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  • The '70s: "The Dark Age" is largely set in the '70s, with the suspicion and cynicism in society playing a big part in the narrative. The story begins in the late '60s and ends in the early '80s. It also includes thematic elements from '70s movies such as The Godfather, Serpico, and assorted martial-arts films.
  • Action Girl:
    • Many of the female supers fall into this trope.
    • A notable subversion is Martha "Sully" Sullivan, who uses her telekinetic powers to do special effects for movies and television. Sully may not be a hero or a villain, but she's shown that she can kick someone's ass if she needs to. It helps that whenever some idiot supervillain doesn't get the hint that Sully and the rest of the Sideliners aren't interested in whatever they're offering, said villain grossly underestimates just what she and they are capable of.
  • Action Pet: Kittyhawk, the stray cat adopted by Nightingale. She can walk through walls and doors, sprout black wings for flight, and is smart enough to foil a kidnapping plot (almost) by herself.
  • Actor/Role Confusion: Crimson Cougar had this happen to him. He's an actor who plays a superhero on TV who, by chance, happened to stop a convenience store robbery while in his costume. This inspired a number of villains to come after him, to make sure he doesn't decide to become a superhero for real.
  • The Adjectival Man:
  • Adorable Evil Minions: The servants of He Who Lies Buried serve an Eldritch Abomination, but some of them are surprisingly cute, as their home dimension is fashioned off of the designs for a video game.
  • Affirmative-Action Legacy: The character diversity in Astro City largely follows that of Real Life comic book history, so this trope is played straight deliberately.
    • As seen in flashbacks, Cleopatra started off as a blonde Caucasian woman. By the time the series begins, however, she has been replaced by a dark-skinned woman.
    • The original Quarrel was a male criminal. He is succeeded by his daughter, who took his name and gear to build a heroic legacy.
    • Little is known about the original Flying Fox other than he was male. The second Flying Fox is the daughter of a state Senator, and a lesbian in her private life.
    • The original Goldenglove was a male super-criminal. His daughter dons the identity of Goldenglove II to be a master thief, but is eventually swayed into being a hero.
    • Stray I was a male member of the Astro City Irregulars, while Stray II is a female free agent who was sometimes seen with the Confessor.
  • After-Action Patch-Up:
    • In "Safeguards", Nick Furst brings the narrator to the field hospital so she can get patched up. This, unusually, gives her time to reflect.
    • Altar Boy is injured after The Reveal at the park. The Crossbreed get him to safety and patch up his arm, and as he rests to recover from shock, they talk about what they've learned.
    • Steeljack, at the end of "The Tarnished Angel", gets some news from a policeman as the EMTs from the ambulance treat him.
  • The Ageless:
    • Loony Leo, being a living cartoon, does not age.
    • "My Dad" includes a passing reference to some people who never seem to get older.
  • A.I. Is a Crapshoot: Gormenghast is a digital consciousness that wants to Take Over the World. Its "body" is whatever elaborate base it chooses to occupy.
  • Alien Catnip: In "Apeman Blues", Reflex 6 breaks up a speakeasy that puts kidnapped humans into a drugged stupor so aliens can get high feeding off their memories and emotions.
  • Alien Invasion: True to form, Astro City has dozens of these; they tend to be split between background context in flashbacks and "live" events during the course of the main story.
    • In "Confession", the city is taken over by the Enelsians after they manage to get many of the city's heroes imprisoned.
    • In "Doing Battle", the alien Imperion leads an army of half-protoplasm cyborgs to conquer the world and restore his lost honor.
    • "Her Dark Plastic Roots" starts with an attack from the Torori, who want to turn humans into slaves and foodstock.
    • Madame Majestrix leads an assault on North America on the same day that the Silver Agent is scheduled for execution.
    • The Mrevani attack Romeyn Falls in "The Sky's the Limit".
  • All Crimes Are Equal: Some of the Sociopathic Heroes in "The Dark Ages" take this view, dispensing major punishment for crimes as minor as littering. In one example, The Pale Horseman incinerates three teenage boys for stealing shopping carts.
  • All for Nothing: At the end of "Lover's Quarrel", Crackerjack's attempt to get the Black Lab to rejuvenate his body has left him crippled and near death. Worse, Gormenghast has gotten away with a sample of Black Rapier's rejuvenation formula, and Quarrel has retired to tend to Crackerjack's recovery.
  • All Musicals Are Adaptations: Crackerjack, in his civilian identity, mentions blowing an audition for the musical version of Inherit the Wind.
  • All Part of the Show: Dr. Aegyptus sets up a ritual to open a dimensional rift for the Oubor under the pretext that it's an Egyptian-themed magic show.
  • All There in the Manual: Zootsuit is only named in the solicit for Vertigo issue #41, not the issue itself. He does get named a few issues down the line, however.
  • All Trolls Are Different: They are in a few panels battling the Enelsians. They are mentioned to live on/under Glittertind in Norway. Visually, these ones look like the creations of John Bauer dressed like stereotypical Norwegian farmers, and are strong enough to throw alien tanks around.
  • Alternate Company Equivalent: The backbone of the series. Every character is an entirely original creation, but they all draw on archetypes from other comics. Samaritan is basically Superman but with a Time Travel origin, the Silver Agent is Captain America as a metaphor for The Silver Age of Comic Books, The First Family is basically the Fantastic Four but multi-generational, Jack-in-the-Box is heavily inspired by Spider-Man but with a variety of gadgets instead of powers, and so on.
    • As The Gentleman is a Golden Age Expy of Captain Marvel, it's rather fitting that he's drawn to resemble Alex Ross's renditions of the Big Red Cheese (especially since Ross paints almost all of the Astro City covers).
  • Alternate Self: Jack-In-the-Box II meets three alternate versions of his unborn son; two of them became ruthless vigilantes after his death, the third one became a non-vigilante college professor. This realization that he could leave his son without a father prompts him to go into retirement, training one of the Trouble Boys to take his place as the new Jack-In-the-Box.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Nightingale and Sunbird are frequently rumored to be a lesbian couple, to their never-ending annoyance.
  • Amnesia Loop: Done in "Her Dark Plastic Roots". Beautie is unsatisfied because she doesn't know her own origins, so she begins to investigate the matter. Beautie eventually discovers she was created by Elaine Girbachs, the daughter of Dr. Gearbox, who denounced Beautie because he believed engineering and math weren't fields for girls. Ashamed, Elaine tearfully ordered Beautie to leave and forget forever. When Beautie confronts Elaine in the present day, she orders Beautie to leave again... and it turns out that this happens every few years as Beautie's directive weakens until she re-visits Elaine again and again and again.
  • Amoral Attorney: Downplayed. One issue has an attorney successfully defending a mobster's son (who had brained his date to death in the middle of a crowded bar) by applying superhero logic (mind control, evil duplicates, Comic Book Death, etc.) to the case, not because he actually believed that was what was going on, but because he wanted to see if he could get away with it. However, it's explicitly mentioned that defending a client as best he can (and irrespective of their innocence) is his job, and when the mob boss starts showering him with gifts and offers him an, ahem, life-long position, he realizes he's messed up good. Ultimately, he comes to realize that his mistake was in thinking of his job as a game that he was supposed to win, rather than as a ritual intended to keep society functioning (and... darker things at bay).
  • Anachronic Order: "Waltz of the Hours". Each page is set on a different hour of a single day, but not in linear order.
  • Animal Motif: The Oubor is associated with snakes.
  • Animal Superheroes: Enough to form an entire team, Pet Patrol, whose roster includes Dr. Monkey, Rocket Dog, Kittyhawk and Ghost Ferret (G-Dog was a member, but eventually stepped down).
  • Animal Talk: Animals have a (simple) form of speech they use to communicate. Andy Merton is able to listen to them after he merges with his pet corgi to become G-Dog.
  • Animal-Themed Superbeing: Most animal-based heroes don't appear in the comic long enough for their full power sets to be established, so most tend to be Type II (Animal Aliases) from what is shown.
    • Members of Honor Guard include Hummingbird, Stormhawk, and Wolfspider.
    • As expys of Batman and Robin, the teams of Leopardman/Kitkat and Nightingale/Sunbird wear animal-themed costumes, but don't otherwise appear to have any abilities related to their respective animals.
    • The television character Crimson Cougar has an above-average leap and claws on his costume.
    • The Lion and the Unicorn from Great Britain.
    • Cap'n Cookaburra and Wolfspider from Australia.
    • The Mock Turtle is a villain in a Power Armor suit.
    • The Otter is a small-time crook in a wetsuit. He sometimes works with The Owl and Mister Toad.
    • The original Hummingbird has the alias. Her daughter has actual hummingbird powers, which proves to be a Forced Transformation.
    • Palmetto of the Astro City Irregulars teen group resembles a giant cockroach, but hates to be called as such. Other animal-themed members include Stray, a heroic werewolf, and past member Alligator, a mutant reptile.
  • Animesque: American Chibi is an overt, over-the-top example, with an oversized head, large eyes, and tiny body.
  • Anthropomorphic Personification:
    • The Living Nightmare is a manifestation of human fear, and that fear shapes and sustains it. If need be, it can draw on that fear to bolster its determination. Even if its body is destroyed, it will eventually return as long as fear exists.
    • The Dancing Master is a personification of the concept of dance and romance. This is not necessarily a good thing, as his presence brings about a "plague" of romance that almost drives the entire city mad.
    • One character the Broken Man introduces to the audience is Mister Cakewalk, a Robin Hood-like Southern Gentleman from the late 19th/early 20th century, who is eventually revealed to be the personification of counterculture music. As the genres changed, so did his identity (and gender in some cases); Jazzbaby, Zoot Suit, the Halcyon Hippie, and so on. Their final appearance reveals that an encounter with a cult that worshipped an ancient god of darkness destroyed them, leaving behind the Broken Man. The Broken Man himself isn't convinced that he can be any of those people, since A) he remembers his old life, which is something a personification of music shouldn't have, and B) if he was the personification of counterculture music, he would've changed with the dominant genre, but he's been the exact same for years.
  • Anti-Climax: Occurs at the end of "Friends and Relations". The big fight between Honor Guard and several dozen massive battle robots ends when Ellie gently orders the robots to stand down, restrain the villain, and fly off.
  • Anti-Hero: Plenty of them appear in "The Dark Age". Prominent examples include the Blue Knight, Black Velvet, the Point Man, and Stonecold. And that's not counting the sociopaths...
    • The Confessor would like to be an out-and-out hero, but he can't escape the dark side of his nature, on account of being a vampire.
    • Crackerjack is a lighter version, in the sense that he fights crime and saves people primarily for his own self-aggrandizement and is, simply put, a bombastic Jerkass.
    • The Cloak of Night was an early example, being a silent gun-wielding vigilante who went after criminals and bootleggers.
  • Anti-Villain: The Junkman was a brilliant inventor who was removed from his job only because of the company's mandatory retirement policy; they wanted him to relax and enjoy his twilight years, but he simply wanted to keep working. The only reason he turns to crime is to show society that discarded things can still have value, and builds his arsenal out of junk to prove his point. It's not hard to imagine that he could be a happy law-abiding citizen if someone would just give him another job.
  • Antiquated Linguistics: Cleopatra II had a tendency to speak in flowery and regal language in her early appearances. She's toned it down a few decades later.
    "You will surrender, Demolitia. Cleopatra commands it — and she will not be defied this day!"
  • Apocalypse How: Lots, though they typically appear as either alternate realities or close calls averted by the efforts of the heroes. A noteworthy case appears in "The Eagle and the Mountain", when Samaritan and Infidel ended up creating a Class Z event by destroying all of existence.
  • Appropriated Appellation:
    • Samaritan got his name after he first appeared on the scene and identified himself solely as "a good Samaritan." The name stuck.
    • Similarly, Infidel took his name from the cries of the ignorant masses who opposed his "unnatural" research into the fundament energies of the universe, and he decided to embrace the name to mock them.
    • G-Dog got his name after he rescued some folks from being mugged; when they asked his name, Hank (the corgi) immediately replied "G-Dog! I'm G-Dog!" (which was the term of endearment Hank's owner used).
  • The Archmage: Several have appeared so far in the stories.
    • Simon Magus was a European magician who came to Astro City in The '70s because he foresaw a time of great strife centered on the city. He helped exorcise the spirit of vengeance known as the Blue Knight and warned about The Continuum's judgement of Earth. After a great spell, he was transformed into the Green Man.
    • Magus' assistant, Grimoire, became a sorceress in The '80s after Magus disappeared. She appeared during the Rise of Kerresh the Devastator, and wrote a tell-all book about her relationship with Magus.
    • Currently, the Silver Adept is considered the most powerful magician of the forces of light in the Astro City cosmology. However, this means there are a lot of mystical matters that need her attention, keeping her busy enough to require a personal assistant.
    • Infidel is a villainous example, being an Evil Sorcerer out to rule the universe. Only his Self-Imposed Exile keeps him from being a frequent menace to the heroes.
  • Are These Wires Important?: Ultimately used by Supersonic to stop the fight in "Old Times".
  • Armor-Piercing Question:
    • During his annual dinner with Samaritan, Infidel summons several women to bring in the food. Infidel assures Samaritan that they're not slaves, just magical homunculi made from organic scraps. When Samaritan still expresses his discomfort, Infidel retorts, "Were they mere robots created by science you understand, would you have similar unease?"
    • Esteban Hidalgo spent years trying to act as a community organizer and philanthropist, but found his efforts stymied by the fact that he could never quite escape a reputation as an out-of-touch rich guy. However, the thing that pushed him to become a superhero was when a companion simply told him:
      "So your message, Estaban, is simple: Work hard, stay out of trouble—then inherit two hundred million dollars and everything will be fine?"
    • Winged Victory gives one of these to the Council of Nike in "Victory". When they criticize her association with Samaritan and the Confessor, she asks what she's supposed to teach — that men and women are equal, or that women need to be alone to be strong? They have no response.
  • Artifact of Doom:
    • The Sekhmet Stone is a giant red stone mask. It has ancient mystic knowledge and power, and it rules the Nebulous Evil Organisation called Pyramid.
    • The Black Opal, of which there were two. The first was acquired by Krigari Ironhand from the Non, another dimension made out of the shattered remnants of dead universes, the opal being the distilled hatred and anger from those universes, and used as the source of Ironhand's power until destroyed by Stormhawk. The second is a cheap imitation, which has long been broken, but if repaired would still be very powerful indeed.
    • The Star of Lahkimpur is a bright green gem with the power to summon the Eldritch Abomination known as the Oubor.
  • Artificial Human:
    • A plot point in the "Victory" story arc involved civilians secretly replaced with plant-based copies. The doppelgängers were sufficiently human-like to give false testimony as part of a frame-up against Winged Victory, and evaporate into mist when cornered.
    • Samaritan's Arch-Enemy Infidel has created dozens of non-sentient homunculi as servants and harem girls in his trans-dimensional fortress, because Samaritan tends to get testy if he tries to kidnap real women from the main universe. They look and feel exactly like real women but are basically machines.
    • Gormenghast created dozens of copies of Crackerjack to serve as Mooks and taunt the heroes when they staged a rescue.
    • Boss Diode once infiltrated the members of the US Senate with robot doppelgangers.
    • The Weirdies are blue-skinned synthetic creatures who were used by The Underlord to fight Jack-in-the-Box. They speak gibberish, have a simple Hive Mind, and sprout additional limbs whenever they're struck.
  • Artistic License – Law: In "Victory", a trio of female supervillains publicly accuse Winged Victory of secretly leading them. Less than 24 hours later, the Justice Department has ordered her schools to be seized and shut down under the RICO Act — all without any investigation, conclusive evidence, or judicial review.
  • Ascended Fanboy:
    • Altar Boy starts off as a small-town child who wishes to make his name as a Kid Sidekick.
    • American Chibi is an ascended fangirl. She squees whenever Samaritan compliments her on a job well done, and is absolutely over the moon when he names her a member of the Honor Guard.
    • Wolfspider is a downplayed example — while he grew up watching and admiring Honor Guard, he's really excited to join his childhood cartoon heroes "Queenslaw".
  • The Atoner:
    • The Confessor is purposefully torturing himself by using a cross as his costume theme, as a form of mortification in penance for his killings as well as his self-loathing as a vampire.
    • Eth, the narrator of "Sorrowsday."
      "I can live with it no longer. I surrender to your justice. What is my punishment?"
    • The Street Angel becomes this after turning Darker and Edgier during his time with Black Velvet; in remorse, he left Astro City to do humanitarian work in Africa, before returning to the city to help inner-city youths.
    • In "Mistakes", Marella Cowper becomes this after she overlooks a clue to a hidden Skullcrusher base in Ecuador, turning the area into a war zone. She leaves home and devotes herself to aiding rescue efforts in a desperate attempt to find the child who originally contacted her, getting into more and more dangerous situations as a result.
  • Atrocious Alias:
    • The Otter, possibly the cutest supervillain name ever. Mind you, he does run around dressed as an otter, so the name clearly doesn't bother him. Maybe he should have called himself the furry old lobster instead.
    • Then there's Glue-Gun, an Expy of Marvel Comics' Paste-Pot Pete.
    • One issue has The Majordomo, who clearly intends to be an impressive rule-the-world villain. As another character dryly points out, it might have come off better if he hadn't named himself after a servant.
    • Before becoming a special effects artist, telekinetic Martha Sullivan had a very brief career as the superhero "Mind-Over-Mattie." Her only defense was "it was the sixties."
    • When Brian Kinney became the sidekick for the priestly Confessor, he received the codename "Altar Boy." He doesn't care for it, but doesn't get a vote in the matter.
      Confessor: Altar Boy or busboy. Your choice.
    • Before Reflex 6 settled on their name, Tearaway kept suggesting the name "Wildrogues". Everyone else hated it.
    • The Animal Superheroes team Pet Patrol briefly considered calling themselves "Pet Dander" and "Fauna Force".
    • A newly-created supervillain called himself "Lord Sovereign"; a person nearby lampshades how redundant that is.
    • Jerome Johnson, the son of the hero Jack-in-the-Box, tried at one point to fight crime under the name Jackie Justice, a career which was cut short on his first night out when he broke his leg. His father is shown to be in disbelief about many of his actions, not least of all that he went with "Jackie Justice" as a name.
  • Awesome Aussie: Wolfspider, mate.
  • Back from the Dead: This is the origin and source of The Gentleman. He is a fantasy-wish manifestation of Matilda "Tillie" Armstrong, a girl whose father was killed in a supervillain attack. Whenever there's danger, Tillie wishes The Gentleman — her Dad — back to life, so he can save the day.
  • Backstory: Just about everyone has one. Whether or not the readers ever see it is another matter.
