified, and Deathstroke was set up as a "sexy older gentleman" type, and the female fans of the book reciprocated alongside the males drooling over Starfire and Wonder Girl (see MsFanservice).
174* FlyingFirepower: ComicBook/{{Starfire}} is a RubberForeheadAlien that flies and shoots energy blasts from her hands.
175* GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe:
176** As stated previously: ''Starfire''[[note]]technically ''orange''-skinned[[/note]], in the comics. There is a reason Starfire was called "balloon bod" by Terra I. She basically defines MostCommonSuperpower, MsFanservice, and {{Stripperific}}. At the very least, she's as fanservice-intensive as, say, Power Girl (if ''marginally'' "smaller"). In the comics. In the cartoon, not so much.
177*** PĂ©rez actually [[http://www.titanstower.com/source/whoswho/starfire.html#dis stated]] that her character was meant to exude sexuality.
178** Miss Martian in her Green Martian form, though perhaps a much cuter take.
179* HalfHumanHybrid: Raven as well as the majority of the cast in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans1996''
180* HandBlast: Starfire, as well as her evil sister Blackfire, has this as her main superpower.
181* HeroicSacrifice: Cinder of Deathstroke's team dies in order to destroy the Methuselah Device. Subverted in that she was already suicidal but couldn't die because of her power to turn into molten magma, and that she destroyed the device because given the option to bring her dead family back, she'd rather they stayed dead because she believed the world is a horrible place. It's hard to feel that sorry for her, or awed by her, when she'd been portrayed as such an utterly flat character, the circumstances of her powers revealed a month before she died, and the reminder that she burned off a man's reproductive organs using her own.
182* HoistByHisOwnPetard: General Zahl fired his gun against Robotman, but the bullets ricocheted on his metal body, and returned to him instead.
183%%* HollywoodCyborg: Cyborg.
184* HuskyRusskie: Red Star.
185* IJustWantToBeNormal: Cyborg had one of the defining aspects of this in the 1980s run (he was an unwilling cyborg). Blue Beetle later on. Solstice has shades of it in the reboot.
186* IdiotBall:
187** Is handled by Cyborg and Dick Grayson in ''Rise of Arsenal''.
188*** In Cyborg's case, designing a hideously gaudy removable prosthetic that in fact increases the pain Roy already felt in his arm, and is aware of that flaw. Notwithstanding his engineering capabilities, did giving something like that to a man who had just recently learned his daughter was dead seem like a good idea? Wouldn't it have made more sense to wait, or at least give him a more standard strap-on prosthetic made from wood or plastic? Did a grieving father honestly need the pain in his missing limb amplified at that time? Cyborg even states that Roy is "good as new" once he's outfitted with it, and then quickly apologizes for said statement.
189*** And in Dick's case, having Roy admitted to Virgil House, completely alone. From the way Roy had been acting, Dick should've known that being alone was the last thing he needed at the moment.
190%%* IrishmanAndAJew: Kid Devil, possibly.
191* IslandBase: The Titans Tower is on an island.
192%%* JiveTurkey: Mal Duncan.
193* KidHero: At least the original version of this team. By the Marv Wolfman era, most members had reached college age, but there was still room for teenagers (like Beast Boy and Terra).
194* LawyerFriendlyCameo: One issue of ''Teen Titans Spotlight'' features a nascent Brotherhood of Evil transported to an AlternateUniverse where they encounter the post-apocalyptic future selves of [[Franchise/{{Tintin}} Tintin, Captain Haddock, and Professor Calculus]], er, that is, "Tin" and his associates.
195* LegacyCharacter: Four Robins, three Kid Flashes, two Wonder Girls, two Speedies, two Aquagirls, two Aqualads.
196* LeotardOfPower: Every female Titan has worn one at one time or another.
197* LukeIAmYourFather: Changeling had a less troublesome case with one of the villains of the Doom Patrol, who was actually his former foster parent. But, as he was an {{Abusive Parent|s}} in his own right, this simply gave him the excuse to fight him even harder.
198* MadScientist: Doctor Caligan.
199* MagicIsFeminine:
200** The first female Titan was [[ComicBook/WonderGirl Donna Troy]], whose powers are often connected to Greek deities. Before the [[ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths first DC reboot]], Lilith Clay was a [[{{Seers}} clairvoyant]] who was revealed to be the daughter of a Titan of myth.
201** The ''New Teen Titans'' era introduced ComicBook/{{Raven}}, a witch whose biological father was a demon. On the villain side, Jinx of the Fearsome Five was one of [[TwoGirlsToATeam the only two female characters on the team]] and was their magic expert.
202* TheMole: Subverted with the finalized origin of Terra II. She was sent to the surface world to help Mankind by her people, who were oblivious to the fact that Terra was evil.
203* MonsterModesty: Cyborg doesn't wear anything. He used to wear a jump suit hoodie with the hood up, but Beast Boy convinced him he looks better [[HoYay wearing nothing]]. The orange-skinned alien Starfire also had elements of this (see below).
