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Power Girl is a 2009 ongoing comic book by DC Comics, originally written by Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti and beautifully drawn by Amanda Conner. After issue #12 the original creative team left the series, replaced by Judd Winick and Sami Basri, and the series shifted both its visual and writing style.

In the series, Power Girl reestablishes her Secret Identity of Karen Starr and establishes the company Starrware, all the while mentoring Atlee, the new Terra, and trying to stop the Ultra-Humanite or really hot aliens from destroying New York.

The series took a Lighter and Softer approach to the character and the DC Universe at large, at first focusing on Power Girl's attempts to reintegrate into living a normal life and forming a stable relationship with Terra. After the creative team change, the book focused less on Power Girl's personal life, instead revolving around her heroic activities and how they affected her personal life, and also dealt with the reappearance of Maxwell Lord. The story was heavily tied into the Brightest Day event, though not published under the Brightest Day banner, and had interweaving plotlines with Justice League: Generation Lost.


Power Girl (2009) provides examples of:

  • Amnesiac Dissonance: After his final defeat, Ultra-Humanite had his memory erased and was reintroduced into society. He does not seem happy with the plan, but he is accepting of the future...until Power Girl turns her back and he swears that it will never be over between them.
  • And Now for Someone Completely Different: The Judd Winick run seemed to exist to see how much of DC's roster could be crammed into her series.
  • Asteroids Monster: The Ix Negaspike is a self-replicating alien monster. When Karen freezes and smashes it to bits, it regenerates into more monsters.
  • Barely-There Swimwear: Issue 12 has Karen wearing a swimsuit provided by Atlee and comments on its brevity resembling a "thought balloon".
  • Beneath the Earth: Atlee's people live in a vast underground city. Their technology is so advanced that even Power Girl was impressed.
  • Bestiality Is Depraved: It's implied Satanna had sex with the Ultra-Humanite when his brain was first implanted into his gorilla body. Not to mention the fact he was covered with the blood of the men who later attacked him. She told him not to wash off before the sex.
  • Big Applesauce: Power Girl begins operating in Manhattan.
  • Big Bad: When breaking into New Cadmus, which is being orchestrated by Max Lord, Karen and Nico actually comment that this is the headquarters of the bad guy that is behind everything.
  • Buried Alive: Ultra-Humanite tries to do this to Karen in #10. It doesn't work.
  • Call-Back: The gags used when Karen and Atlee go shopping together first appeared in the Terra mini-series.
  • Canon Discontinuity: Power Girl's inner monologue and speeches hint that she was never deceived into believing she was an Atlantean, she was never harassed by being Arion's family, her alternate self was already around when she got stuck in New Earth, and there never were other Supergirls other than Kara Zor-El.
  • Captain Ersatz: Vartox was originally based on Sean Connery, with his appearance taken from the movie Zardoz and his over-the-top machismo from Connery himself.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: "'Rue the day'? Nobody talks like that anymore. It just sounds stupid." "It's a classic villain line."
  • Cats Love Laser Pointers: In issue #12, PG uses her heat vision to form a pair of dots to play with her cat.
  • The Chikan: An issue featured a pervert who groped her in a subway. Bad idea..
  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: After the author/artist switch to Judd Winick and Sami Basri, Terra, who had been Power Girl's sidekick/partner/sister throughout the early issues, appears in a grand total of one panel, with the kicker being Power Girl mentioning her as a Super Hero In Training, and afterwards is neither seen nor mentioned again.
  • C-List Fodder: The Blue Snowman is the initial villain of the Vartox arc, and is introduced with the caption "Blue Snowman... Life Expectancy: Panel 4, Page 14"
  • Comic-Book Fantasy Casting:
    • Towards the end of the series, it was noted that Kara, either intentionally or otherwise, was starting to resemble Mad Men actress Christina Hendricks. And not just due to Hendricks having a similar build.
    • Recurring character Vartox, as he was in his original Superman appearances in the 1970s, continues to be based on Sean Connery in his role in the sci-fi film Zardoz.
  • Comical Over Reacting: One of Satanna's minon's goes nuts ranting about how much emphasis people put in sports and celebrities rather than science.
  • Conviction by Counterfactual Clue: Explored in #21, when Bruce Wayne gives the corpse of a supposed suicide victim an autopsy. He points out that the bullet wound is on the forehead, at which Dick Grayson points out that it's not unheard of in suicides. He then points out that the exit wound suggests the bullet came from straight-on, and Dick again points out that it's weird, but not impossible. Then he points out that the angle suggests the gun was being held in the victim's left hand when they were right-handed, and Dick points out that the victim was a Badass Normal and reasonably able with his left hand. Bruce responds by pointing out that, yes, it's possible that the victim held the gun to his head at a bizarre angle with the wrong hand, but it's not likely, and Dick keeps focusing on the least likely possibility - which is what causes them to conclude that they're being influenced mentally. And just to nail the coffin, he gives a much less disputable bit of evidence; namely, the bullet hole is too neat for a gun-to-the-head shot.