  • Badass Bookworm: Roy Virgil was an engineering genius, aeronautical millionaire, and thrill-seeking adventurer known as the Astro-Naut.
  • Badass Normal: Not surprisingly, many of the veteran crimefighters are regular folks coupled with a few gimmicks (Jack-In-the-Box, Crackerjack, Altar Boy, the Black Badge, El Hombre, the Flying Fox), but who have trained themselves up to bullet-dodging levels.
    • Deconstructed with Quarrel; she constantly realizes that she's a Badass Normal in a world of super-powered beings, armored villains, aliens, and gods, and compensates for it with lots of training — to the point where she cannot sustain any sort of normal relationship because of the commitments required. She's only with Crackerjack because she doesn't care that he Really Gets Around, and he doesn't care if she forgets his birthday.
    • Played with in the case of Sticks. In his home of Gorilla Mountain, he's just a typical — and disinterested — soldier in gorilla society. In Astro City, however, his strength, training, and prehensile feet makes him a dangerous opponent to anyone who tries to exploit him.
    • in "The Dark Ages", Charles and Royal Williams eventually grow into this role through a combination of physical training and gear appropriated from Pyramid.
  • Bad Guy Bar: Joey "The Platypus" Platapopulous runs the Down Under Club. The front is a legitimate nightclub with scantily-clad waitresses, while the back is where all the scheming takes place.
  • Bad Powers, Bad People: Many of the new "heroes" who appear in "The Dark Age" qualify. Special attention should be given to Black Velvet, who uses her Touch of Death to disintegrate criminals, and the Pale Horseman, who fries all evildoers whether they're super-criminals or shoplifting teenagers.
  • Bad Powers, Good People:
  • Banging for Help: Seeking shelter at an arms cache during a citywide riot, Royal Williams finds his brother Charles dying from a gunshot wound. Desperate to attract the police over the chaos around him, Royal fires off all of the weapons to get their attention.
  • Barbie Doll Anatomy: Beautie, literally.
    "My skin is ferro-styrene over an omnitanium frame. My breasts and buttocks are rigid. And I have no genitalia."
  • Barrier Warrior:
    • Samaritan can manipulate an "Empyrean field", which is strong enough to repulse a tidal wave.
    • Resistor is a free-floating memetic field that turns ordinary people into energy beings who casts protective barriers to shield innocents.
  • Bash Brothers: The Butthead Brothers are two teen Delinquents who terrorize people with elemental powers from a space meteorite.
  • Bayonet Ya: The Old Soldier carries a bayoneted rifle as one of his weapons. Given how long bayonets have been used in warfare, he may have been carrying it for a long time.
  • Beast Man:
    • Daniel of the Crossbreed is a lion man.
    • Ragged Tom and the Raggamuffins are a gang of cat-people who rob wayward travelers at night.
    • Team Carnivore is composed of five men and women who have animal characteristics (a snake, bear, lion, wolf, and hawk).
    • Stormhawk is a human with the head, wings, and clawed feet of a hawk.
    • G-Dog is half-man, half-corgi.
    • The Eastern European Beast-Men, whose prince is Natalie and Nick Furst's biological father.
    • The evil god Jabaja has Mooks that are half-human, half-puma.
    • Sasha Furst of the First Family is a humanoid wolf.
    • Popinjay is a criminal with the head of a bird.
  • Bee Afraid: The Beekeeper, an older supervillain who attacks folks with deadly bee swarms.
  • Befriending the Enemy: In "Enemy of the Empire", Zo the Zirr finds Karl Furst after he's been injured in a battle with the Zirr Empire. Instead of turning him in, however, Zo helps Karl signal the other members of the First Family so they can rescue him.
  • Being Evil Sucks: A recurring theme, especially in later stories. Many stories show that villains are driven by a combination of greed, attention-seeking behavior, and various personality disorders, and even when they do win, they don't gain any real satisfaction from it. Many could have made a ton of money with using their talents legitimately, but for one reason or another aren't interested. As a result, the ones who make it to old age often have little to nothing to show for it.
  • Belly Mouth: The Living Nightmare's torso has a face with burning orange eyes and a sharp-toothed mouth.
  • The Bermuda Triangle: Monstro City (where Rex Zorus of the First Family came from) is located on the sea floor of the Triangle.
  • Berserk Button: Bugman Palmetto hates being called a roach. It's implied that this is actually because that's an ethnic slur against Latin-Americans, rather than because he's a giant roach man.
  • Better the Devil You Know: In "Safeguards", Marta Dobrescu realizes that, while Shadow Hill is filled with vampires, dark creatures, and other Eldritch Abominations, at least she knows the wards and rituals to keep them at bay since she's lived there her entire life. Downtown Astro City may be a tempting and exciting place, but her ignorance of their rituals is ultimately a liability.
  • Big Damn Heroes: In "Hot Time In the Old Town", Dr. Aegyptus's Eldritch Abomination summoning seance goes a little awry when all of the local heroes of 1920s Romayn Falls — Jazzbaby, the Cloak of the Night, the Blasphemy Boys, and the Five Fists — get in on the action.
  • Black-Tie Infiltration: Tom O'Bedlam's "Phoenix Party" to celebrate Glamorax's transformation is infiltrated by cultists of the Oubor, who use talismans to disrupt Glamorax's rebirth.
  • Blessed with Suck:
    • Once he gets out of prison, Steeljack discovers quickly that being a Chrome Champion is not exactly helpful in most low-level jobs (that is to say, the only jobs that will hire an ex-con with no work experience). Because his fingers are coated in steel, he can't handle fragile objects without risking breaking them, which meant he couldn't even hold down a job washing dishes or use a touchscreen device. He also weighs eight hundred pounds, which provides its own problems, like not being able to drive a car. His body has also started to corrode and rust in his old age, and the metal coating over his body needs iron supplements to keep it from feeding off itself. Oh, and he Can't Have Sex, Ever, or at least not with someone who isn't also a superhuman.
    • Played with in the case of Hummingbird II — she received her powers while still a fetus from the gods of Khpak Iqun, but the evil god Jabaja slipped in a curse to eventually turn her into a real bird. Though she had the option to save herself by losing her powers, she turned it down, resolving to remain a hero for as long as she can.
  • Blind Obedience: Most of the Zirr have this towards their warlord Emperor. When Zo's sister Ziriza questions why the First Family repeatedly attack the Zirr Empire even though (by the official accounts) they were previously defeated and punished, her father angrily insists that she's just confused and the Priestlords will straighten her out.
  • Blob Monster: Gloo is a mindless monster that resembles a giant misshapen blob of green liquid. It fights crime with deadly "pranks", such as spraying litterbugs with flesh-melting acidic "seltzer".
  • Blood Knight: In "The Dark Ages", there's a popular Reality TV show called "Rough Justice" that shows actual footage of Sociopathic Heroes brutally punishing assorted criminals.
  • Book Ends: The episode "In Dreams" begins and ends with Samaritan dreaming about flying.
  • Bouncing Battler: The Bouncing Beatnik.
  • Bounty Hunter: In the Astro City legal system, some superheroes make a living by registering as bounty hunters with the local authorities. They are sanctioned to capture criminals (super-powered and otherwise), and are paid by picking up checks made out to their real identities.
  • Boyfriend-Blocking Dad:
    • This is Duncan Keller's first reaction to learning that his daughter is not only training as one of the new Starfighters with four others, but one of them is also romantically interested in her. His wife cools him down.
    • Rex Zorus, Astra's father, gives Matt an intimidating interrogation on their Prom Night. Intimidation is very easy when you're a 500-pound bright red reptilian monster with razor teeth...
  • Brain in a Jar:
    • A.T.T.A.C.C, who has gone a little bit bored (and mad) from being stuck in a tin can for several years, while still having human desires.
    • Braintrust is an Astro City crime lord; his brain is in an oval glass jar, perched on top of a spindly robot body.
  • Brainwashed: As part of their training regiment, Pyramid troops undergo brainwashing to support Pyramid and become fearless footsoldiers. This is done by a combination of mandatory pills, sleeping gas, and speakers broadcasting propaganda.
  • Brainwashing for the Greater Good: The insect aliens of the Zirr Empire have The Understanding, which mentally bonds them and removes all traces of individual doubt or uncertainty.
  • Brand X: "Beautie" dolls, "Beefy Bob's" burger joints, and "Astro-Mart" convenience stores.
  • Brawn Hilda: According to both Steeljack and Cutlass, the muscular villainess Wrestla is "built like an ox, with a face to match."
  • Breaking the Bonds: In "Things Past", Steeljack breaks his super-powered restraints, then snaps Cutlass's restraints, all in the span of a few seconds.
  • Briar Patching: Used by Marta Dobrescu in "Party of the Second Part" — when the Silver Adept is on trial for blasphemy by the Cult of Tzammath, Marta tricks them into summoning Tzammath directly by claiming they're not capable of doing so.
  • Broke Your Arm Punching Out Cthulhu: The Hanged Man versus what's implied to be servants of the Oubor, if not the Oubor itself. He won, but lost his host, and had to find a new one.
  • Brought to You by the Letter "S":
    • "A" is for the All-American.
    • The Silver Adept has a brooch with a stylized "A" on it.
    • Beautie uses a stylized "B" for her accessories.
    • Appropriately for a fictional hero, the Crimson Cougar has a prominent double-CC logo.
    • "F" is for the First Family.
      • As an adult, Astra Furst has traded her "F" bodysuit... for a bodysuit with a massive "A" on it.
    • In a photo, the original Goldenglove is seen wearing a championship belt with a large "G" on it.
      • "GG" is for the C-rate villain Glue Gun, though it's only visible on his back-mounted glue canisters.
    • Honor Guard's logo is a large serif H with a smaller sans-serif G embedded inside.
    • "N" is for N-Forcer.
    • "Q" is for Quarrel.
    • Roustabout has a large cowboy belt with a double-R branding design.
    • Supersonic's costume has a full-torso logo that resembles a very stylized "S".
    • Winged Victory's emblem/Transformation Trinket is a capital "V" with a pair of outswept wings.
  • Brown Note: The roar of the Living Nightmare inflicts pain on whoever hears it.
  • Bullet Catch: Steeljack saves a man from being robbed by placing his steel hand in front of the barrel and catching the bullet as it's fired.
  • The Bus Came Back:
    • Ben Pullam first appeared in the first issue of the second series in 1996, and returned 17 years later in 2013 for the first issue of the Vertigo series.
    • Steeljack returned to the series in 2016, 16 years after "The Tarnished Angel".
    • An even longer bus ride is that of Marta Dobrescu, who originally appeared back in issue 4 of the original series in 1995, and returned for issues 39-40 of the Vertigo series in 2016 21 years later.
    • Michael Tenicek made his first appearance in "The Nearness of You" in 1998, returning 20 years on in 2018 for issues 50-52 of the Vertigo series.
  • Bus Full of Innocents: Team Carnivore exploits this, menacing a crowd to force Roustabout to reveal himself.
  • Butt-Monkey: Glue-Gun is a super-villain whose main purpose is to be humiliated by the protagonists.

    Tropes C-E 
  • Call-Back: Astro City is just full of references and in-jokes to people, places, and events in its own history.
    • The very first issue of Astro City has the Samaritan flying alone in his dreams. The twentieth anniversary issue also focuses on his dreams of flying, only this time Winged Victory is flying alongside him.
    • In "Thumbtacks & Yarn", one brief story has a man dealing with a snake cult, only to have the Broken Man interrupt and yell at the reader for trying to read the story prematurely. Later, in "The Sky's The Limit", Zootsuit stops two Lizard Folk from trying to attack a young woman — and on the next page, the Broken Man is on the gutters of the page, gesturing silently back to the thwarted attack.
    • In "Apeman Blues", Sticks' solution to his dilemma involves some of the characters from "On the Sidelines", published two years earlier.
    • Elliot Mills, the reporter from "The Scoop", reappears from time to time. "The Dark Age" reveals that Mills is the author of Charles' and Royal's story, while the "Astro City Visitor's Guide" includes his article giving a brief history of the city.
    • Astro City: Astra issue #2 is addressed to Andrew Eisenstein of Fairbanks, Alaska — who was last seen Put on a Bus in "A Little Knowledge".
    • In "Resistance", the fact-checker who verifies that Louisa's news story is legally safe is Asa Martin, a.k.a. Samaritan.
  • Call to Agriculture:
    • Supersonic spends his golden years tending to his rose garden.
    • After her robot museum is closed, Ellie Jennersen starts a bee farm, selling honey.
  • The Cape:
    • The leading example in Astro City is unarguably the Silver Agent. A natural leader and All-Loving Hero, he selflessly helps anyone in need regardless of the risk to himself. He ends up being an inspiring figure for over 43 centuries to beings throughout the universe.
    • Samaritan is the world's most famous hero and always a reassuring sight in times of danger. Despite the never-ending pressures he faces trying to help everyone, the harshest he'll get is a stern-voiced frown.
    • The Gentleman is so nice and polite that he makes Fred Rogers look like a drunken sailor by comparison. Stylishly dressed and unerringly chivalrous, The Gentleman is a constant example of impeccable civility.
  • Cape Busters: E.A.G.L.E. became this during the "Confession" story arc.
  • Captain Ethnic / Captain Geographic: The further away a hero is from Astro City proper, the more likely they are to be one of these. This is quite deliberate, to allow for a strong sense of place when outside of the boundaries of Astro City.
    • Las Vegas' big hero is the neon-themed Mirage.
    • New York is defended by Skyscraper.
    • Boston has the Silversmith (after Bostonian silversmith Paul Revere) and The Brahmin.
    • Chicago has The Untouchable.
    • Austin, Texas has Lonestar.
    • Atlanta, Georgia (home of Coca-Cola) has The Real Thing.
    • Detroit, the Motor City, has MPH.
    • Los Angeles has Starpower, a Chrome Champion wearing an oversized film strip.
    • The All-American and Slugger can be seen as representing the United States as a whole, whose tactics and abilities all come from sports.
    • Australia's most notable heroes include Kookaburra, Barrier, Bullroarer, and the Colonial.
      • Later issues introduced another hero called Wolfspider, and the villains Coolangatta Pete, the Exo-Skells, and Jack Panzer.
      • There's also a popular kids' cartoon called "Queenslaw", about a team of (fictional) Australian superheroes — Cap'n Cookaburra, Banana Bender, Goldrush, Krokolite, Seadragon, the Territorian, and Numbat.
    • British crime lords include The Red Queen, Clever Dick, the Toff and the Headmaster of Crime, while its heroes include The Lion and the Unicorn, Larkspur, and Popstar.
    • Germany has Iron Cross.
    • Kenya has Anansi, who creates illusions.
    • India has a team of super-powered street urchins called The Unclean.
    • Brazilian heroes mentioned are the Birds of Paradise, a trio of flying, scantily-clad women.
  • Cassandra Truth: Steeljack tries to warn the Honor Guard about the Conquistador's plan, but they don't believe him. At least, at first.
  • Cats Are Mean: Downplayed with Kittyhawk — while she's nice enough to be a pet hero, she also casually ignores Nightingale's instructions, has a quick temper, and randomly breaks things out of spite.
  • Cat Up a Tree: The first story has Samaritan rescuing a cat from a tree on his way to another emergency, and castigating himself because the thirty seconds he spent comforting the kid almost cost someone's life.
  • The Cavalry Arrives Late: in "The Tarnished Angel", the Honor Guard gets to cart off the villain and get medical attention for Steeljack.
  • Censor Steam: A variant involving speed lines is used when Samaritan has his dreams of flying naked.
  • Central Theme: Very prevalent in multi-issue arcs.
    • "Confession" is about doing the right thing regardless of the cost. Central character Altar Boy's late father treated anyone who needed help, even when the community and his own son scorned him for letting himself be financially taken advantage of. The Crossbreed proselytize despite being mocked, and they and the Astro City superheroes in general keep fighting the good fight after public opinion and the city government has turned against them. The secretly-vampiric Confessor wears a cross as a form of mortification, and performs a Heroic Sacrifice to expose the villains.
    • "The Tarnished Angel" is about shame and the hold of the past. Main character Steeljack is haunted by regret for his supervillain past and for killing another kid in a gang fight. His criminal history and the steel skin he got during it also prevent him from getting an honest job. Kiefer Square, his home neighborhood, is trapped in a seemingly-inescapable rut of criminality, personified by a teenage aspiring second-generation supervillain. The villain is a disgraced superhero whose attempt to create a crisis he could publicly overcome failed miserably. Having obsessed over it for years, he's decided to try again, this time killing off the supervillains he involves so they can't expose him. Side character Donnelly knows about the previous but won't reveal it, because that would also reveal that he was fool enough that he hooked a great many people up with an employer who intended to kill them.
    • "Lovers Quarrel" is about coping with and accepting the issues of old age, which is an especially debilitating problem for Badass Normals in Astro City. Crackerjack and Quarrel try different approaches to cope, such as semi-automated body armor and an assortment of liniments and salves. Their attempts end poorly, and at the end they have no other choice but to accept their condition and try to find new things in life to focus on.
  • Changing of the Guard: Given the long line of legacy heroes in the 'verse, this happens fairly often.
    • The first Jack-in-the-Box was killed in action, although his family knew only that he vanished without a trace. It wasn't until years later that his son discovered a hidden cache of his costumes and equipment, and decided to become the second Jack-In-The-Box and avenge his father's death.
    • Jack-In-The-Box II had a two-issue story arc on his succession. Jack is confronted by nightmarish futuristic versions of his son, who blame Jack for their fate — in their Alternate History, Jack died before they were born, and was therefore unable to be a father figure in their lives. When Jack later discovers his wife is pregnant, he has to decide between giving up his super-hero identity or risk leaving behind a twisted offspring. The problem is resolved when Jack passes his super-hero identity to an acrobatic gang member, whom he aids from his home basement with remote-control spy cameras and microphones.
    • The mantle of The Confessor is passed on when the original Confessor is killed and his sidekick chooses to take over the role.
    • Played with in the case of Quarrel, a male villain whose daughter inherits his title and equipment, but ends up becoming a hero instead — just as he wanted.
    • Comes up in the story of Starfighter as well, in a different way. As his powers begin to fade, he wonders what he's done wrong... only for the entity that grants said powers to explain it just wants him to have a peaceful retirement. It then presents him with a list of several worthy candidates to take on the mantle, one of whom is his daughter.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: Vivi Vector, mentioned as being one of the earliest villains to use robot minions, turns out to be very important to the story of Ellie Jennersen.
  • Chess Motifs: The Red Queen is a crime lord who had chess-themed minions as part of her Alice in Wonderland motif. That said, they were based on designs stolen from the Chessmen of Astro City.