204* MostCommonSuperpower: Starfire is the best example. They didn't call her "Balloon Bod" for nothing.
205* MotiveDecay: The villains of the Fearsome Five. What do they want to do as villains? According to the day, it may be bank robberies, be more powerful, get revenge (either against the Titans or one of their own ranks), or bank robberies again.
206* MsFanservice: Starfire was an obvious example in the old days, what with her InnocentFanserviceGirl ways, but Donna Troy often ran around in bikinis as well. Let's just say [[DirtyOldMan George Perez]] liked drawing sexy ladies.
207* NextTierPowerUp: After Beast Boy was briefly [[OnlyMostlyDead Only Mostly Murdered]] by Deathstroke, the Titans brought him to the Amazons on the chance that their purple ray might be able to heal him. It did, but it briefly made him go berserk and enabled him to accomplish transformations he couldn't before, like dinosaurs. His BadFuture self Animal Man implies he has a whole host of other abilities that he's too afraid to make use of.
208%% Beast Boy didn't unlock anything while fighting the Wyld so much as decide to bring out a monster form, which he could do before.
209* NiceJobBreakingItHero:
210** Roy Harper's descent into anti-heroism can be attributed to how out-of-character his family and friends acted during ''Rise of Arsenal''.
211*** Black Canary, the closest thing to a mother he ever had and the woman who helped him beat his addiction the first time, washed her hands of him and considered him a lost cause. She should've known that being alone was not helping matters. It was with her support that Roy beat his addiction the first time. And when she had the opportunity to fully give that support again after Roy had been pushing her away, she chose not to and gave up on him entirely.
212*** Cyborg designed him a prosthetic arm that wasn't a "proper" prosthetic because Roy's arm is still infected. The arm is removable, but increases the pain in his stump, greatly hinders his ability as an archer, and he can't wear normal clothes over it.
213*** Doctor Mid-Nite was completely oblivious to the fact that Roy had been taking pain killers from his supply of medication, never mind how easily Roy was able to take them.
214*** Donna Troy, Wally West, and Dick Grayson, supposedly his closest friends for years, did nothing to help. Granted, Roy called Donna a whore and said she was a bad mother, but if Donna truly understood the pain Roy was in as she claimed during his daughter's funeral, she'd know people say things they don't mean when they've lost a loved one (and have suffered a horrible injury). She might have wound up the same way he did after her son died, only she had the support of her friends and family. Dick was the one who came up with the idea of having Roy temporarily committed at Virgil House. And Wally, he did absolutely nothing at all.
215* TheNotableNumeral: The Fearsome Five. Also the Fatal Five-Hundred, from a crossover with the ''Legion of Superheroes''.
216%%* NotWearingTights: Lilith, Danny Chase.
217* OrwellianRetcon: Brother Blood is a special type of LegacyCharacter: he is immortal, nothing can kill him, nobody can kill him... except his own son, when he gets to 100 years old. His son takes up the identity of Brother Blood, and will reign as an immortal until his age of 100, and then face a similar curse. But what about the people that pray to him? Even if they witness the fight, they will not even think that there was one man being Brother Blood then and another one now: it is always Brother Blood, who has lived 700 years. All hail Brother Blood!
218* OurMermaidsAreDifferent: Villain named Siren, though she can make her [[SirensAreMermaids tail]] into legs.
219* PoisonousPerson: Plasmus, a walking chemical monster, has the ability to melt people with his touch.
220%%* ThePollyanna: Miss Martian.
221* PowerOfFriendship: They are all over this trope. They aren't the equals to the JLA or JSA in sheer power. It's their ability to work as a ''team'' and the fact that you mess with one, and expect ''any and all past and present members'' to show up looking to kick your butt that makes them frightening.
222* PrecisionFStrike: A downplayed example occurs during issue 50 of the original Silver/Bronze Age run. During an argument with Speedy, Duela Dent calls him a "pompous ass". It's not emphasised in any way, but the fact that the rest of that particular era of Titans comics was mostly campy fare makes it stand out.
223* PutOnABus: With the Flashpoint reboot, all of the Titans save for Cassie, Tim, Connor, Kiran are now gone. Furthermore, even the villains are now on a bus, as Scott Lobdell had announced that his run will not feature a single existing Teen Titan villain. Rose Wilson and Bart Allen are kind of exceptions, but their origins have been changed around [[note]]Of course, Lobdell had to change his statement about the villains eventually, as editorial had him introduce the New 52 version of Trigon to the book.[[/note]]
224* ReligionOfEvil: Brother Blood's Church of Blood.
225* RevisitingTheRoots: There are several arcs the center around reunions of the Fab Five or on their memories.
226** Following the end of ''ComicBook/TeenTitans1996''[[note]]The series dedicated to the H'san Natall and their affairs.[[/note]], apparently ''somebody'' felt the franchise had gone too far astray, so Devin Grayson's work on ''The Titans'' (launched in 1999) and the [=JLA/Titans=] crossover preceding it focused greatly on setting up the Fab Five as TrueCompanions and building a new phase of the team based around the Fab Five and their personal nominees.
