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Dewicked trope


* AdultFear: The issue about Hannibal and the other young Serpentor clones. The reactions of the clones' adoptive parents are really understandable as their children are lost.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gi_joe_devils_due.jpg]]
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Added to a trope.


* FormerlyFit: Bazooka is portrayed as this when he volunteers to return to active duty. Having spent the seven years since the Joes disbanded, he is overweight and out of shape (and balding). He later hits the gym and gets back into shape.

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* FormerlyFit: Bazooka is portrayed as this when he volunteers to return to active duty. Having spent the seven years since the Joes disbanded, disbanded as a night watchman, he is overweight and out of shape (and balding). He later hits the gym and gets back into shape.
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* AllThereInTheManual: Cobra's initial defeat between the end of the Marvel series and the start of the DDP series was explained in promotional material. In it, it was explained a multinational task force met Cobra in direct battle and thoroughly routed them, forcing Cobra Commander into hiding.
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In 2001, Devil's Due Publishing (a spinoff of Creator/ImageComics) acquired the comic rights to Franchise/GIJoe and launched a new series, set in the same continuity as [[ComicBook/GIJoeARealAmericanHeroMarvel the Marvel Comic]], with the premise of G.I. Joe being reformed to continue battling Cobra after seven years of inactivity. They published an ongoing title - once again called G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero, but later renamed G.I. Joe: America's Elite - and several miniseries exploring the backstories of the characters. Devil's Due lost the comic rights to Creator/IDWPublishing in 2008, and their final issue was printed that July. The Devil's Due run has since been republished by IDW under the ''Disavowed'' banner, a reference to its [[CanonDiscontinuity non-canonical status]] following their decision to make a separate continuation of the original Marvel series.

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In 2001, Devil's Due Publishing (a spinoff of Creator/ImageComics) acquired the comic rights to Franchise/GIJoe and launched a new series, set in the same continuity as [[ComicBook/GIJoeARealAmericanHeroMarvel the Marvel Comic]], with the premise of G.I. Joe being reformed to continue battling Cobra after seven years of inactivity. They published an ongoing title - once again called G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero, but later renamed G.I. Joe: America's Elite - and several miniseries exploring the backstories of the characters. Devil's Due lost the comic rights to Creator/IDWPublishing in 2008, and their final issue was printed that July. The Devil's Due run has since been republished by IDW under the ''Disavowed'' banner, a reference to its [[CanonDiscontinuity non-canonical status]] following their decision to make [[ComicBook/GIJoeARealAmericanHeroIDW a separate continuation of the original Marvel series.
series]].

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* AndThisIsFor: The 31st issue of ''America's Elite'' has Roadblock fire at the Interrogator and state that it was for Max Hauser, Duke's father.

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* AndThisIsFor: AndThisIsFor:
**
The 31st issue of ''America's Elite'' has Roadblock fire at the Interrogator and state that it was for Max Hauser, Duke's father.father.
** The 36th issue of ''America's Elite'' has Storm Shadow kick Scrap-Iron in the face and state that it's for the Soft Master and others Scrap-Iron had killed.
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* AndThisIsFor: The 31st issue of ''America's Elite'' has Roadblock fire at the Interrogator and state that it was for Max Hauser, Duke's father.
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* GrandTheftMe: In ''America's Elite'', the corrupt T'Jbang leading the Red Ninjas turns out to be possessed by the Red Ninjas' original leader Sei Ten, who was dying and cheated death by switching minds with T'Jbang.

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* GrandTheftMe: In ''America's Elite'', the corrupt T'Jbang leading the Red Ninjas turns out to be possessed by the Red Ninjas' original leader Sei Ten, Tin, who was dying and cheated death by switching minds with T'Jbang.
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* GrandTheftMe: In ''America's Elite'', the corrupt T'Jbang leading the Red Ninjas turns out to be possessed by the Red Ninjas' original leader Sei Ten, who was dying and cheated death by switching minds with T'Jbang.
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* OffingTheOffspring: Cobra Commander ''kills'' his son Billy with a poison dart in the 33rd issue of ''America's Elite''.
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* HeartbrokenBadass: Flint doesn't take the murder of his wife Lady Jaye very well.
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* LibationForTheDead: Flint empties a liquor bottle onto the ground while visiting Lady Jaye's grave in the fifth issue of ''America's Elite''.
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* CanonCharacterAllAlong: The comic brought back the nameless S.A.W. Viper who killed Doc, Crankcase, Quick Kick, Heavy Metal and Thunder in the original Marvel Comics series, revealing that he survived his apparent death at Snake Eyes and Storm Shadow's hands and that his actual name is Robert Skelton. Shortly afterward, he becomes this continuity's version of Overkill, first by taking on Overkill as his codename before eventually being converted into a cyborg against his will by Cobra scientists so that the codename isn't the only similarity with the original character.

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