    • The Chessmen themselves are, of course, a good example, as super-criminals wearing Powered Armor designed to resemble chess pieces. However, the set of armor has swapped hands, been broken up, been reassembled, been rebuilt, been copied, and so on so many times that any relation between the Chessmen and chess is tentative at best.
  • Chick Magnet: Briefly discussed; when Reflex 6 tries to recruit Sticks to join them, Tearaway notes that it's a great way to meet girls.
  • Chrome Champion: Several.
    • El Robo of the Irregulars is a muscular young man made of steel.
    • Steeljack is a former super-villain whose entire body is covered in living metal. It cuts down on his sense of touch, but he's completely human underneath. Worse, he's tarnishing with age, suffering from rust and needing to supplement his iron intake as his body begins feeding on itself.
    • In Los Angeles, the superhero Starpower is a silver man wrapped in a film strip, while the Platinum Blonde was a robotic villain who fought El Hombre.
  • City Mouse: Camille in "Pastoral" is a teen girl from Astro City who's spending the summer with her family in small-town Caplinville. She's initially bored and frustrated by their folksy ways, but is soon piqued by local superhero Roustabout and butts heads with the locals as a result.
  • Clap Your Hands If You Believe: In one story, the Golden Age villain Professor Borzoi uses a Belief Ray to make a giant gorilla attack the crowd at a movie theater. A side effect of the ray brings the cartoon character Loony Leo to life. When Leo smashes the ray, he and the gorilla start to fade away, but The Gentleman convinces the crowd to believe in Leo and saves him. That's how Leo's troubles began...
  • Clear My Name: "Victory" centers on Winged Victory being falsely accused of masterminding villainous activities to promote a pro-feminism agenda.
  • C-List Fodder: "The Tarnished Angel" has an in-universe version. Someone is murdering the C-list supervillains of Kiefer Square, but their surviving relatives are resigned to the fact that none of them are prominent enough or important enough for the police or the heroes to care.
  • Clone Degeneration: The acid-spitting, barely-intelligent pile of slime known as Gloo is apparently an imperfect clone of Jack-in-the-Box. Appropriate for a character heavily based on Spider-Man: he gets a malformed clone and a murderous slime-like imitator combined into one!
  • Close-Enough Timeline: Played rather tragically in "The Nearness of You", where it's revealed that one of these was created at an indeterminate point. In the reconstructed timeline, a few events were delayed by a day or so, which means that some people who existed in the old timeline were never born in the current one. People who were particularly close to them have vague dreams and visions of someone they've never met, with the focal character being haunted by memories of his former wife. The Hanged Man apparently comes to them on occasion to console them.
  • Close-Knit Community:
    • In "Pastoral", the girl visiting from Astro City is freaked out by how everyone in Caplinville knows everyone else.
    • Kiefer Square is a Vice City version of this trope. The locals are all working-class folks, many of whom get by as B-grade villains or Mooks, but they still have the local Gossipy Hens and street roughs, and don't hesitate to come together when the neighborhood is imperiled.
  • Clothes Make the Legend: Played straight, as most costumed super-beings in Astro City will wear the same outfit for decades, even in the case of generational Legacy Characters. If a character does change their appearance, it's typically justified, such as the N-Forcer upgrading his armored suits.
  • Clothes Make the Superman: American Chibi's powers come from her mystic hair scrunchies. Later, the scrunchies become a Transformation Trinket for her creator, Marguerite.
  • Collector of the Strange:
    • The First Family seem to have a large number of weird things lying around their home, though home much of it is a collection, how much is there for safekeeping, and how much is there because Augustus and Julius want to tinker with is not established.
    • Jared Everall, owner of the T.J. Scoundrel's chain of Kitschy Themed Restaurants, collects souvenir super-gear and is a supervillian fanboy.
      "You want to sell those Grav-Pods you arrived on, I'll give you a good deal. Those are vintage, man. First used in 1963 by Dr. Ecliptic against Supersonic. Not many originals survive, but those two look cherry."
  • Comic Books Are Real:
    • "Where the Action Is" examines the common comic book subtrope of superheroes' lives being documented by comic publishers in-universe, and establishes that all real-life major publishers exist in the series' universe. Some superheroes even attend comic book conventions and sign autographs, while supervillains read their own comic books and take their displeasure out on the publisher. At the end of the story, when one comic publisher switches to stories about extraterrestrial and "cosmic" characters to try to avoid further attacks from supervillains, their entire building is mysteriously annihilated. That's right, there is an Eldritch Abomination out there somewhere who reads comic books.
    • In "My Dad", someone mentions that Penny Bright — the star of an in-universe romance comic book — is actually a real person who never grows old.
  • Comic-Book Time: Averted; the Astro City characters age in real time.
    • In the first issue of the second series in 1995, POV character Ben Pullam is an adult man with two young daughters moving to Astro City for the first time. In the first issue of the Vertigo series in 2013, Ben is back as an older man and his two daughters return now as grown women in their late twenties.
    • Astra, the First Family's daughter, is ten years old in a 1996 story, and graduates from college in her own 2009 mini-series. In the interval, her uncle Nick has gotten married and has super-powered twin children of his own.
    • The Black Rapier, a longtime leader of Honor Guard, retires in a 2014 story and even mentions his 45-year-long crime-fighting career (aided by a rejuvenation serum).
    • Being Badass Normals, Quarrel and Crackerjack are acutely aware of the effects of advancing age on their bodies and reflexes.
    • Starfighter got his powers during the Vietnam War; by 2017, he's a white-haired senior writing novels and enjoying quiet time with his (alien) family.
  • Complete Immortality:
    • Loony Leo discovers that, being a living cartoon, he cannot die. He spent six years Walking the Earth with no ill effects.
    • One of Infidel's early discoveries was how to use the base energy of the universe to make himself immortal. note 
  • Compliment Backfire: Steeljack breaks into the Honor Guard headquarters to warn them about another supervillain's plot, and is nearly immediately apprehended by a group of heroes, including Quarrel II, the daughter of one of his old accomplices, the original Quarrel. As he is dragged out, he mentions that her dad would have been proud of her. While he probably means that he would be proud that she got away from the slums and crime and became an upstanding citizen and hero, Quarrel II flies into a rage at being complimented by an accomplice of her father's and a supervillain, and given approval by proxy from said father, whom she has done everything to distance herself from.
  • Conflicting Loyalty: While working undercover for E.A.G.L.E., Charles Williams has to decide between reporting a major operation to his superiors or going after the man who killed his parents.
  • Continuity Nod: Frequent. By way of a particularly illustrative example, virtually everything from issue one is called back in future issues:
    • Samaritan briefly mutters his flight time when he arrives to visit Steeljack in "The Tarnished Angel," and again when visiting Maddie in "On the Sidelines".
    • Samaritan mentions that Honor Guard's alien detector is on the fritz. This seeming throwaway line is a critical plot point in "Confession."
    • At the Honor Guard meeting Cleopatra mentions the rising threat of "Gnomes" in the mountains. A few issues later a giant, Gnome-built robot squares off with some heroes.
    • Samaritan's fight with the Living Nightmare is the front-page story for the Rocket in the very next story, "The Scoop."
    • And the Rocket's lead story in issue one is "Jack-in-the-Box captures Brass Monkey." Both Jack and the Monkey of course appear in future issues.
    • At the office, Asa's latest work assignment is about the First Family, who of course also make frequent appearances throughout the series.
    • A news story in "Confession" mentions yet another award ceremony in Samaritan's honor.
  • Cool Chair:
    • Each employee at Honor Guard's call center gets one of these — they automatically adjust to the weight and posture of whoever sits in them, auto-recline to a relaxing position, offer fingertip-ready touch controls, and display information on ergonomically-friendly floating screens.
      "You'll be in it a lot, and we want you comfortable."
    • The mob boss known as the Underlord ran his criminal empire from an ornate throne.
  • Cool Gate: Common as a form of transport. Everything from Honor Guard's Portal Network to the gates they have to construct in Hummingbird's and American Chibi's stories to reach other dimensions.
    • The back door of the Silver Adept's mansion magically opens to a rustic countryside in the Fields of Allatar.
    • Roy Virgil, a.k.a. the Astro-Naut, had one in his office that led to his Space Base over the Earth.
  • Cop/Criminal Family: The two viewpoint characters in "The Dark Age" are brothers Charles and Royal Williams. Charles is a policeman, and Royal is a petty criminal.
  • Corporate-Sponsored Superhero:
    • Some of Honor Guard's members qualify, as the team has a stipend available (via N.R.-Gistics) for those who need financial support to offset their time being heroes.
    • Beautie is sponsored by Tip-Top Toys, the creators of the "Beautie" line of fashion dolls that she is modeled after.
    • Reflex 6 has corporate sponsors, and team benefits include a stipend, branding research, and a genre-savvy marketing department.
    • Jack-In-The-Box III (Roscoe James) technically counts, as he gets paid by his predecessor so he can earn his way through college without resorting to handouts.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive:
    • According to Roustabout, the executives of TransGene International are these. They allegedly perform illegal genetic modifications on unwilling humans, and are rumored to be behind the creation of the villainous Team Carnivore.
    • Simon Sterling of Sterling Industries is an arms dealer who provides super-tech to government agencies. He's been exposed for illegally selling weapons on the black market to criminals and hostile nations, but have avoided prosecution thanks to his vast fortune and Army of Lawyers.
  • Covert Group with Mundane Front: While Honor Guard isn't a covert group, their call center is, to protect them from being targeted by supervillains. The employees are hired through shell companies that serve as their cover, with names like HumanoGlobal, Hampton Genetics, Halston-Godney, Hanawa Giken...
  • The Cowl:
    • The Confessor is Astro City's most famous example, being an Expy for Batman who easily surpasses him in all major skills — he fights off crowds of thugs without effort, avoids gunfire at point-blank range, intimidates everyone with his piercing gaze, is never seen in daylight hours, and has such mastery of the Stealth Hi/Bye that he's never been caught on film or camera. That's because he's a vampire.
    • Implied with Black Rapier; he appears to be Batman with fencing, or perhaps a Captain Ersatz Zorro. Other characters have referred to him as a detective.
    • During his Darker and Edgier phase, the Street Angel adopted this role, stalking the criminals of the night and fighting them with steel-core halos and throwing knives.
  • Crazy Cat Lady: Tabitha Grey, former Kid Sidekick to Leopardman, reinvented herself as a mage named Greymalkin. In her twilight years, she lives in an Old, Dark House with dozens of cats.
  • Create Your Own Villain: Aubrey Jason would have been content to remain a normal human and high-ranking Pyramid leader, but was pushed into acquiring superhuman powers to protect himself from the relentless pursuit of Charles and Royal Williams and their Roaring Rampage of Revenge.
  • Creator Cameo: Kurt Busiek, Brent Anderson, and Alex Ross appear as three bank robbers hiding in a sewer in the "Confession" story arc.
  • Creepy Souvenir: Jared Everall, collector of super-memorabilia, keeps a pitcher containing seven vengeful demons on his coffee table.
  • Crisis Crossover:
    • In "The Nearness of You", a man becomes increasingly obsessed about a woman who keeps appearing in his dreams. It turns out it's because a minor villain caused a Temporal Paradox that threatened the universe and required all of the heroes to stop it — and the woman is his wife who ceased to exist in the repaired timestream. Yes, the Crisis Crossover is relegated to a background reference.
    • Also appears in the ending of the "Confession" arc, which is basically a Crisis Crossover as seen from the sidelines.
  • Cryptic Background Reference: Used liberally. Right from the first issue we're given all sorts of names and concepts that are not given direct exposition, it is simply expected that readers will fill in the gaps with their knowledge of comic book tropes.
    • In particular, the death of a hero named Silver Agent is referenced in quite a few issues, we even see a memorial at one point. Why did he die? Why does the memorial say "To Our Eternal Shame"? This would go unrevealed for a long, long time, until the "The Dark Age" revealed that he was framed for murder by the Mad Maharajah, and the government executed him to show they still had control over superheroes. Using time travel, he saved the entire city mere minutes after his death, and saved the world several times years later, illustrating that he was a hero to the last. The kicker? The Mad Maharajah wasn't even really dead.
  • Cultural Rebel: Sticks is a gorilla who grew up in an enclave of warriors and protectors. Unfortunately, he wants to be a musician.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Occurs in "Great Expectations," when Mitch Goodman's latest shot is interrupted by the Dark Centurion. As the Crimson Cougar, Mitch leaps into battle, but the Centurion effortlessly beats him into submission. Mitch is reduced to begging for his life, which causes the Centurion to leave in disgust and Mitch's fans to abandon him. Justified, as the attack was a Fake Danger Gambit staged by Mitch and his friends to lower his appeal.
  • Curious Qualms of Conscience: Several characters:
    • An alien spy wondering whether he should tell his masters to proceed with their plans for an Alien Invasion.
    • A mobster who's lived his life by always taking any opportunity available suddenly hesitates about using an alien artifact to strengthen his position.
    • A girl who thinks a superhero is vastly overrated gets a chance to betray his Secret Identity and get him arrested for being a fugitive.
  • Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon: In "In the Spotlight", the battle between The Gentleman and Professor Borzoi has Borzoi threaten to crumple his carnation and mess up his hair. Admittedly, these might actually be threatening statements to a dapper fellow like the Gentleman.
  • Cut Lex Luthor a Check:
    • Infidel is a straight example. He's an Evil Sorcerer Mad Scientist who can rewrite reality, and could easily live a long and comfortable life of unimaginable fame and luxury without effort. But he's obsessed with conquering everyone everywhere, and is relegated to a pocket dimension instead.
    • Deconstructed in "The Tarnished Angel". Steeljack points out that all of the villains he knows (including himself) made millions at one point or another, but he finds all of their widows living in run-down apartments. They all put their fortunes into preparing for their next job, expensive gear, or paying off debts, telling themselves that the next heist would be big enough to retire on. To a degree, this corresponds to real-life criminal psychology. This is even specifically pointed out when he interviews the Chain's boyfriend, who mentions that he kept pushing the Chain to sell his invention (which allows him to transfer his mind into a metal body) for space or deep sea exploration, making millions in a perfectly legit way. The Chain would always shoot down the suggestions and insist he didn't understand.
    • It is also deconstructed in the Eisner Award winning "Show 'Em All". It shows that while supervillains COULD get rich from their creations or even by being more clever with their crimes, that's not why they do it, it's mostly the result of a desperate need for validation. Everyone HAS to know how clever and powerful the villain committing the crime is, they'd rather lose outright than get away with no one knowing who did it.
    • Indirectly addressed in the story "On the Sidelines", a story about superpowered folks who use their abilities for regular jobs such as special effects, construction, and glassblowing.
    • Averted by the villainess Cutlass, who saved enough money from her supervillain heists to start a real estate business near Phoenix, AZ.
  • Cyanide Pill: In "The Day the Music Died," the Oubor cultists magically kill themselves to avoid capture by the police.
  • Cyborg: El Robo of the Astro City Irregulars is a half-human half-robot hero, though he has no visible human parts.
  • Cynic–Idealist Duo: In the beginning, Charles and Royal Williams are this in regards to superheroes — Charles is highly suspicious and thinks that they're unaccountable vigilantes, while Royal is a wide-eyed optimist who fervently believes that they're paragons of virtue (except for the Silver Agent). Yet at the same time, they're reversed in their views of authority, with Charles trusting the government implicitly and Royal thinking that "justice" is a bad joke.
  • Dark Age of Supernames: Although the regular heroes avoid this trope, it was invoked (usually briefly) for characters who appeared during "The Dark Age", such as Stonecold, Broadsword, Hellhound, the Pale Horseman, and Hollowpoint.
  • Darker and Edgier:
    • Possibly justified in "The Dark Age" story arc, as an extradimensional dark energy enters people's minds as they revel in sadistic behavior. Lampshaded when some characters wonder if the energy turned people darker... or if it was simply attracted to them because of it.
      • One character specifically notes the phenomenon when he sees Street Angel beat up a bar full of bad guys and thinks about how he used to be all smiley, telling jokes all the time and using gimmicky (but non-lethal) throwing halos. When he sees that the halos he uses now are "high-impact ceramics with a steel core", he thinks it's a perfect metaphor for Astro City in the 70s.
      • Another character mentions that while he didn't appreciate the previous generation of heroes, "at least they seemed to mostly care about helping people."
    • Jack-In-The-Box II's two bad-future possible sons are perfect examples of the absolute worst kind of "heroic" characters from the Dark Age of Comics - one is a Sabertooth expy, the other is a cyborg killer (with a spring-loaded head for a prosthetic arm, no less), and both are absolutely convinced that they are entitled to kill anyone they want because they are the good guys. Jack spends the rest of the story arc moving heaven and earth to make sure they never come into existence.
  • Dark Is Evil: Invoked in "The Dark Age", when a dark energy from another dimension enters people's minds as they revel in Darker and Edgier behavior.
  • Dating Catwoman: The Confessor has a thing with former costumed crook The Stray, who is cat-themed.
  • Day in the Life: The bread and butter of the series. While the book's setting is a classic superhero universe full of costumed heroes and battles between good and evil, the actual focus of many of the stories is the day-to-day, down-to-earth parts of life. Even the issues that are about a superhero often show the "boring" parts of their lives, rather than the exciting, action-packed moments.
    • "In Dreams", which covers Samaritan's nonstop heroic-filled day, due to his Chronic Hero Syndrome.
    • "On the Sidelines" covers a relatively typical problem for a super-powered civilian.
    • "Where the Action Is" follows a woman who writes comic book stories.
    • "Waltz of the Hours" does this with a transdimensional being.
    • "The Sorcerer's Assistant" follows the Silver Adept's secretary through a normal day.
    • "The Menace From Earth" shows the First Family's adventures on the planet Zirros, told from the perspective of a native.
  • Deadly Dodging:
    • In "Yesterday's Heroes", Wolfspider goads Krokolite into charging at him, then shrinks out of the way so Krokolite would destroy the machine giving his powers.
      "Oi! Kroko! Didja hear? You've been elected mayor of Yirrawanka!"
    • One story in "Thumbtacks & Yarn" has Mr. Cakewalk goad Dame Progress into firing a pair of missiles at him. He knocks them off-course to hit a nearby warehouse, revealing the chained prisoners inside.
  • Death Is Cheap:
    • Averted far more often than played straight, but it does get a mention in "Victory" when Winged Victory mentions that one of their villains is dead-dead.
    • Also, in one story an attorney managed to (successfully) get his client off the hook by, among other things, citing the resurrection of one hero, and asking the coroner if he was absolutely certain the murder victim was actually dead before he started the autopsy.