227* SassyBlackWoman: Bumblebee, in the old days.
228* SecretPublicIdentity: Danny Chase, Mal Duncan.
229* SexyJester: Joker's Daughter, eventually. She started out being pretty hideous (basically, she took after her supposed dad ComicBook/TheJoker, with the same really long nose and chin he was drawn with at the time), and got heavy (and aged up) in the mid-80s, but later artists draw her very hot.
230%%* {{Shapeshifter}}: Beast Boy/Changeling, Miss Martian.
231* SidekickGraduationsStick: Nightwing, Arsenal, Troia, The Flash, Flamebird, Tempest, Red Devil, Aquaman III
232* TheSmurfettePrinciple: In the first incarnation of the team, there wasn't even ''one''. They were looking for a [[TokenMinority token girl]] and they saw that a character called "ComicBook/WonderGirl" had already been published, so they decided to use her. Somehow they (not to mention their editors!) missed the fact that "Wonder Girl" was actually just Diana as a teenager for something like ''four or five years'' real time. She was finally given the first of way too many origin stories in an attempt to fix this mistake. [[ContinuitySnarl And thus began a grand and glorious tradition of no one having any idea who she is or where she came from.]]
233%%* StarSpangledSpandex: Wonder Girl.
234%%* SugarAndIcePersonality: Raven
235* SupernaturalFearInducer: Phobia, a minor enemy of the Teen Titans and sometime member of the Brotherhood of Evil, has this power [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin as her codename indicates.]]
236* TakeThat: After leaving DC and going to work for Marvel Comics, Sean [=McKeever=] publicly talked about the copious amounts of executive meddling he faced while writing the Teen Titans. In response to the attention the quotes drew and the negative reputation ''Teen Titans'' has garnered in recent years, Marvel editor Tom Breevort publicly referred to [=McKeever=]'s new title, ''Young Allies'' (which like ''Teen Titans'' is a book about teen superheroes) as "...What you wanted Sean's ''TEEN TITANS'' run to be!"[[http://twitter.com/TomBrevoort/status/15753299069]]
237%%* TeamTitle
238%%* TeenSuperspy: Danny Chase.
239* TokenBlack
240** The book actually had two black cast members in the 70s (initially to be three but ExecutiveMeddling cut that off), and it was going to be averted with Cyborg and the character who eventually became Starfire in the Wolfman team, but they went with an alien girl instead.
241** Averted in Lobdell's run; three of the seven members are minorities.
242* TotallyRadical: Cropped up in every version from time to time, but especially the original.
243-->''"No teen-ager would use "music" in a hip language message! They'd use '''jive'''!"''
244* UnderwearOfPower: Several, though less nowadays. Best example would be the old Robin costume.
245** Even though it was in fact a legless leotard, people (even later writers) seem to think it was just underwear, despite how impractical that is.
246* ValuesDissonance: InUniverse. Troia had an "anti-evil touch", and tried to use it against Panzer and his group of Neo-Nazis. It did not work: in their twisted view of things, those guys believed in the alleged virtue of their cause, and did not consider themselves evil.
247* VillainProtagonist: The Terror Titans in their own miniseries, and much later Deathstroke's team in ''Titans'', most of whom kept indecisively straddling the line between anti-hero, anti-villain, and straight-up villain.
248* WickedToymaker: The Puppeteer was a villain who used remote controlled marionettes to murder people.
249* YetAnotherChristmasCarol: Happen in an issue entitled "A Swinging Christmas Carol" involving a stingy junkyard owner, junk smugglers, and a young boy in need of a motorized wheelchair. The Titans work out what's going on halfway through and, entirely undisturbed, take the opportunity to play the ghosts.
250* YouCantFightFate: Raven spent years knowing that Trigon would eventually assimilate her, and that she would eventually become a demon like him. It finally happened in ''ComicBook/TheTerrorOfTrigon''. Her soul was cleansed from Trigon's evil at the end of the story.
251** All the [[LegacyCharacter Brothers Blood]] were cursed with this. They do not age, but at some point, each one's son kill his father and becomes the new Brother Blood, who would be killed by his own son a century later, and so on.
252* YouHaveFailedMe: Do not work as a mook for Trigon, ever. You'll have more chances if you tell Darth Vader that the rebels have escaped.
253[[/folder]]
254
255[[folder: New 52]]
256* See ComicBook/TeenTitansNew52
257[[/folder]]
258
259[[folder: Rebirth]]
260
261See [[ComicBook/TeenTitansRebirth relative]] [[ComicBook/TitansRebirth pages]].
262[[/folder]]
263
264[[folder: Infinite Frontier]]
265* See ComicBook/TeenTitansAcademy
266[[/folder]]
267----
268->''"Sometimes, the more things change, the more things stay the same.''
269->''We've been to hell and back together, but our bond remains intact.''
270->''Our love.''
271->''Our friendship.''
272->''Our camaraderie.''
273->''Titans Together.''

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