  • Deconstruction:
    • Busiek denies the assertion that the comic is "realistic" since superheroes are inherently fantastical and he believes that reconstruction should always follow deconstruction. While the comic generally doesn't veer into the Darker and Edgier territory associated with deconstructions, the superheroes and villains are given convincing, human characterization and deal with the sorts of day-to-day problems and personal demons that would logically be experienced by people in their place. Meanwhile, Astro Citizens react to happenings around them as one would expect considering that heroes have been around for over seventy years.
    • "On The Sidelines" takes a look at a superpower-heavy world from the viewpoint of someone who doesn't want to be a superhero or supervillain after trying her hand at both: her first vigilante action as a superhero left a carjacker severely injured and her seeing it first-hand. While he deserved it, it made her feel awful. Her bad guy attempt was to 'legally' rob a casino by using her telekinesis to get jackpots, but she felt too guilty to actually take the money, even if it wasn't a violent crime. Instead, she, and a thousand others like her, make a living by simply using it for mundane jobs, like special effects or deejaying. As she puts it, there's always someone (usually a supervillain) trying to tell what someone can do with their powers, but at the end of the day, they're just control freaks playing at trying to be bigger than they are. (She also points out typical supervillain tropes sound stupid. The villain of the day calls himself 'Majordomo', but that means a servant, not a leader.)
  • Decoy Damsel: The Apollo Eleven rescue a family whose boat capsized in stormy weather off the coast of South Carolina. Unfortunately, it's a ploy by Pyramid to infiltrate their base with Spy Bots and steal their secrets.
  • Deliberately Painful Clothing: The original Confessor wears a cross on his costume, which leaves him in constant pain because he's a vampire. He does this because he's a fallen priest who acts as a superhero for penance.
  • Dented Iron: Shows up from time to time, typically after a Badass Normal superhero's had a particularly tough fight.
    • This trope is used as one of the signs that Crackerjack is getting too old for super-heroics; in a routine encounter with Demonhead, he slips up at a critical moment, allowing the villain to leave some nasty gashes across his chest before escaping.
    • It's particularly tragic in the case of Supersonic, who used to be a Genius Bruiser par excellence but has found that, between his age and his many blows to the head, he's no longer able to think of a tactic more complicated than crushing his opponent with pure brute strength.
  • Depleted Phlebotinum Shells: In the "Confession" story arc, a squad of alien invaders is armed with holographic crucifixes, restraining cables soaked in holy water, and a two-handed stake-launching revolver. They are thus armed because they know that the nocturnal Confessor is actually a vampire.
  • Despair Event Horizon: El Hombre crosses this when the girl he loves marries someone else and he realizes that he is a vain Glory Hound who needs the adulation of the public. He sets up a Monster Protection Racket to rejuvenate his public stature, but it backfires on him and turns him into a shameful fugitive. It gets worse when he becomes the villainous Conquistador, recruiting villains in an Engineered Heroics plot that would end with him killing them all and becoming the city's newest hero.
  • Destructive Savior: Played for drama in "Old Times" when Supersonic is called out of retirement to stop a rampaging robot. He's unable to think of a clever scheme to stop it due to his age; instead, he settles for simply pounding it into submission, and the ensuing brawl takes out a dozen residential blocks.
  • Determinator:
    • The Blue Knight, who once hunted Royal Williams over several months for the crime of unloading stolen merchandise, even chasing him down while the planet was literally shaking itself apart.
    • In "The Tarnished Angel", Steeljack becomes one when he finally figures out what's going on. An 800-pound man made of steel is pretty darned unstoppable when he wants to be.
    • Krigari Ironhand. Guy just did not give up. His whole motivation was being told he'd be defeated by the Honor Guard and doing everything, including mining a broken universe, to find a way to beat them (neatly ignoring that they wouldn't have been a problem if he'd just not fought them at all).
    • Infidel, Arch-Enemy to Samaritan, is Astro City's hands-down winner of this trope. The man thinks nothing of waiting millennia to wear down Samaritan's heroic resolve and come around to Infidel's point of view.
  • Detrimental Determination: This eventually happens to Charles and Royal Williams, due to their growing obsession with hunting down their parents' killer. The two pursue him across multiple hideouts all over the planet, oblivious to the collateral damage and endangered innocents in their wake.
  • Deus ex Machina: Used in the original, Greek, sense of the term. How do you prove to a bunch of normal people that your wife really was erased from existence by changes in the timelines? You don't. The Hanged Man shows up and does it for you.
  • Did Not Get the Girl: Part of the reason for El Hombre's Start of Darkness was when the love of his life married a local political activist, forcing him to admit that his heroism was a futile attempt to win her heart.
  • Dimension Lord: Krigari Ironhand, an interdimensional tyrant and emperor who's already conquered several realities before the heroes have even heard of him.
  • Direct Line to the Author: According to Kurt Busiek, a core idea of the worldbuilding for Astro City is that the stories we read are but a fraction of the output of "Astro Comics", a comic book company that has been active since the Golden Age. For example, a good number of the superheroes are Fad Supers who were created by "Astro Comics" at a time to capitalize on a cultural trend or popular movie, and the grittier tone of the series at various points is due to readers' changing tastes and market forces.
  • Dirty Cop: As a policeman, Charles Williams' partner Lannie takes weekly bribes from the criminals to overlook their activities. Charles refuses to get involved, rejecting the bribes but refusing to report Lannie to Internal Affairs. He gets shot In the Back as a result.
  • Disappeared Dad: Dr. Bertram Garneau was a neurophysiologist who abandoned his wife and child to spend more time fighting for progressive and liberal causes. Even after his wife died from cancer, he left his daughter to fend for herself, occasionally sending money to support her.
  • Disowned Parent: Downplayed with Jessie Taggart. She's deeply disappointed to learn that her father is the criminal Quarrel, where she holds a grudge against him for nearly 40 years and ignores his attempts at reconciliation. On the other hand, she expresses this most of the time by tersely ignoring him, and when he gets older she secretly supports the assisted living facility where he resides.
  • Disposable Superhero Maker: Appears very frequently, and usually seen in flashbacks.
    • Dr. Lewis Oscar Croft is a criminal scientist implicated in the creation of dozens of super-beings.
    • Dr. Ganss is a Mad Scientist in Kiefer Square who turns ordinary people into assorted super-villains. Later, he invents a technique to turn homeless people into superhuman Mooks.
    • TransGene is a corporation with the knowledge to create half-human Beast Men.
    • Dr. Nautilus creates aquatic monsters.
    • The Mock Turtle, a Gadgeteer Genius who decided to keep his exploration suit for himself.
  • Disproportionate Retribution:
    • The villains care about what you write about them. Yes, even the cosmic ones.
    • The Blue Knight kills all of the criminals he encounters, whether mob bosses or Mooks transporting goods.
    • Gloo stuffs a family of litterbugs into a wastebasket (they survive), and nearly a dozen Mooks into a compact car (they don't).
    • And the Pale Horseman is worse, dispatching supervillains and jaywalkers alike. He incinerates a trio of teen boys for stealing shopping carts.
  • Does Not Like Men: This is the perceived image of Winged Victory, whose main concern is the well-being of women in modern society, to the point that she will focus on saving women in disaster zones. In reality, this has little to do with her personal opinion of men, but with the source of her powers: she's the avatar of a hive-mind made up of many great women throughout history, chosen to champion the cause of the world's women. She doesn't hate men, it's literally her job to focus on women's issues first and foremost.
  • Dolled-Up Installment:
    • Kurt Busiek wrote and submitted a sample Superman script about a young Lex Luthor offering Superboy a 24-hour truce in exchange for a favor. It didn't get published, but helped get his foot in the door. He later reworked the premise (using his own characters) into "Wish I May...".
    • Busiek also pitched a one-shot to Marvel of a Spider-Man story where a Mook, completely by chance, sees Spider-Man taking his mask off, and grapples with what to do with the information. Marvel shot down the idea, because they thought leaving that loose end untied wouldn't be feasible. Naturally, he retooled it into "A Little Knowledge", using Jack-in-the-Box instead.
    • "The Dark Age" started life as a proposed sequel to Marvels to be called Cops & Robbers (later Crime & Punishment).
  • Do Not Taunt Cthulhu: Occurs in "Where the Action Is." After publisher Manny Monkton pisses off a super-villain with his sensationalist stories, he becomes inspired to create a new line of comics dealing with Cosmic Entities, beings who "won't give a gnat's fart" about whatever he says about them. When the first issue of their new series hits the stands, their entire publishing office vanished the very next day; onlookers claimed they smelled something at the scene that may have been a gnat's fart.
  • Do Well, But Not Perfect:
    • Samaritan works as a newspaper fact-checker in his Secret Identity. He has an advanced computer to actually do the work while he goes on his superheroic rounds, and it slips in occasional errors as part of the facade.
    • Invoked in "Show 'Em All" — the Junkman pulls off a major heist without a hitch, then lives a life of luxury while everyone wonders who was the brilliant criminal who committed the robbery. However, he becomes frustrated at not getting recognition for the heist, especially since the public assumes he must have been caught for another crime. He decides to repeat the robbery again, but with deliberately-included mistakes, so he can get captured and be recognized for the first heist.
  • Downer Ending:
    • "Her Dark Plastic Roots" ends on a fairly down note. Beautie is no closer to learning her origins, and while she is feeling fulfilled at the moment, she will eventually begin re-questioning herself and will go through another cycle of investigation to re-learn who Elaine Girbachs is. Worse, there's no indication that Elaine has taken any of MPH's advice to heart, so she could very well dismiss Beautie once more and perpetuate their cycle of pain.
    • The "Lover's Quarrel" story arc ends on this: Crackerjack has been badly injured and probably crippled for life, the Big Bad who injured him has escaped, and the whole thing was a futile effort for Crackerjack to rejuvenate himself. The only bright spot is that Quarrel has begun to reconcile with her father, and she's giving herself a new purpose in life by tending to Crackerjack's rehabilitation.
    • "What I Did On My Vacation"/"The Other Side of the Story" has a bleak ending with no easy comfort. The Johnson family finally learns that the original Jack-in-the-Box died in a Suicide Attack by his longtime foe Mister Drama. But it's worse for Francesca Darman, a.k.a. the Drama Queen — she had spent decades plotting revenge on Jack-in-the-Box for the death of her grandfather, only to learn that Jack wasn't to blame and that all of her family's emotional pain and suffering was self-inflicted. She survives an attempt to kill herself, but it's unclear if she will ever wake up from her coma, much less make anything close to a recovery.
    • "The Day the Music Died" is a downer on both a narrative and a metaphorical level. The story is Exactly What It Says on the Tin — Glamorax, the current spirit of counterculture music, dies — and there's no sign that it will return. The story also challenges the reader to think about the topic on a metaphysical level, asking if the Real Life spark of musical expressionism has been snuffed out by the industry's overuse of targeted markets, micro-niches, and brand management.
  • Dragons Up the Yin Yang: The Jade Dragons are a brother-sister martial arts team. Each sibling had a dragon tattooed along one arm; when put together, the two summoned a spiritual dragon to attack their foes.
  • Dramatic Irony:
    • Cammie in "Pastoral", bitter about being shipped off from Astro City to spend the summer in the countryside with relatives, resentfully thinks that they would not think so highly of their local superhero Roustabout if they could compare him to a real Astro City superhero — like Crackerjack, who not only (unlike Roustabout) has no superpowers but also is an arrogant Glory Hound (also unlike Roustabout).
    • Similarly, when Brian longs to be a hero for the respect, he sees Crackerjack in action and thinks he gets respect in spades — unaware that his Jerkass ways mean he gets less than even his exploits would ordinarily merit in the superhero community.
    • In "Shining Armor", Irene Merriweather recalls how her dogged determination to learn Atomicus' secret identity ended up driving him away forever. Yet, despite her investigative skills, she fails to notice that her daughter is now the Badass Normal superhero called the Flying Fox.
  • Draw Aggro: When the Silver Agent, Mirage, and Hellhound are fighting a crowd of mutated Mooks in Las Vegas, Mirage offers to fly off and draw their attention so the others can break into a hidden base and disrupt their power source.
  • Dream People:
    • This is the secret origin of American Chibi, dreamed into existence by video game designer Marguerite Li. The Unbodied, a group of eldritch abominations, sent Marguerite dreams of monsters, provoking her to dream up American Chibi to oppose them — which was exactly what the Unbodied wanted. With a creature from Marguerite's dream-world in reality, the walls between the dream-world and reality would weaken, allowing the Unbodied to manifest in the material world as the monsters from Marguerite's dreams.
    • The same is true of the Gentleman. He is created by the psychic powers of a girl from idealized memories of her real father, with his Kid Sidekick being her idea of an ideal older brother.
    • There's also Loony Leo, a cartoon lion brought to life by a Mad Scientist, whose existence was initially maintained by people's belief in him.
  • Dream Spying: In "Knock Wood", attorney Vincent Oleck has dreams of the vigilante Blue Knight's attacks on criminals as they occur. On the last night, the Blue Knight speaks to him directly with advice.
  • Drill Sergeant Nasty:
    • One appears in the Pyramid training camp that Royal infiltrates in "The Dark Age". He even sports a 'Smokey the Bear' hat.
    • Sticks had one of these back on Gorilla Mountain.
  • Drowning My Sorrows: Irene Merriweather did this after she scared Atomicus into leaving Earth forever.
  • Dude, Where's My Respect?:
    • Used as character development in "Confession". The Confessor's Kid Sidekick Altar Boy holds his father in contempt because he worked as a doctor despite being stiffed by his patients and died with no respect, and wants to be a superhero because they are respected. After watching Confessor protect the city through a period where superheroes were not getting any respect at all, he abandons his warped priorities.
    • The heroic El Hombre got hit with this in both his civilian and hero identities. As community organizer Esteban Hidalgo, he never felt accepted by the Latino community no matter how much money and time he spent improving the neighborhood. As El Hombre, he was disappointed to learn that he was the least popular member of Honor Guard — and disgusted with himself to realize that he actually cared about that.
    • The Junkman is a villainous example; he pulls off a bank heist so perfect that no one has any idea who did it, then retires securely in the knowledge that he outsmarted everyone. His joy is short-lived when everyone assumes that the robber must have been caught anyway, simply because the heroes always win. This makes him realize that his victory isn't worth anything if no one knows he outsmarted the heroes.
  • Dumb Muscle: Jitterjack can literally tear a person apart with his bare hands, but his Hulk Speak and other mannerisms indicate serious mental difficulties.
  • Dysfunction Junction: Played straight with the Williams brothers during the "Dark Age" arc. After seeing their parents gunned down during a super-hero fight, Royal becomes a jaded petty thief, while Charles becomes a By-the-Book Cop who gets shot In the Back by Dirty Cops; the two eventually become vigilantes in a Roaring Rampage of Revenge against their parents' killer. They abandon their quest after realizing what they've become, and retire to run a chartered fishing business instead.
  • Easily Forgiven:
    • Done twice by Ellie Jennersen in "Friends and Relations":
      • Ellie's quiet life was upended by her nephew Fred, who used the excuse of renovating her robot museum as a cover for renting out her robots to commit crimes. He ended up framing her for robbery, assault, and terrorism, and almost had her sent to prison. But after everything was straightened out, she simply wished him well in his new life and encouraged him to be an upstanding citizen.
      • Ellie also forgave her former college roommate, the villainous Vivi Viktor, who Mind Raped Ellie, stole her designs, and left her with memory problems for decades. Yet in the end, Ellie forgives Vivi without so much as a sharp word, and is content to let the criminal justice system resolve the matter.
    • In "Dog Days", Andy Merton visits Stormhawk's wife to apologize for burglarizing their home four years ago. She immediately forgives him, being happy to see that he's been carrying on Stormhawk's heroic legacy as G-Dog.
  • Eldritch Abomination:
    • The Hanged Man is seen fighting one at the end of the "Confession" arc, which is revealed to have been the true source of the serial killings in the area that had caused a serious case of social unrest. It's implied that Shadow Hill may house or imprison more.
    • The Hanged Man himself may be an unsettling figure, but he is a hero, albeit a Terror Hero with power akin to the likes of The Spectre.
    • "Where the Action Is" deals with a comic book publisher deciding — after a bad run in with several superbeings angry about what his comics have been saying about them — that maybe it's time to switch to cosmic based stories, because nobody of that nature would care about some little comic book, right? This assertion is proven very, very, wrong...
    • Eldritch Abominations are just a part of the neighborhood for the Shadow Hill district. The residents' daily routines includes refreshing the wards protecting their homes while ignoring the tentacled horrors retreating from daylight. The people who live there get by because they've gotten used to the vampires, the things that terrify the vampires, the Hanged Man hanging about, and all of the other unsettling weirdness that comes with the place.
    • The story "Thumbtacks & Yarn" introduces the Blasphemy Boys, a government agency out to contain such horrors, such as the Batrachi. It goes badly for them.
      • Later on in the same issue we see a glimpse of what looks like one that's been imprisoned. It's a fragment of the Oubor, locked up but still capable of influencing the world outside.
    • Whatever the "Oubor" is that the Broken Man is so afraid of sounds like one. It's eventually confirmed that it is. It turns out to be a primordial darkness which has been around since the early days of man, and takes their existence personally. It's been manipulating and infecting heroes, erasing any and all knowledge of itself, and has been battling the living incarnations of counterculture music.
    • The Unbodied, myths who were once worshipped, and would like very much to be so again, trying to get back into the world by any means they can. One of them, He Who Lies Buried, is tied to the origin of American Chibi.
    • It's said that the Void Between the Worlds is a black and featureless place, filled with hungry, nasty, vengeful things trying to break through. It's also believed that the Pale Horseman is one of those horrors given human form.
  • Electric Black Guy: Rachel "Electric" Brown is an Electric Black Gal.
  • The Empath: Zo the Zirr is a Binder who can touch other beings and make them share their thoughts and feelings.
  • Empathic Environment: The climax of "The Dark Age" has Astro City — the source of the dark energy gripping the populace — drenched in a sudden rainstorm, culminating with a Battle in the Rain between Charles, Royal, the Silver Agent, Lord Sovereign, and the Pale Horseman. Once the villains are vanquished, the rain suddenly stops.
  • Empowered Badass Normal:
    • The Silver Agent was created after a postman named Alan Craig touched a mysterious floating glob of silver in a cave. It gave him a perfect body with enhanced strength, speed, senses, and reflexes.
    • The second Confessor uses magic to supplement his Badass Normal training, as he lacks the vampiric abilities that his predecessor used.
    • The Black Rapier is a Badass Normal who used a rejuvenation serum to prolong his crimefighting career. Even so, time catches up with him eventually.
    • While most of the First Family are various forms of Half-Human Hybrids, Julius and Augustus Furst are normal humans augmented by "vitalons" they've absorbed in their adventures.
  • End of an Age: "The Dark Age" explores how the optimism of the The '50s and The '60s transformed into an era of public skepticism in their leaders, the rise of violent and reckless "heroes", and more. At the end, it is agreed that this age ended when Samaritan averted the Challenger disasternote  and ushered in a new, brighter era of inspirational heroism.
  • Enemy Mine: Occurs in "Wish I May...", when Evil Nerd Simon Says helps Starbright fight crime for 24 hours to prove his sincerity in asking for Starbright's help to organize Simon's birthday party.
  • Ensemble Cast: Even excluding one-shots and background cameos, the lack of a single main character/team (along with the Cryptic Background References and Continuity Nods) causes Astro City to have several dozen characters with regular appearances scattered throughout the series' run. This is especially true in extended story arcs like "The Tarnished Angel" and "The Dark Age", which often star characters who only get a brief appearance in other stories.
  • Epic Hail: During his heroic career, the Astro-Naut gave his friend, Councilman Joe Greenwald, a desk lamp that can send a radio signal to contact him in case of emergencies.note  In the modern day, the Astro City Bank Tower is topped with a giant replica of the beacon; when activated, it sends a radio signal that summons all of the local heroes.
  • Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas:
    • Glowworm (who is African-American, though his skin color is obscured by his constant Power Glow) is specifically incensed that his mother saw a comic book that depicted him as a white supremacist. Publisher Manny Monkton tries to appeal to reason somewhat by asking how she feels about him robbing banks, and that probably didn't help.
    • Steeljack's efforts to reform are partly an effort to live up to the standards his mother set, and he visits her grave repeatedly.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: "Through Open Doors (Part Two)" features Thatcher Jerome, a high-ranking member of the Deacon's mob who makes money through various shakedowns. He's also Happily Married to his wife Rachel and frets over their two kids.
  • Every Episode Ending: Most stories end with a street sign reading "You are now leaving Astro City. Please drive carefully." Issues that are part of a larger arc end with "Astro City Department of Public Works - Under Construction."
    • Except for "Pastoral", which ends with "Caplinville City Limits - Come Back Soon!"
  • Everything's Cuter with Kittens: The one thing Cammie's willing to admit about the farm: the kittens are cute.
  • Everytown, America: Caplinville in "Pastoral" feels very much like this.
  • Evil Doppelgänger: Starfighter once had to fight his alternate-dimension evil counterpart.
  • Evil Genius: Naturally, Astro City is full of these. See the individual tropes for examples.
  • Evil, Inc.:
    • TransGene genetically engineers half-human Beast Men.
    • The Black Lab performs underground science for anyone willing to pay.
  • Evil Is Not a Toy: Dr. Aegyptus tried summoning the Oubor in exchange for eternal life. He didn't get what he was after.
  • Evil Nerd:
    • Simon Says is a Teen Genius who turned to crime after being relentlessly bullied in school.
    • The Mecha-Nerds are a group of high school science fair winners who were turned into robots, then decided to go on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge.
  • Evil Parents Want Good Kids:
    • The original Quarrel was a small-time crook with a gimmicky bolt-blaster. When his first child was born, he cheerfully hands out cigars to his villainous colleagues and declares that she won't be a criminal like himself. In his later years, he's thrilled that she's become a world-renowned superhero.
    • Thatcher Jerome may be a racketeer in the Deacon's mob, but he frets over his adult children and almost loses his cool when his college son's grades start to dip.
    • The original Goldenglove was a criminal who'd always tell his kids to go to school and not follow in his shoes.
  • Evil Sorcerer: Infidel, the Arch-Enemy of Samaritan, is fully capable of using magic to create Artificial Humans, conquer time and space, and create his own realities. He is equally comfortable with both magic and technology, but prefers spells when given a choice.
  • Evil Twin: Brief mention is made of the Worst Family, evil versions of the First Family from another dimension. The simple fact that these situations can happen motivates a defense attorney to turn a hopeless case on its head by bringing up the incontestable idea that maybe it was his client's evil twin who killed that woman in front of 59 eyewitnesses.
  • Exact Words: The spells empowered by Tzammath take the form of contracts — essentially: "take this power, and serve Tzammath". Her cult cuts off access to her (extremely powerful and useful) spells in an effort to forcibly conscript all the magic-users who've been using them without serving her in exchange. As it turns out, Tzammath happens to be a raging egotist who LOVES showing off — having mages use her power is doing her will. And she's not happy with her cult for stopping that.
  • Exposed Extraterrestrials: The Jarranathans are pink-skinned humanoid aliens whose only "clothing" are leafy vines that strategically cover any awkward bits.
  • Extradimensional Power Source: Both Lord Sovereign and The Pale Rider derive their powers from the dark energy in the Void Between the Worlds. The more one uses their powers, the weaker the other becomes; this leads them to try and kill each other.
  • Extra-Strength Masquerade: In "Pastoral", the Close-Knit Community's means of acting as a collective Secret-Keeper is by using Obfuscating Stupidity. They do it so well that Cammie feels like they are in a Masquerade that only she can see through.

    Tropes F-H 
  • Face Framed in Shadow: In "Game Over", the King-In-Chains' face is obscured due to the lighting of his cell, but there's a certain spider-y hint to his features.
  • Face on a Milk Carton: The cover of Astro City #3 has Astra pictured on a milk carton when she goes missing.
  • Fad Super: Occasionally employed in a self-aware manner.
    • Flashbacks to The Fifties might feature an appearance by the Bouncing Beatnik, who actually changes identities to social trends of the time. There've been six known incarnations in-universe: Mister Cakewalk, Jazzbaby, Zootsuit, the Bouncing Beatnik, the Halcyon Hippie, and Glamorax. The Beatnik's story began in the mid-19th century, before the founding of Astro City, with the murder of the mystic troubadour Silverstring and the immolation of his silver-stringed guitar.
    • "The Dark Age" references the Real Life kung fu fad of The '70s with the Jade Dragons, and the space race with the Apollo Eleven.
    • Older stories have featured brief glimpses of the Frontiersman, complete with coonskin cap.
    • In a flashback, Martha Sullivan reveals that as a teenager, she briefly considered becoming a super-heroine, "Mind-Over-Mattie". Her costume consisted of a tie-dyed shirt with a domino mask and a brown vest.
      "It was The '60s. I also wanted to be one of The Doors."
    • A story set in the early 20th century featured Steampunk heroine Dame Progress.
  • Fag Hag: Beautie, a human-sized robotic fashion doll, has an apartment above a gay bar and is friends to the local gay community because they understand what it's like to feel separate from the norm (if in a different way). It also helps that they don't try to proposition her.
  • Fake Danger Gambit: Inverted in "Great Expectations" to make the protagonist look less heroic. After Mitch Goodman is mistaken for a real superhero and endangered as a result, his friends stage an "attack" where he is badly humiliated. The public quickly loses interest, allowing Mitch to return to a life of peace and safety.
  • Fake Ultimate Hero: Queenslaw pretended to be selfless superheroes so they could steal from the criminals they captured.
  • Fancy Dinner: As part of their truce, Samaritan and Infidel meet for dinner once a year to converse and take measure of each other. Infidel, being a Man of Wealth and Taste, invariably prepares a lavish spread whenever he hosts. Samaritan's efforts... vary.
  • The Fantastic Faux: The First Family are analogous to the Four, being a Super Family Team of space-age-inspired explorers and adventurers. Note that "First Family" is a moniker occasionally used for the team within the Marvel universe, making this a not-too-subtle Shout-Out.
  • Fantastic Racism: Earthpride is an anti-alien hate group that violently attacks aliens and their human supporters.
  • Fantasy Kitchen Sink: The series definitely qualifies — pretty much anything fantastical will exist in some form, somewhere, in this 'verse.
  • Fantastic Legal Weirdness:
    • In one storyline, attorney Vincent Oleck is defending a mobster who had murdered someone in front of dozens of witnesses used a "superhero defense", pointing out known cases of crimes actually committed the accused's evil twin from another dimension, supposedly dead people getting up and walking away none the worse for wear, etc. Between the sheer audacity of the argument and a mood of public guilt over the recent wrongful execution of the Silver Agent, it worked. The case also became a landmark in American legal praxis, and led to changes in how cases with metahuman involvement were handled. Lampshaded later when an older Oleck states that there is no way that defense would fly in the comic's present day.
    • Another story looks at legal services in Shadow Hill, the city's supernatural district. Ghosts can be called up to settle their disputed wills; when a magician discovers their spells are contracts with higher powers, they can get a lawyer to figure out the terms; and vampires and other quasi-immortals can hire professional Renfields to help with their financial holdings, transferring the holdings to the Renfield when they die (or appear to), and the Renfield transferring the holdings back to them (minus a commission for the service) when they show up with a new identity.
    • In "Where the Action Is", super-heroine Nightingale angrily confronts publisher Manny Monkton for insinuating that she is in a lesbian relationship with her sidekick Sunbird. He blows off the complaint, noting that she can't sue him without revealing her Secret Identity.
  • Fate Worse than Death: One of the Blasphemy Boys gets controlled by something, and one of the others shoots him through the head. Immediately thereafter, his ghost rises up and says he hadn't been doing any of it. Before he can get further the thing grabs his soul. The last survivor of the team even wonders if the thing had actually killed him, or whether he was still alive.
  • Fighting Your Friend: One story in "Thumbtacks & Yarn" has a malevolent force possess one of the Blasphemy Boys, then shoots two members of the team. In retaliation, Cal Tarrant shoots him in the head.
  • Fight Off the Kryptonite
    • The Confessor's Heroic Sacrifice involves taking on men armed with hologram cross-generators, guns that shoot giant wooden stakes, holy water, etc. and succeeding in revealing the Alien Invasion despite all this.
      • And don't forget he wears a shirt with a big, shiny cross on it because the constant pain this causes helps him overcome the vampiric bloodlust.
    • In "The Tarnished Angel" arc, once the conflicted Steeljack finally realizes what he's fighting for and that he's the only one who can save everyone, he's able to overcome the special "vibro-magnetic" weapons that were used to take him down before.
  • Film Noir: "The Tarnished Angel" and its sequel, "Things Past", are noir stories about broken, cynical people trying to get by in a heartless world.
  • The First Superheroes: The first superhero depends on who you ask, as all of its history is related firsthand by either bystanders or modern heroes, with all the inaccuracies and biases that entails (that the timeline has been repeatedly warped because of Infidel's multiple attempts to erase his nemesis Samaritan from existence does not help.) It's generally held that the first supers emerged in the late nineteenth century, and that, for whatever reason, many of them came to Romeyn Falls, a bustling Midwestern city that became a Weirdness Magnet. These heroes would eventually inspire other heroes, ultimately transforming Romeyn Falls into the modern Astro City.
  • Fish out of Temporal Water:
    • Samaritan is a time-traveler who averted the Challenger disaster, but rewrote his history so that he has no place in the future.
    • Also Infidel, Samaritan's arch nemesis, is a time-lost villain whose own timeline was inadvertently destroyed by Samaritan's actions. Interestingly, neither of them has much trouble adjusting. note 
  • Five-Man Band Concert: "Powerchord" is a literal example — they're a musical band composed of five super-powered beings.
  • Five-Second Foreshadowing: While visiting The Fixit Man, Steeljack puts on a pair of mystic glasses that allegedly revealed who would die soon — and sees the Grim Reaper looming behind Fixit and Cutlass. They are under attack by the Iron Guard seconds later.
  • Flashback Cut: "Her Dark Plastic Roots" has moments where Beautie's speculations on her origin are interrupted by quick flashbacks to a happy voice excited over her creation.
  • Flying Brick: Many characters have this as a default power set, most notably Samaritan, Beautie, and The Gentleman. The generic nature of these powers is lampshaded when a character describes another superhero, Roustabout, as having "real vanilla powers".
  • Follow the White Rabbit: Done with a kitten in "Pastoral", which leads Camilla to a discovery that solidifies her summer plans.
  • Forced Transformation:
    • In "Through Open Doors (Part Two)", metallurgist Andrew Wilson was studying an alien artifact when he accidentally released the gas within. A moment later, he is transformed into the self-proclaimed Ore-Master, a ten-foot-tall monster made of earth metals and burning with internal fire.
    • When the heroic Hellhound is infected with Black Velvet's Hate Plague, he involuntarily changes into his gigantic One-Winged Angel form.
  • Foreshadowing:
    • In the very first appearance of the Gentleman in "Welcome to Astro City" (published in 1996), there is a crowd of people, including a girl with pigtails in a green sweater. She's the reason he exists. This doesn't get explained until issue #43 of the Vertigo series (published in 2017), making this over 20 years of foreshadowing.
    • In "Justice Systems", Vincent Oleck gets flashes of a black featureless void beyond reality, filled with hungry and vengeful Eldritch Abominations. This is explored later in "The Dark Age" story arc.
    • A subplot in the "Confession" story arc revolves around a series of murders in Shadow Hill; the only clue to the cause was a glimpse of an Eldritch Abomination fighting the Hanged Man one evening. Sixteen years later, the abomination is finally revealed as The Oubor, foe of the Broken Man.
    • The end of "Thumbtacks & Yarn" has the Broken Man holding some newspaper clippings about the Menagerie Gang, the Ore-Master and the Silver Adept, all of whom are mentioned or featured in following issues.
    • "The Sorcerer's Assistant" makes mention that there was a "silver harmony" about Astro City that drew the Silver Adept to it, or possibly an absence. Something that takes on a different light after the stories about Silverstring and Glamorax.
    • During "The Sky's the Limit", the narrator mentions the Gentleman first appeared fighting the Bund-O-Teurs, but despite this there was damage and death, including children being orphaned, and one specific man in a green sweater. These details prove to be very important a few issues later.
  • Fountain of Youth: Crackerjack looks for something to restore his youthful physique once he starts becoming incapacitated due to his advancing age.
  • Fourth-Wall Observer:
    • There's the Broken Man, who is fully aware of his status as a fictional character and spends most of his time commenting on the same. This is actually his superpower - he's in an institution, but can "sidestep" out of his body, putting him on a metafictional level outside of standard reality. He ran into a surprise when, while trying to tell a story about the Bouncing Beatnik, he introduced another character who promptly hijacked the story to tell their own.
    • Tillie Armstrong is another example; she doesn't quite get that she's fictional, but is well aware there's an outside audience.
  • Frame-Up:
    • In "Confession", there is a spate of robberies seemingly performed by Crackerjack.
    • "Victory" begins with several female villains accusing Winged Victory of secretly being their leader, using her heroic persona as an act.
  • Friendly Neighborhood Vampire: The Confessor.
    • It is also implied that the vampires who live in Shadow Hill all behave — or else.
  • From Nobody to Nightmare: "The Eagle and the Mountain" gives us the story of a lowly slave named Kiyu, and how he eventually becomes Infidel, the reality-shattering Evil Sorcerer Arch-Enemy of Samaritan.
  • Functional Magic: In the Astro City cosmos, magic runs on theurgy, with the god-like Entities commanding the fundamental forces of sorcery. Magicians call on the Entities' power to fuel their spells, offering rituals, prayers, sacrifice, etc. in return. Some of the Entities are selective, only allowing their power to be used for goals they're sympathetic to. The 'big seven', however, the seven eldest and most powerful Entities, will allow anyone who calls on them to use their power. In at least one Entity's case, spells calling on their power are to all intents and purposes contracts.
  • Fusion Dance:
    • Jitterjack is a villainous composite example; he appears as two bisected men joined together lengthwise, with more than double the speed, reflexes, and agility of a normal person.
    • After Andy Merton steals an amulet once possessed by Stormhawk, it accidentally triggers a fusion of Andy with his corgi Hank, creating G-Dog. The dog's loyalty and herd instinct influence him, causing him to give up crime and become a hero.
    • The Ubersaurus, the finest weapon of the Ziri Empire, a beast made of ten thousand of their loyalest (and mind-merged) troops mushed into one. The First Family manage to figure out how to disrupt the link holding it together and it collapses.
  • Gadgeteer Genius:
    • The first Assemblyman was a villain who built dangerous devices and rampaging robots for whoever could pay.
    • The Junkman's gimmick is that he uses stuff that's been thrown out to create his devices, as he considers himself cast off by society because of his age.
    • Similarly, the Toymaker repurposes children's toys into dangerous devices.
    • Then there's Jack-In-The-Box II, who is the CEO and lead inventor at a toy company, and whose weapons are enhanced versions of his various products. He's also smart enough to cobble together a quick-freeze spray from leftover car parts in a junkyard.
      • It runs in the family — his father became the first Jack-In-The-Box while working for a toy company and discovering his designs were secretly sold to the mob as weapons.
    • The Mock Turtle is a naive scientist who built an all-environment exploration suit, but stole it when his company wanted someone else to actually pilot it.
    • Dr. Gearbox builds a variety of devices, vehicles, and Mecha-Mooks with his expertise. His daughter, Elaine Girbachs, also qualifies, as her expertise surpassed her father's.
    • The Astro-Naut was so smart that he could recreate alien technologies after just seeing it being used.
    • Demolitia, leader of the Unholy Alliance, once escaped from prison by building a jackhammer out of a toilet.
    • The great-grandson of the late Radio Raider fixes super-gear as a hobby.
  • Gang of Hats: Astro City has lots of these, usually serving as Mooks and background color. There are even criminal cliques who've become addicted to being sharp-dressed coordinated crooks.
    • The Sweet Adelines are a gang who dress like members of a barbershop quartet.
    • The Dopple Gang are shapeshifters who commit crimes as celebrities.
    • The Menagerie Gang are bank robbers who wear animal-head masks.
    • The Dominos are mob enforcers who wear black full-body suits adorned with dots.
    • The Robber Barons commit crimes while dressed in black robes and Victorian powder wigs.
    • Ace High and the Gambling Men are robbers dressed in western gambler outfits.
    • The Mount Rushmore Four are four criminals disguised as US Presidents.
    • The Skullcrushers are a high-tech group of mercenaries in skull-shaped Powered Armor.
    • The Mime Gangs are mimes who commit robberies.
    • The Screampunks are basically a gang of horror movie monsters with supertech (although it's ambiguous whether they're actually monsters).
    • The Chessmen, who all dress like chess-pieces. By the time of the Vertigo series however, due to turnaround and the odd spot of usurpation, they've undergone serious Motive Decay, and no longer have anything to do with chess outside the costumes.
  • Deal with the Devil: In order to complete his work, Dr. Bertram Garneau — a fervent progressive idealist — makes an agreement with an amoral arms dealer to sponsor his research.
  • Genre Deconstruction: Astro City is a deconstruction and a reconstruction; it focuses on the impact of superheroes on regular people, but also on the inner thoughts of heroes and villains. Even more so, it deals with those issues in ways that are not just negative or cynical as deconstructions often are. For example, one story deals with a parent bringing his children to Astro City, only to be greeted with a chaotic night full of angry weather elementals; yet despite the danger, he decides they should stay, as the strength and idealistic community of the city were values he wanted his children to have. Other stories deal with a hero trying to balance the needs of his neighborhood and the needs of his unborn child, or a lawyer leveraging superhero tropes to benefit his client but subsequently endangering his family. Kurt likes to keep his fans guessing.
  • Genre Shift: A meta-example — Kurt Busiek has noted that Max O'Millions, an Honor Guard member in The '50s and The '60s, started life as an "Astro Comics"note  non-superhero character similar to Richie Rich. He was retooled into a superhero when they came back into vogue, in homage to a similar retooling for characters like Martian Manhunter.
  • Genre Throwback: The heroes of the 20s and 30s such as the Cloak of Night and the Five Fists are homages to old pulp stories, such as The Shadow.
  • Gentleman Thief: Ned of "Deep Dark Woods" originally started off as a dapper criminal called the Gentleman Bandit.
  • The Ghost: The occult serial killer in the Confessor arc is never seen or even named. Except for a brief glimpse at the end, as a gigantic Eldritch Abomination fighting the Hanged Man.
  • Girlish Pigtails: Several — American Chibi, Matilda "Tillie" Armstrong, and Cammie's nine-year-old cousin Holly in "Pastoral."
  • Girl Friday: Raitha McCann, the Silver Adept's personal secretary, fits this trope to a tee — a typical day's work includes rescheduling the Adept's appointments, plotting the most expedient interdimensional travel routes, and placating angry gods while the boss is out.
  • Girl Next Door: Silver Agent explicitly describes his first girlfriend this way.
  • Give Him a Normal Life: Inverted in "Serpent's Teeth", after Jack-In-The-Box II is attacked by evil future versions of his unborn son (they turned evil because he died and wasn't available as a father). Jack eventually decides to semi-retire from super-heroics to raise the child; he recruits a replacement and relegates himself to Mission Control support.
  • Giving Them the Strip: In "A Little Knowledge", low-level Mook "Eyes" Eisenstein gets tied up to a fence by Jack-In-The-Box's entangling confetti. He manages to escape by twisting out of his jacket, leaving it still tied to the fence.
  • Glory Days:
    • In "Lovers Quarrel", Crackerjack and Quarrel are haunted by the growing realization that this might be happening to them, as their age makes it more and more difficult to keep up with their superheroics.
    • Played with in "Old Times"; retired hero Supersonic is abruptly dragged into action by his civilian partner Ed Robbins because Ed is having a hard time admitting that he is past his prime. Ed is hoping that the two of them can continue their adventures together.
  • Glory Hound:
    • The Conquistador in "The Tarnished Angel", who is actually the disgraced superhero El Hombre, who misses being famous so much that he stages a supervillain attack so that he can stop it and become famous again.
    • Crackerjack, a boastful, wisecracking, attention-stealing, self-promoting vainglorious flamboyant showboat who loves signing autographs, merchandising his likeness, and upstaging everyone else nearby, is undoubtedly Astro City's premiere example of this trope.
  • Glory Seeker: In "Confession", this is what motivates Altar Boy to go to Astro City, as he dreams of being a Kid Sidekick to get the respect his family never received. He snaps out of this mindset after the Confessor's death.
  • Godiva Hair:
    • Infidel's homunculi appear as naked women with flowing hair.
    • In "The Gordian Knot", Astra's former boyfriend Gavrad is dating Carissa, an orange humanoid alien with floor-length hair and wearing only a bikini bottom.
  • Go-Karting with Bowser: In "The Eagle and the Mountain", Samaritan and Infidel eventually realized the futility in continuing their feud when it became clear that there was no way either of them would ever be able to win, and thus set up a yearly meeting along these lines just to compare notes and talk instead. It's interesting to note that at this point they don't even seem to regard one another as enemies. There's a lot of mutual respect in that arrangement. Though it should be noted they're still indulging in stratagems to wear the other down, psychologically and emotionally. And Infidel himself admits he isn't sure who will be the victor of that battle.
  • Gold Digger: Charles Williams' ex-wife Darnice. She flirts with anyone who has money, spends his earnings on personal luxuries, even encourages him to take bribes as a way to supplement their income, then leaves him when he refuses to be a Dirty Cop.
  • Good-Guy Bar: Within Astro City are two prominent examples.
    • Bruiser's Bar is a rough-and-tumble dive, complete with popcorn, longnecks, and arm-wrestling.
    • On the opposite end of the spectrum is Butlers, a very discreet private club with formal eveningwear and elegantly catered meals, suitable for special events.
  • Good Feels Good: A major reason why G-Dog fights crime is because performing heroic acts gives him an overwhelming sense of joy and pride, thanks to his dog half.
  • Good Is Not Dumb: Many of the heroes are reasonably nice even as they foil the villains' plans, but the Gentleman is arguably the quintessential example — he is unerringly polite, and was still smart enough to avoid capture by alien invaders who had imprisoned almost all of the other heroes.
  • Go Through Me: At one point, Royal Williams is trapped on a rooftop as the Blue Knight prepares to shoot him. Suddenly, his brother Charles appears, standing in front of Royal and insisting that the Knight will have to shoot him first if he wants to get his brother.
  • Got Volunteered: Done narratively in "Through Open Doors (Part One)". Ben Pullam volunteers himself to be humanity's ambassador to the Kvurri after the reader concentrates on him at a key moment (as urged on by The Broken Man).
  • Government-Exploited Crisis: Occurs during the "Confession" story arc. In the midst of growing public skepticism over superheroes, the neighborhood of Shadow Hill is rocked by a series of brutal murders. The mayor begins pushing for heroes to be registered; when they refuse and the murders continue, the Mayor becomes increasingly hostile, culminating in a citywide ban on all heroes and the capture of all violators. Ultimately justified as the mayor is a member of a race of shapeshifting aliens, who are neutralizing superheroes worldwide prior to invading the planet.
  • Gratuitous Ninja: One issue of "The Dark Age" starts off with a martial arts fight between two kung-fu superheroes and a team of flying jetpack ninjas.
  • Half-Human Hybrid: Most members of the First Family are this to every degree imaginable. While Dr. Augustus Furst and his brother Julius are fully human, Augustus' adopted twins Nick and Natalie are half-human, half-Beast Man hybrids. Then Natalie marries the monster prince of an underground city and have a daughter Astra, while Nick marries a human woman and have twins Karl and Sasha with their own powers...
  • Hand Blast:
    • The villain HandGun had an arsenal of specialized gauntlets which fire different types of energy beams. When he's mysteriously murdered, his widow is stuck wondering what she's going to do with a basement cybernetics lab and about twenty different Hand Blast-producing gauntlets.
    • Glowworm fires blasts of radioactive green energy from his hands.
    • Nick Furst uses his hands to manipulate and control the energies inside his body.
  • Hand-or-Object Underwear: G-Dog defeats the Lichen-Thrope by pulling its human master out of its torso. The guy is stranded in the street in nothing but red boxers, desperately covering his crotch with his hands.
  • Happily Married:
    • From the First Family, there's Natalie Furst to Rex Zorus, the monster prince of an undersea kingdom. Rex defied his own mother to marry Natalie, and the entire family has remained fairly cordial for over twenty years.
    • Zachary Johnson, the second Jack-In-The-Box, has been married to local television news anchor Tamra Dixon for decades. He gave up super-heroics after finding out she was pregnant, and they have been nothing but supportive of each other over the years.
    • Michael Hendrie (M.P.H.) is briefly mentioned as being happily married to a woman named Sally. Their relationship is not shown, but given how M.P.H. has been seen treating his girlfriends, it's hard to imagine them having any sort of drama.
    • Duncan Keller, a.k.a. Starfighter, is married to Illula, Seven-Fold Empress of Jarranatha. They have a son and daughter, have been together for nearly fifty years, and still shamelessly flirt with each other.
    • Thatcher Jerome, a high-ranking member of the Deacon's mob, is devoted to his wife Rachel, even into their senior years. Thatcher turned down a chance to give himself super powers because he didn't want to disrupt Rachel's contented life.
  • Hard-Drinking Party Girl:
    • Astra Furst becomes this in her late teens, at least if Inside Scoop magazine is to be believed.
      "A hard-partying bad girl since her teen years, she's been linked to everyone from Shia LaBeouf to Prince Harry!"
    • Word of God is that the Silver Adept is this, to put a twist on the usual "stodgy old mage" archetype. She sleeps in late, dresses in tank tops and form-fitting pants, and even sports a mystical tramp stamp. Presumably she uses her powers to sober up when needed.
  • Hate Plague: When Black Velvet is mortally wounded by Jitterjack, her body releases black energy that infects the populace and starts a riot.
  • Have We Met Yet?: Happens to Quarrel II when she first arrives in Astro City — instead of the fearful or suspicious reception she was expecting to get, she's greeted by people who are happy to see her again. Turns out that she will eventually use time travel to arrive three weeks earlier and establish a heroic reputation.
  • Heartbreak and Ice Cream: When Hummingbird II is crying over being rejected by her boyfriend, Cleopatra suggests a "sacred ritual" to help her get over it. Smash Cut to Quarrel, Beautie, Cleopatra, and Hummingbird gleefully sharing relationship stories over pints of ice cream.
  • Heel–Face Turn:
    • Simon Says was a Teen Genius Mad Scientist outcast who became a supervillain due to being bullied by the jocks at school. However, the death of local superhero Starbright, which revealed that he had been a jock that had tried to help Simon when they were younger, causes Simon to reassess things, use Starbright's technology to transition into being a woman (the cause for the bullying against her), and eventually take up Starbright's mantle as a superhero.
    • Steeljack was a small-time villain who eventually realized that his career was essentially pointless. Even when he did make the big score, it never made any difference. After making parole for the final time, he decides to try and improve things in the slum he grew up in, where he becomes an all-around go-to guy if you're having problems, and the caretaker for the local cemetery where his mother was buried. He also ends up inspiring the second Goldengloves to become a hero rather than a criminal like her father. He doesn't consider himself a "hero," exactly, but his actions show him to be a good and decent man.
    • In "Nightmare Life", the Living Nightmare develops a sense of self, overcoming the pain that its various masters used to control it and deciding to become a hero.
    • Andy Merton was a petty criminal who happened to steal the magic amulet that had belonged to Stormhawk. He accidentally triggered it, merging with his corgi and gaining superpowers. He also gained a strong empathic link to the dog, whose sense of loyalty and herd instinct steered him away from crime and toward using his new powers to help people as a hero.
  • Hermetic Magic: Simon Magus was specifically designed to look more "European hermetic" than "carnival prestidigitator".
  • The Hermit: Mister Manta becomes this in "The Deep Blue Sea". After decades marooned on a deserted island, he finds his way back to civilization, only to become rattled because he's so accustomed to being alone. He returns to his island and begins planning his memoirs instead.
  • Heroic BSoD: Street Angel has one after Black Velvet confronts him with the Fridge Logic of Thou Shalt Not Kill. Specifically, she pointed out that for all of his nonlethal combat tactics, it's not like he ensured medical attention for every internal injury he caused and that many thugs likely died in cold alleys because of Street Angel's beatings.
    "How many have you left lying in alleyways these past two years, skull fractured, lung punctured? How many internal injuries? Did they all get medical attention? Did they all live? DID THEY?"
  • Heroic Bystander: This is a recurring element in Astro City, where ordinary people selflessly take risks to save others in need.
    • In "Newcomers", hotel doorman Pete Donacek does a diving catch to save a four-year-old girl from being crushed by a falling car during a giant robot attack. He sees her every day and doesn't even know her name, but is satisfied knowing that he did the right thing for someone.
      "My name is Pete Donacek. I live in Astro City. I wear a uniform too."
    • In "Pastoral", a team of supervillains take down Roustabout in the middle of a carnival attack. An entire crowd of bystanders piles on with farm tools and two-by-fours, winning him enough time to regroup and turn the tide.
    • In "Victory", an injured teenager named Joey Lacroix discovers the secret base of the mastermind destroying Winged Victory's reputation. Despite feeling helpless and alone and scared, he manages to pass the information along, all to help people he had never met.
    • "And, In the End..." shows that there is a citywide network of civilian volunteers who support emergency services personnel after super-conflicts.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Occurs fairly frequently in stories, given the overall idealistic tone of Astro City — heroes won't hesitate to put themselves at risk to save their teammates, their friends, or even total strangers.
    • The Confessor sacrificed his life and reputation to stop an alien invasion — the reputation because the sacrifice revealed that he was a vampire, and made him appear to be a serial killer.
    • Despite possessing immense power, the Silver Agent goes to his execution by the city without any resistance, to avoid possibly altering the future and undoing the valiant efforts of all of the other heroes who will come after him.
    • "Sorrowsday" is about Stormhawk's Heroic Sacrifice, and the shame of the farmer that caused it.
  • Heroic Pet Story: "The Cat Who Walked Through Walls" is focused on Kittyhawk, the pet of Sunshrike and Nightingale.
  • Heroic Vow: Appears in flashback in "Old Times"; in his heyday, Supersonic pledged to himself to always use an original method against each of his opponents. When he's called out of retirement to stop a rampaging robot, he feels shamed because his impending senility has reduced him to simply hitting it until it stops.
  • Heroic Willpower: Ben Naparski, a.k.a. Lord Saampa, has been fighting against the corrupting influence of the Oubor. He tries to steal the Diadem of the Serpent's Eye to control it, but realizes at the last second that wearing it will actually unleash the Oubor. As he struggles to resist, a little girl nearby urges him to remember who he is, which gives him the strength to throw away the Diadem.
  • Heroism Won't Pay the Bills:
    • Averted for the superheroes. Not only can heroes register as Bounty Hunters with local law enforcement agencies, but some teams like Honor Guard and Reflex 6 offer a stipend for members who need financial support.
    • In "Aftermaths", Michael Tenicek is able to devote himself to running a support group for victims of super-battles because Honor Guard has been paying his bills and depositing a modest fund into his bank account.
  • Hero Killer:
    • The insane Pyramid assasin Jitterjack is one, as he mortally wounds the Anti-Hero Black Velvet.
    • Subverted in the case of the first Jack-in-the-Box (Jack Johnson). For decades, it was believed that he was killed in an exploding underground base on Torres Island engineered by the Underlord. However, when his son Zach Johnson led an expedition on the island, they found footage revealing that the real mastermind was Mister Drama, who was dying of cancer and decided to kill himself and Jack-in-the-Box in a dramatic showdown.
  • Hero of Another Story: Happens to just about every super-being at one time or another, since the stories in Astro City typically take the big, planet-shaking battles of traditional superhero comics and reduce them to background color. Instead, the focus is usually on the ordinary citizens and peripheral characters of those events as they try to handle their own, comparatively minor issues.
  • He Who Fights Monsters: Lampshaded in "The Dark Age" as Charles Williams gets to wondering exactly how much difference there is between the current generation of Darker and Edgier "heroes" and the criminals they fight. Later played straight as Charles and his brother Royal grow obsessed with killing their parents' killer that they become the same callous "heroes" that they despised.
  • High-School Sweethearts: In "That Was Then...", Bugleboy and Majorette are teenagers trying to decide what to do with their lives. Bugleboy wants to continue being a superhero, but Majorette wants to retire and go to law school, and are unsure if their relationship can hold.
  • Hive Caste System: The Zirr are insectoid aliens whose society has assigned roles for all adult members. Though they are a war-oriented society, not all roles are related to fighting — non-combat roles like healers, religious leaders, engineers, and empaths are mentioned.
  • Hive Mind: The Gorilla Swarm is an army of insect-headed primates with a hive mind. The story "Everyday Life" has them being controlled by a villain (The Silver Brain), making this a double instantiation of the trope.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard:
    • In "Confession", as part of their effort to register or detain all of the heroes in the city, the Mayor and his supporters threaten to expose the Confessor's secret unless he leaves town or goes into hiding. With this threat, the Confessor deduces that they are actually an alien invasion force and proceeds to thwart them.
    • In "Friends and Relations", the villain Vivi Viktor discovers that her robot Mooks would rather obey Ellie Jennersen instead, because Vivi has been building them with Ellie's designs and mental patterns for decades, allowing them to recognize her as a "friend".
    • Dr. Gearbox died in battle against Honor Guard in 1971. His death was due to a flaw in his Robosaur that his daughter had found and fixed separately... but he didn't know about because he believed that only men could be engineers.
  • Holding Both Sides of the Conversation: Atomicus uses his self-duplicating power to conceal his secret identity.
  • Hold Your Hippogriffs:
    • A straight example from "The Gordian Knot":
      "You look hot enough to power a transwarp liner and sleek enough to out-slink an Aristucian Pillilynx. But then, you always did."
    • "The Menace From Earth" features the First Family's adventures on the planet Zirros, told from the perspective of a native, and features a lot of this as a result.
  • Hollywood Law: In "Things Past", Steeljack's trial is hijacked when Cutlass' high-priced private attorney shows up, takes over his case, presents a litany of evidence and witnesses proving Steeljack's innocence, and moves to have the case dismissed... all in the span of a few hours.
  • Homemade Inventions: This is The Junkman's gimmick; after being forced to retire, he decided to show the world the foolishness of throwing things away. He robs a bank with toy soldiers made into miniature robots, an Etch-a-Sketch repurposed as a fluoroscope, and other equally recycled equipment.
  • Honorary Aunt:
    • After Quarrel broke up with MPH, he found a wife who was a better match for him, and Quarrel became "Aunt Jess" to their kids.
    • The female superheroines of Honor Guard are this to Hummingbird II, as they are friends of her mother. They offer her support, training, and advice, especially in matters that she doesn't want to talk to her mom about.
  • Horrifying Hero: The Hanged Man, who wears a black bodysuit, a burlap sack over his head, and a hangman's noose around his neck. He also just... floats around listlessly, adding to the unsettling aspect.
  • Hot-Blooded: The Point Man jumps into action now and thinks about the consequences next month, if at all.
    "What is this? All the time, you don't dare this, you don't dare that. Sister — I DARE PLENTY!"
  • Hover Tank: A variation — during World War II, the Germans attacked Romeyn Falls with the Bund-O-Teurs, a Nazi squad using propeller-driven one-man flying turrets.
  • Howard Hughes Homage: The Astro-Naut is an overt copy of Howard Hughes, being the Badass Bookworm millionaire owner of an aerospace company who goes on epic adventures. The only reason he won't share his inventions with the US military is the fear that The World Is Not Ready.
  • How We Got Here: Used at times.
    • Issue 32 of the Vertigo series begins with a battered Steeljack being arrested by the police. The next two issues go back to how he got there, revealing Steeljack was actually defending himself.
    • "Yesterday's Heroes" begins with Wolfspider falling into water while being attacked by unseen enemies. The bulk of the story is a flashback from his childhood to the present situation.
  • Hulk Speak: Several characters — typically the more monstrous ones — talk this way. Examples include Jitterjack, Gloo, and the Living Nightmare.
  • Humanity on Trial: This is the purpose of the Incarnate, to determine if humans are fit to join the Continuum, and to destroy the planet if not.
  • Humanoid Abomination: The Hanged Man is a spectral presence who (normally) operates out of the Shadow Hill district of Astro City. It is a silent, foreboding black silhouette, who has its own agenda, but can usually be seen when supernatural dangers threaten its neighborhood.
  • Human Sacrifice: Done in "Hot Time In the Old Town". Under the pretense of a magic show, Dr. Aegyptus and the Jaguar Cult kills two members of the audience as part of a ritual to open a dimensional rift and allow the Oubor to enter reality.
  • Humans Are Special: An alien infiltrator evaluating Earth for possible conquest decides to observe Crackerjack as his "make or break" example of humanity, and moves from personal contempt of Crackerjack to a grudging admiration - that in spite of Crackerjack's egotistical and half-assed approach to heroism, he's still genuinely trying to do good. And then Crackerjack's identity is revealed and the self-righteous old bags in the same apartment building who had looked down on his civilian identity suddenly started talking about how much they loved him and how proud they were... and enraged at this sudden hypocrisy, the infiltrator sends the invasion command.
  • Humble Goal: In "Things Past", the mastermind who's been committing crimes using the gear from retired supervillains did so simply because he wanted to play with his nifty toys.
  • Humongous Mecha:
  • Astro City: This is a popular staple of villainous Robot Masters.
    • The original Assemblyman would create rampaging robots for anyone.
    • Vivi Vector has spent decades using giant robots to attack her enemies.
    • Doc Robotnik builds humongous mecha with a team of human operators inside.
    • Dr. Saturday is a Mad Scientist who builds giant robots resembling cartoon characters.
  • Hunter of Monsters: Mordecai Chalk. A cyborg monster hunter whose missing body parts were destroyed by occult creatures, Chalk makes quite an impression for a character who was only 'on screen' for a handful of panels.
  • Hyper-Destructive Bouncing Ball: The Junkman has trick marbles that are attracted to a target and adhere to him. The more the target tries to dislodge, the faster he attracts them.

    Tropes I-M 
  • I Choose to Stay: American Chibi chooses to stay trapped in her game world with the Unbodied after realizing that she is the reason why it is able to attack Earth. Honor Guard promises to work on a transdimensional communicator so she can contact them, while her game creator adds new elements to the game to give Chibi friends, allies, and advantages.
  • Idiot Hero: Crackerjack is a Badass Normal and skilled acrobat. He's also a bombastic, egotistical, shallow, showboating glory-stealing Jerkass who irritates friends and foes alike. How much of it is real and how much is an act is anyone's guess.
  • I Gave My Word: Infidel has withdrawn into his own pocket dimension and refrained from interfering in human affairs merely because he had promised Samaritan he'd do so.
  • I Have Many Names:
    • In "Waltz of the Hours", it is said the Dancing Master has "a thousand thousand" names, including Al-la-lil-il, the Morning Brother, Xitu of the Evening Light, The Nurturer, The Spark Blower, The Robed God, Pendifisiarni, and the Fisher of Hearts.
    • Likewise, the Hanged Man has hundreds of names, including The Dark One, Tereth-Il, and Kerem the Wise.
    • A low-key example is Rex of the First Family; since the naming convention of Western civilization differs from that in Monstro City, he has alternately been called Rex Zorus, Tyranos Rex, and Rex Majestros at various times.
    • The Master had multiple names, including The Overlord, The Judge, and the White King.
  • I Have No Daughter!: In "Enemy of the Empire", Ziriza the Zirr is shunned by her parents after she failed to defeat the First Family in combat and is Reassigned to Antarctica by the Zirr Empire.
  • I Just Want to Be Normal:
    • Astra Furst knows she's a super-powered Energy Being, and a member of a superhero family, and has absolutely no problem with joining in to save the world when needed. It's what happens between world-saving that gets to her, like being home-schooled and never meeting anyone her age, having to keep a special diet which usually tastes like crap (manganese-flavoured breakfast cereal, anyone?), being restricted in her romantic life and not really having any career choices other than the Family Business...
    • Further explored with the Sideliners, people who have powers that would be useful if they chose to be heroes (or villains), but who for various reasons prefer to lead ordinary lives. Occasionally some villain will get it into their head to capture one of these people and try to force them into service (sometimes after trying and failing to coax them with the promise of money), but such villains are typically in for a rude awakening; Sideliners tend to keep in contact with each other for just such an occasion, and while they don't like to fight, many of them can and will when necessary.
    • Then there's Sticks, who wants nothing more than to be the drummer in a rock 'n roll band. Unfortunately, he's constantly being pursued by super-villains who want to recruit (or enslave) a hyper-intelligent six-foot-plus silverback gorilla into their ranks...
  • I Just Want to Be Special:
    • Mitch Goodman, the former stuntman who plays The Crimson Cougar on the soap opera "Tomorrow's Dawn", seizes any opportunity he can to become a famous star. When his popularity soars after he stops a robbery, he doesn't hesitate to milk the Actor/Role Confusion for his benefit.
    • The villain Mock Turtle spent his childhood trying to find his way into a magical world like Oz or Narnia or Wonderland. He grew up to become an engineer, but became a supervillain after being denied a chance to use the exploration suit he had invented.
    • "The Tarnished Angel" indicates that most B-grade supervillains suffer from this. They're often ordinary folks who happen to come across some sort of Applied Phlebotinum, then try to leverage it into riches and power.
    • Matt Zimmer, Astra's boyfriend, uses this to excuse why he was secretly selling recordings of their dates to gossip media.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends:
    • In Astra's first appearance, she loves her parents and the rest of the First Family, but despite her powers and super-adventures she's still a child and desperately yearns for the friendship of other kids her age. She then runs off to have an "adventure", leaving her superpowered family going out of their minds with worry about which of their enemies have taken her while she's attending elementary school and mastering hopscotch.
    • In "Wish I May...", Teen Genius Evil Nerd Simon Says works with his Arch-Enemy Starbright to bring Simon's old school friends to his lair so they can celebrate Simon's sixteenth birthday party together.
  • I Know Madden Kombat: The Golden Age heroes included the football-themed All-American and his sidekick, the baseball-styled Slugger.
  • I Meant to Do That: In "The Menace From Earth", the First Family routed the Zirr Empire by destroying their mighty Ubersaurus, humiliated the leaders, and smashed their communications array before leaving. Afterwards, the Zirr Empire tells its citizens that their emperor mercifully allowed the humans to live, exiling them after their deeds, and dismissed the communications array as merely an art piece. Zo the Zirr, who witnessed these events, realizes the official account is a massive pile of Blatant Lies.
  • In Case You Forgot Who Wrote It: the full title of the comic is Kurt Busiek's Astro City. Lampshaded by the callsign of the town's main television station, KBAC.
  • The Infiltration: Royal and Charles Williams end up joining the villainous organization Pyramid (on separate occasions) to get the man who killed their parents.
  • Infraction Distraction: Downplayed; when Marella Cowper is helping deliver emergency supplies from the United States to Ecuador, the locals think she has black market connections. In actuality, she's using Honor Guard's teleportation gate system, but lets them perpetuate the myth to avoid more questions.
  • Innocent Bystander: The villains in "Pastoral" menace the people attending a carnival in an attempt to draw out local hero Roustabout.
  • Innocent Bystander Series: Many of the stories Astro City are about what it is like being an ordinary person in a world of super-beings, alien invaders, otherdimensional horrors, and walking cartoon lions.
  • Interrupted Intimacy:
    • At one point in "The Dark Age", two members of the Apollo Eleven are snuggling outdoors at a picnic, only to be interrupted by two of their teammates playing lawn darts very poorly.
      Strangeling: "So, it... the game is to try to hit our teammates?"
    • In "Things Past", Steeljack has a fit when he catches his two teenage groundskeepers making out at the Kiefer Square cemetery... behind his mother's gravesite.
  • Intrepid Reporter: Samaritan's civilian identity is a fact checker at the Current weekly magazine. Subverted as he doesn't do any actual investigation — he only uses their internet connection so his organic computer can monitor news worldwide and alert him to dangerous events.
  • I Resemble That Remark!: Crackerjack laments that his on-and-off ladyfriend Quarrel is mad at him for flirting with other women, even as he's flirting with Nightingale.
  • Is This Thing On?: In "Through Open Doors (Part One)", the intergalactic ambassador Telseth's Big Entrance gets messed up this way.
  • "It" Is Dehumanizing: The Zirr Empire refer to the captured Darcy Conroy-Furst as "it" in their broadcasts.
  • It Only Works Once: The Innocent Gun was a powerful mystic superweapon that was left behind by alien Precursors to be used to protect humanity from a vaguely unspecified future threat, and was crafted so that it could only be used once. Unfortunately, the Point Man ended up using it against another menace, leaving the gun unavailable for the original threat.
  • It's Not You, It's My Enemies:
    • This is the reason the Silver Agent gave his first girlfriend for breaking off their relationship. In reality, he had learned that he was sterile, but didn't want to tell her the truth so she could move on.
    • Sticks, a sentient gorilla trained in combat, is unable to join a band because of his constant fear that that super-villains trying to exploit him would endanger his fellow band members.
  • It Tastes Like Feet: Energy Being Astra Furst says her specially-prepared synthetic breakfast tastes "manganese-flavor," after her mother tells her it is supposed to be grape-flavor. Still, if anyone is going to know what manganese tastes like, it's probably Astra.
  • I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: The Silver Agent breaks up with his girlfriend because he was sterile, while she wanted to start a family.
  • I Was Beaten by a Girl: When Steeljack was being pummeled by Goldenglove's daughter, his only fear was if Samaritan was using his super-senses to see him get beaten up by a 15-year-old girl.
  • I Wish It Were Real: An element in several stories.
    • Loony Leo was a cartoon character brought to life because of a mishap with the Golden Age villain Professor Borzoi's Belief Ray. Leo stopped the villain and started to fade away, but The Gentleman convinces the crowd to save him by believing Leo was real.
    • Beautie is an adult-sized manifestation of the popular Beautie doll for girls. She is actually a robot invented by the genius daughter of a Gadgeteer Genius, who used the doll as a model.
    • One day, the heroes of the popular Australian kids' TV show "Queenslaw" manifested in the real world, fighting crime to the delight of kids and adults nationwide. They're actually a gang of criminals who used Professor Borzoi's Belief technology to commit robberies while impersonating the heroes.
  • Jerkass: The Point Man, the obnoxious Guy Gardner-like 1980s anti-hero.
  • Jewish Mother: Played for laughs with Marta Dobrescu, whose mother continues to nag her to get married (and have grandkids), manipulates her to visit more often, and asks about baseball — as a ghost. That's one of the drawbacks of living in Shadow Hill...
  • Jigsaw Puzzle Plot: The Broken Man story arc. He first introduces himself in issue #1 of the Vertigo series, gives some intriguing and frustratingly bizarre story fragments in issue #5, pops up briefly in a few issues afterwards, then suddenly wraps everything up in issue #37.
  • Jump Scare: In "Graduation Day", Astra and Matt are surprised when a dozen monsters leap out of a nearby creek... to deliver a graduation present from her grandmother.
  • Just a Kid: In "That Was Then...", the teen superheroes are annoyed when they discover that the adult superheroes have been secretly monitoring them during their road trip.
  • Just Like Robin Hood:
    • The Mock Turtle gives all of the money he steals, apart from that which he spends on his own maintenance, to help with the "charitable works" of his childhood love Lucia. Too bad she's actually a Manipulative Bitch who uses his naivete and intellect to build her own criminal empire.
    • Mister Cakewalk, the personification of counterculture music, first manifests at the start of the twentieth century as a defender of local African-Americans. He stole from the rich and redistributes their wealth to the exploited, protected striking rail workers, and once redirected a parade of Rich Bitches through the slums of the city.
  • Kidnapped by the Call: Sarah Brandeis was an ordinary lab technician when she was kidnapped by the sinister Hellsignor during his attack on Earth. To foil his plans, the Point Man stole the Gem of Thebis from him, then tossed it around Sarah's neck. She instantly became the new Cleopatra and banished Hellsignor to another dimension.
  • Kid Sidekick:
    • The original Honor Guard member Leopardman had Kitkat.
    • Altar Boy is this for the Confessor.
      • The second Confessor has the Choirboys, a small group of teens who do surveillance for the Confessor.
    • The All-American had Slugger.
    • The Hispanic-themed El Hombre had his trusty partner Bravo.
    • In the 50s, the Gentleman often worked with the Young Gentleman.
    • The unnamed Master-Apprentice Chain of bird heroines adopt a new Kid Sidekick when the eldest retires. Known members have included Nightflyer, Sunshrike, Nightingale, and Sunbird.
    • For a while Starfight had Quark, until he proved unsuitable for the power.
    • The Jayhawks were a team composed entirely of Kid Sidekicks — Kid Corsair, Buster, Teen Genie, Beachboy, and Rally.
    • Bugleboy and Majorette were male- and female-sidekicks to Music Man.
  • Killer Space Monkey: The Gorilla Swarm, a pack of gorilla monsters with insect heads and a Hive Mind.
  • Kill Him Already!: Gender-flipped. Mortally wounded and unleashing a Hate Plague across the city, Black Velvet begs the Silver Agent to stop it by killing her.
    Silver Agent: I can ease your pain. Take it away. Do you want me to do that?
    Black Velvet: W-will I... live through it?
    Silver Agent: I'm sorry. That, I can't do.
    Black Velvet: G-good... Do it. Please. Now.
  • Kitschy Themed Restaurant: Not surprisingly, there are superbeing-themed restaurants like SuperBistro, Hero Cafe, and T.J. Scoundrels. They feature salvaged super-gear as decor, though the customers can't tell if they're real or shoddy knockoffs from Hong Kong.
  • Knight Templar: The Pale Horseman, a vengeful spirit who incinerated hardened killers and jaywalkers equally.
  • Knowledge Broker: In "The Tarnished Angel," Donnelly Ferguson uses his knowledge of the city's underworld to find jobs for the B-rate villains of Kiefer Square. Steeljack didn't like associating with him, but because Ferguson didn't have a record he was one of the very few people Steeljack could visit without violating his parole. Ferguson arranges for most of the villains to be hired for a city-wide crime spree planned by The Conquistador, who plans to kill them all afterwards.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia:
    • Part of the reason the Broken Man has no allies against the Oubor; it erases any and all evidence it was around, including visual records.
    • This is why Beautie cannot remember her origins, because Beautie was ordered to forget, after her creator was shamed for her creation. Worse, if Beautie tries to remember or uncover her origins, she soon forgets her quest.
  • Law of Conservation of Normality:
    • Astro City refines this to a fine art. The story "Welcome to the Big City" has a single dad who recently moved into town with his two daughters, when the city is attacked by a gigantic storm elemental. Heading to the roof to watch the fight between the monster and the town's superheroes, he is horrified at how casually his neighbors treat the whole thing almost like a party, and he seriously considers leaving town the next day to protect his kids. But after the battle, when he sees how supportive everyone is in the cleanup, he chooses to stay, realizing that those are the values he wants his children to learn.
    • And the story "Newcomers" reveals that this isn't the case for all new arrivals — a fair few just can't take it and will go somewhere else. There are superheroes and villains in other cities, but Astro City is just an exceptional Weirdness Magnet.
      Pete: But that's okay. Somebody's got to live in all the other cities.
    • How does Honor Guard, the world's greatest super-hero team, stay on top of the millions of emergency calls sent in every day? Easy! They have a call center, with thousands of operators employed. Other than the building having matter transporters, materializing at locations around the world for secrecy, and occasionally being a key component in defeating super-villains, it's more or less just like any other call center employed by large organizations everywhere.
  • Lazy Alias: Samaritan uses the alias Asa Martin in order to maintain a cover identity. Granted, he only bothers with the civilian identity because the alien computer that informs him of global emergencies needs an internet connection.
  • Leeroy Jenkins: This is how American Chibi is introduced — her first appearance consists of directly charging into the Iron Legion to disrupt their robbery plans. Then, minutes later, she tries to open a giant floating door by slamming it at top speed.
    "SPLAMMO! Did you see that? Did you see that?!"
  • Legacy Character: Given the long-running nature of Astro City and the lack of Comic-Book Time, many characters end up this way. A few examples include Cleopatra, Jack-in-the-Box, The Blue Knights, Quarrel, Stray, The Flying Fox, the Silver Centurions, the Confessor, Starfighter, Starbright.
    • A villainous example is Goldenglove; the first one was a small-time crook with a pair of alien gauntlets, while his daughter plans to use them to become a classy burglar. With help from Steeljack, she ends up learning to be a hero instead.
    • Another villain example is Mister Drama and his granddaughter, the Drama Queen.
    • It's suggested that the Assemblyman might be one, as there is both an earlier villain and a modern hero with the same name.
    • Stray is implied to be this, the earlier one being a heroic wolfman, the later one being a wolfwoman who'd once been a villain, and still has a dark edge.
    • In one of the more unusual examples of this trope, American Chibi gifts a pair of her mystic scrunchies to her creator, Marguerite Li.
    • Another unusual one is Stormhawk and G-Dog; both are heroes formed by bonding a human and an animal, but the two have never directly met.
  • Le Parkour: Practiced by the Trouble Boys, a bunch of young men who admire Jack-in-the-Box and race him across rooftops for fun. When you can practically keep up with a guy with spring-powered leaps, you're good.
  • Let's You and Him Fight:
    • Happens between Samaritan and The Confessor at one point in "Victory", though The Confessor knows the fight is pointless. But he proceeds to fight Samaritan to a standstill anyway just to show that he can't allow the ultra-powerful to push him around.
    • Played for drama in the story "Sorrowsday". Krigari Ironhand, a dimensional conquerer, is goaded by a mysterious stranger into attacking Honor Guard. The two clash repeatedly over the years until Krigari is finally defeated thanks to a Heroic Sacrifice by Stormhawk. The stranger is then revealed to be the farmer Eth, who was trying to stop Krigari before he could conquer Eth's realm — and becomes racked with guilt over causing Stormhawk's death.
  • Lightning Lash: El Hombre had a special, high-tech titanium-steel whip that could snap bullets out of mid-air and shock villains into submission.
  • Like an Old Married Couple: Crackerjack and Quarrel have been with each other so long that they're effectively married, even though they've never been exclusive to the other and have broken up (and gotten back together) dozens of times.
  • Line-of-Sight Alias:
    • In "Hot Time In the Old Town", Jazzbaby disguises herself as a human to interrogate Cal Tarrant. When Cal asks her name, she sees a sign for the Harmony dance hall and calls herself "Harmony Chord".
    • In "A Little Knowledge", petty thief Andrew "Eyes" Eisenstein is scoping out Jack-in-the-Box's apartment when Jack and his wife (a local TV newscaster) appear. To allay suspicion, he asks her for an autograph, and gives his name as "Jack Bachsinger".
  • Locked into Strangeness: Samaritan has his hair turn blue after the Time Travel incident that gives him his powers. He can change it to white at will, but apparently not back to its original black. His archenemy Infidel's hair also changed color as a result of his experimentation with the same energy that caused Samaritan's incident, going from black to green, though when not using his powers it's blonde.
  • Logging onto the Fourth Wall: "Pastoral" featured a character looking up the hero Roustabout on herocopia.com. If you looked up herocopia.com at the time, you got taken to the same page as in the comic. For a time, herocopia.com was a sanctioned fan site, until a database error erased most of the wiki. Fortunately, it has since been restored and is now the most extensive wiki for the series online.
  • The Lonely Door: In "Through Open Doors (Part One)", Telseth of Kvurri arrives in Astro City through a fifty-foot-tall door floating above the Gaines River.
  • Longing for Fictionland: As a child, the Mock Turtle always was trapped in wardrobes because he was trying to find a portal to Narnia. As an adult, after arriving in Astro City and accepted into the super-community, he sees the city from above. Through his green-tinted visor, he breathlessly notes that it resembles an Emerald City.
  • Long-Lived:
    • The Black Rapier has effectively doubled his natural lifespan with the aid of a rejuvenation serum.
    • Julius and Augustus Furst have been adventuring for nearly a century, thanks to "vitalons" they've absorbed on their adventures.
    • The Master was an ancient racist mastermind who was reportedly not entirely human.
  • Loser Son of Loser Dad:
    • In "Confession", Brian wants to be a superhero to avoid this trope.
    • In "The Tarnished Angel", Yolanda Costello — daughter of the super-villain Goldenglove — vows to avoid this by being a smarter crook than her dad was. In the end she learns to be a hero instead.
    • Jessie Taggart is so disgusted by her criminal dad that she takes up his gear and identity to become a hero. She ends up being the world-famous superhero Quarrel.
  • Lost Superweapon: The Innocent Gun, a weapon left on Earth by alien Precursors as the final defense against an unspecified future threat. It was hidden in an ancient underground temple, and harnesses one of the fundamental powers of the cosmos.
  • Lovable Jock: "Wish I May..." has Chet Markham, quarterback of the high school football team, and the only non-Jerk Jock who tries repeatedly to befriend Teen Genius Evil Nerd Simon Siezmanski.
  • Lovecraftian Superpower: Both Lord Sovereign and The Pale Rider derive their powers from the dark energy of the Eldritch Abominations in the Void Between the Worlds. Lord Sovereign is able to fire energy blasts and Mind Control people, while the Pale Rider is able to incinerate people instantly.
  • Love Is in the Air: In "Waltz of the Hours", the arrival of the Dancing Master causes this to the people of Astro City, stirring up the sparks of love in the hearts of everyone around him.
  • Love Makes You Dumb: The brilliant (but very naive) Gadgeteer Genius Mock Turtle is blinded by love for his childhood sweetheart Lucia, who he constantly imagines as an innocent girl to be sheltered from his roguish life as a super-villain. She, in turn, easily exploits his intellect and engineering talents for her own criminal gain.
  • Lower-Deck Episode: Some of the most memorable stories are of this trope, usually focusing on the viewpoint of minor characters in a Superhero universe, witnessing Crisis-level events from the sidelines or behind the scenes. The "Local Heroes" trade collection provide a nice selection, with stories focusing on characters such as a hotel doorman and a lawyer.
  • Mad Scientist: Professor Borzoi, Dr. Ganss, Dr. Nautilus, and Dr. Lewis Croft all do strange and unspeakable things with conventional science.
    • Infidel is an Evil Sorcerer who is also capable of using Mad Science when he wants.
  • The Mafia: The main crime syndicate in Astro City is run by The Deacon.
    • During The '70s, a gang war raged between The Deuce, "Tommy" Gunn, Brian "Braintrust" Rusk, Kuo "Bamboo" Tseh-Shi, and Josef "The Platypus" Platapopulous.
    • "Tommy" Gunn took over the Forgione Mob after Dominic "Junior" Forgione, his son Richard, and the top associates were killed by the Blue Knight.
    • And before their time, there was The Scarlet Snake, Mister Drama, and the Underlord.
  • Mandatory Unretirement:
    • Sticks' initial problem when he arrives in Astro City is trying to avoid this - the last thing he wants is to go back to a life of combat, but there are a number of groups who'd just love to have an effectively superpowered gorilla with combat experience working for them, and they're not the sort to take "no" for an answer.
    • Shown rather tragically with Supersonic, where his old buddy tries to get him out for one rousing battle to show these young upstarts a classic in action. However, with his strategist mindset dulled by years of aging and hard knocks, he fails to perform anything like the way he used to, barely managing to scrape out a Pyrrhic Victory.
  • Man of Wealth and Taste: Evil Sorcerer Infidel lives in an ornate floating palace, is tended to by beautiful naked homunculi, and eats and drinks the finest foods available anywhere.
  • The Man They Couldn't Hang: Played with by The Hanged Man, who is implied to be the victim of a hanging several centuries ago. Whether or not he currently counts as alive is another matter...
    • It's subsequently implied in "Waltz of the Hours" that he's not what he's assumed to be, that he's been known by other names in other times and places, and that "The Hanged Man" is merely his most recent name.
    • "The Party of the First Part" reveals that he already had "The Hanged Man" as his name in 18th century France, and that he took a new host there after his old body was destroyed, that of a criminal being hanged who accepted his offer of redemption.
  • Married to the Job:
    • Samaritan is so devoted to helping others that he barely has time to sleep or maintain a civilian identity. His idea of a good day is one where he manages to get nearly a minute of flight time (that is, flying for its own sake, rather than rushing to the next emergency).
    • Winged Victory prefers to stay in her transformed superpowered form all the time, possibly because it's a refuge from her original frail form. She can't even recall the last time she visited her mother, noting only that it's been years.
    • Quarrel effectively has this, as part of her deconstruction of a Badass Normal. She constantly realizes that she's outranked in a world of super-powered beings, armored villains, aliens, and gods, and compensates for it with lots of training — to the point where she cannot sustain any sort of normal relationship because of the commitments (physical and emotional) required.
    • As the most powerful magician in Astro City, the Silver Adept combines this with Hard-Drinking Party Girl, having more than enough supernatural responsibilities for the role. She works hard and parties hard, to the consternation of her staff.
  • Master-Apprentice Chain: Astro City has an unnamed Legacy Team that consists of two avian-themed super-heroines, a "bird of light" and a "bird of shadow". When the elder partner retires, the younger one chooses a new apprentice. Members shown have included Nightflyer, Sunshrike, Nightingale, and Sunbird.
  • Master Computer:
    • Gormenghast is a rogue AI that wants to Take Over the World.
    • In the 43rd century, the iGod is a digital consciousness that spans galaxies.
  • Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: Teased with the Blue Knight; it's unclear if he's a vigilante with high-tech gadgets and a skull mask, or a policeman empowered by the ghost of a police officer killed in the line of duty. It's eventually implied to be a bit of both.
  • Meaningful Background Event: Used all over the place, and often from the perspective of someone in the background.
    • It's especially evident in "Confession," where several of these lead to The Reveal of the Confessor's true identity.
    • In "Knock Wood", every time policeman Josh Stone appears, there is a blurry skull-like reflection, shadow, or image nearby, hinting that he is The Blue Knight.
    • Every time the Gentleman appears you can see a small girl in pigtails somewhere in the background. She is the key to his existence.
  • Meaningful Name:
    • Lots, but these are probably the least obvious examples - Charles and Royal grow up to become a cop and a robber.
    • In a meta-example, the Silver Agent is named because after the Silver Age of comic books, which he embodies via his actions. It's also fitting that the "Silver Age" era of Astro City ends when he was executed for a crime that he didn't commit.
  • Mental World: The Broken Man lives in an otherworldly plane of shifting thoughts where he crafts plans against the Oubor. In Astro City proper, he's a drooling, barely-conscious mute restrained in a straitjacket at a high-security psychiatric hospital.
  • Mile-High Club: As Samaritan and Winged Victory's relationship becomes more series, they occasionally indulge in late-night intercourse in the skies above Astro City. Since both of them can fly, no vehicles or assistance is required.
  • Mind Control:
    • Lord Sovereign can control people with his dark energy powers.
    • Stovepipe Johnny once had a vat of green ooze that allowed him to turn homeless people into Mooks.
  • Mind Rape: This happened to Ellie Jennersen when her college roommate used a device to scan her genius knowledge of robotics and keep her from sharing it with anyone else. It takes decades for her to recover.
  • Miscarriage of Justice:
    • This is the reason behind the death of the Silver Agent, and why his statue is memorialized with the caption "To Our Eternal Shame". He was framed for the murder of a supervillain, then was arrested and executed by the government to show a skeptical populace that they had some control over superheroes.
    • In "Knock Wood", a lawyer helps his guilty client avoid conviction by invoking the numerous superhero tropes, like evil twins, doppelgangers, and mind control. He even invokes the recent execution of the unjustly punished Silver Agent to push the jury into a decision.
    • In the backstory of "Pastoral", a man was forcibly subjected to genetic engineering experiments at the hands of TransGene International; they were acquitted, and he was convicted of breaking and entering instead.
  • Misery Poker: Played for drama in "And, In the End...". Rose Wilkerson, a woman who lost her young son (and her right hand) in a supervillain attack, has joined "Miranda's Friends", a support group for survivors of super-conflicts. However, when the group's organizer reveals that his wife was erased from history in a Close-Enough Timeline accident, she becomes enraged, insisting that he's a fraud and her trauma is far worse.
  • Misplaced Retribution: For decades, the Drama Queen believed that the original Jack-in-the-Box was responsible for killing her grandfather, the mob boss known as Mister Drama. She confronts Jack-in-the-Box III at the scene of the death, only to learn that her grandfather killed himself and the original Jack because he was dying of cancer. Shocked by this revelation, she tries to immolate herself instead.
  • Missing White Woman Syndrome: Briefly referenced in "Confession", when a series of ritualistic killings becomes worthy of a public panic only after an archetypal blonde high-school sweetheart becomes one of the victims.
  • Mistaken for Flirting: Played for drama in "Shining Armor", as Irene misinterprets Atomicus' hesitation about their relationship as a hint that she had to prove herself worthy to him. In actuality, he's scared of relationships since he was Really Was Born Yesterday, and her efforts only make things worse...
  • Mistaken for Gay:
    • Crackerjack doesn't know this, but the old women in his apartment building think he's gay because he's a "theater type" with long hair.
    • Nightingale and Sunbird also face rumors of lesbianism after an unlicensed comic portrayed them as "closer than sisters" and strongly implied there was something going on there. Nightingale definitely didn't take it well...
  • Mistaken Identity: When the Mock Turtle arrives in Kiefer Square, Steeljack thinks he's the latest target of the Kiefer Square murders. In reality, he's being hunted by the Chessmen in retaliation for a totally unrelated matter.
  • Mob War: One breaks out in "The Dark Age" between a half-dozen gangs in Astro City. It's made much more complicated because one gang has hired a psychotic assassin, another gang is led by a telepathic Brain in a Jar, and there's a vengeful Anti-Hero with a Touch of Death who wants to kill them all.
  • The Mole:
    • Royal Williams joins Pyramid to get information about the man who killed his parents. He feeds information to Charles, who forwards it to the authorities as needed.
    • Lord Saampa was chosen by the Oubor to lead its cult, but he keeps them busy with useless rituals so they don't hurt innocents, even as he tries to resist its influence.
  • Molotov Cocktail: In "Confession", an angry mob uses them while attempting to storm Shadow Hill.
  • Monster Clown: The Box and Jackson, evil versions of Jack-in-the-Box II's son from the future.
    • Although Jack-in-the-Box himself is a hero, he meets the qualifications for this trope from the villains' perspective.
  • Monster Protection Racket: Appears twice in "The Tarnished Angel".
    • In the past, El Hombre stages a battle with a giant robot that he could defeat and restore his heroic reputation. Unfortunately, his plan failed, and he becomes a shameful fugitive when the ruse was discovered.
    • The mastermind behind the Kiefer Square murders intends to send dozens of supervillains loose on the city in a crime spree, then capture them all to win instant celebrity as a dashing new superhero.
  • Mood-Swinger: Tumorr of the Stone Sea Mages goes from house-rattling death-threat roars to hyperactive glee in the blink of an eye.
  • Mood Whiplash:
    • In "The Voice of the Turtle", we get the life story of the Mock Turtle, a soft-spoken, naive, good-hearted inventor who only ever wanted to find a city of dreams. After getting tricked into committing crimes by a manipulative woman, he eventually flees the UK and makes his way to Astro City, where he's saved from his troubles and welcomed as a friend by Steeljack and the denizens of Kiefer Square. The issue ends with him having finally found his city of dreams, happy at last. Then issue 18 opens after his brutal murder.
    • "Who's a Good Dog?" is a fun, upbeat adventure of Andy Merton and his pet corgi Hank after they've fused to become the superhero G-Dog. Then the veterinarian reminds Andy that Hank is in his old age.
  • Mook Horror Show:
    • In "A Little Knowledge", a small-time crook sees the superhero Jack-in-the-Box change into his civilian clothes. At first, he thinks that he's struck gold by discovering this potentially valuable information, but then starts to imagine all the ways in which selling the info could go wrong, including nightmares of being pursued by a vengeful Jack. He eventually gets so stressed out he leaves town without revealing the secret to anyone.
    • In the first issue of "The Dark Age", petty criminal Royal Williams is part of an armoured car robbery that is foiled by Jack-In-The-Box. The whole thing is played like a horror movie monster attack, with Royal cowering in fear under a truck while Jack takes the others apart.
    • This effect is also used by the Confessor, a Batman Expy who relies on the fear he gets from mooks — especially for the first Confessor, who was actually a vampire with all of the associated powers.
  • Morality Pet:
    • At one point in "The Dark Age", Royal Williams (an Anti-Hero out to get the man who killed his parents) has a brief encounter with "K.O." Carson, a.k.a. the Black Badge, a superhero who befriended the Williams boys in their youth. Seeing Carson reminds Royal of the virtues of heroism, eventually allowing him to turn away from the path of vengeance.
    • Quite literally, in the case of G-Dog. Andy Merton was a petty crook whose first instinct when he found a magical amulet was to use it for crime. However, when the amulet fused him with his pet corgi, turning them into G-Dog, the dog's simple, good-natured protectiveness pushed Andy to become a better person.
  • More Diverse Sequel: Played with — since the diversity in Astro City is largely a reflection of the different eras of Real Life comic books, the earliest stories tended to feature predominately white male heroes. Even so, there are notable exceptions, such as Coyotl and Dame Progress in the "pulp adventure" era, or the Black Badge in the Golden Age. In a straight application of this trope, there is a noticeable increase in character diversity as the timeline moves forward.
  • Motive Decay:
    • Winged Victory's Arch-Enemy, Karnazon. According to Winged Victory he used to be a Visionary Villain who planned grand schemes such as robbing Fort Knox, but eventually flanderized himself into a one-note chauvinistic Jerkass who only cared about proving the superiority of men over women, just to needle her.
    • The Chessmen were a group who originally performed chess-themed crimes in their chess-themed armor. Over the decades, as turnover occurred, they decayed into just a typical group of thugs with flamboyant outfits.
  • Multinational Team: The Apollo Eleven was originally a team of ten astronauts from various nations tasked with establishing an international Moon base. However, they made contact with extraterrestrials who transformed their bodies and returned them to Earth as their emissaries. They are accompanied by L.G.M., one of the aliens.
  • Multiple-Choice Past: Crackerjack's origins is whatever fanciful yarn he can tell at the spur of the moment. At different times he's claimed to be from a circus family that got abducted and trained by aliens, an Olympic hopeful who was sabotaged by a competitor, a determined survivor of polio, a genetically-engineered member of a spy cult...
  • Mundane Utility:
    • Samaritan has access to an interdimension Phantom Zone. He uses it to store his various awards and change clothes.
    • "On the Sidelines" focuses on a community of superpowered people who use their powers for mundane jobs, like construction and special effects, rather than heroics or villainy. Examples include a telekinetic who controls things for stunt work, a fire-manipulator who's a glassblower, an empath who's a club deejay, and a man with Super-Strength who works in construction.
    • Steeljack ends up using his ability to walk underwater to do salvage runs in the river for the city.
    • The lead vocalist of the band "Powerchord" is a woman with the ability to focus her voice; she uses her power to enhance her singing.
    • The Silver Adept uses a magic-powered internet to respond to emails, track appointments, and get navigational updates.
    • On hot days, Handgun and his wife would escape the heat in his secret underground lab and watch baseball games on TV.
    • Disputed wills on Shadow Hill are quickly resolved by contacting the deceased directly to clarify matters.
  • Mutagenic Goo: Alan Craig was fleeing from gangsters near Romeyn Falls when he found a cave with a giant glob of floating silver inside. Touching it instantly revitalized his body, and he eventually became the legendary hero known as the Silver Agent.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: Happens in "The Dark Age" with Black Velvet and the Street Angel, who are horrified when they fully realize the true cost of their sociopathic war on crime.
  • My Greatest Failure:
    • In "Welcome to HumanoGlobal", Marella Cowper received a phone call from a distraught girl in Ecuador and forwarded it to local social workers. Two days later, she sees a news report from Ecuador about a massive supervillain attack that was sparked by an incident with local social workers...
    • As a child growing up in Kiefer Square, Carl Donewicz' greatest ambition was to study hard and lift himself out of poverty. But after he accidentally shot and killed a teen during a gang fight, Carl considered himself tainted and resigned himself to a life of crime.

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