  • Copied the Morals, Too: Krypto is so damn heroic that even his evil clone comes to Karen's aide.
  • Covered in Gunge: When Power Girl erupts from the throat of one of the Hydra's heads, she is covered in the the monster's blood.
  • Crazy-Prepared: Power Girl has repeatedly stressed that Terra needs to wear her uniform all the time, under her regular clothing if need be, so she will always be ready for danger to strike at any moment.
  • Crossover: Issue #20 is directly continued in Justice League: Generation Lost, which follows up on Power Girl's brainwashing at the hands of Max Lord to kill the Justice League International.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Once Power Girl is pushed past her limit and stops holding back she takes Ultra-Humanite, who a few pages earlier had been bragging about destroying all of civilization, and beats him down in six panels. Four of those panels are PG slamming his head against a wall. The other two were her punching him in the face.
  • Cut Lex Luthor a Check: Deconstructed. Power Girl (In her role as Karen Starr, head of Starrware) holds the patents to several miraculous technologies and heads what seems to be a well-running corporation. However, now that they have engineered these miraculous technologies they need to develop them into some form of marketable product, deal with worried overseeing government agencies and also contend with the almost insurmountable issues of normal office paperwork. Starrware might be on the cutting edge of human technology, and its stock prices will probably go through the roof once it goes public, but right now it needs to find some way to actually gain revenue from its assets. Power Girl herself is struggling to make ends meet until the profits start to come in, and lampshades this when fighting the Blue Snowman, who had developed the technology to create weather and was using this technology to steal jewels not worth half of what her equipment was worth.
  • Day in the Life: Issue #12 shows that Kara's daily life involves bathing in an empathic bikini, bonding with Terra and stopping a fight between an alien monster and a Sean Connery expy.
  • Deconstruction: After the initial 12 issues, Kara learns the hard way that the life of a superhero and a business tycoon don't exactly mix well together, leading to her losing her company. Reconstructed later on, as she finally finds a balance in her life.
  • Destination Defenestration: Satanna gets thrown off a window after Sivanna becomes fed up with her.
  • Dishing Out Dirt: Atlee, the new Terra, and Power Girl's new best friend. They go see movies together.
  • Dressed in Layers: Though Power Girl herself is always prepared for trouble, Terra has not quite grasped the concept that she always needs to wear her costume underneath her clothing just in case. As such, she is completely unprepared when a monster rises up when she and PG are out watching a movie and she ends up going into battle dressed only in adorable lady-bug underwear.
  • Eaten Alive: The Hydra swallows Power Girl whole. The monster seems to prefer her food this way as she attempts to eat her alive again.
  • Evil Brunette Twin: "Divine," the evil clone of Power Girl, has black hair opposed to PG's blonde, but is otherwise identical in every way.
  • Eviler than Thou: Satanna goes to Dr. Sivanna to get a weapon to revenge herself on Power Girl and gives him what he wanted as payment. Afterwards he attempts some minor small-talk and she, because she and he are villains, does not feel it is necessary to disguise the fact that she felt this was a heartily disgusting event which she did solely as part of a business exchange. He agrees with her, then points out that since they are bad guys he no longer cares about her desires since she gave him what he wanted, and throws her out the window.
  • Evil Laugh: Apparently, characters differentiate between your Mad Scientists and scientists who happen to be mad by the presence or absence of a good "Moo-Ha-Ha!"
  • Evil Twin: "Divine," the dark haired clone of Power Girl.
  • Faceship: Vartox's spaceship looks like a human head... with an impressive mustache.
  • Fanservice: Lots, including the new series with a trio of gorgeous aliens.
  • Forced Transformation: Power Girl, Superman and Zatanna are briefly turned into rock people by Siphon, who can copy Zatanna's powers.
  • Frame-Up: In issues #24 and #25, Rayhan Mazin was flying from New York to Gotham when his plane threatened to crash. Mazin used his weather-controlling powers to right the ship and get it to land safely, but unfortunately it was thought he was the one who caused the plane to go down. Mazin surrendered willingly, thinking he would be released once he could explain. Six months later, he remains in Renatta detention facility. Nobody believes him and he is worried about his ill father, whom he isn't allowed to speak to. Mazin escapes to see his dying father, with Power Girl and Batman attempting to capture him. Mazin summons a hurricane above Gotham and slips away while Power Girl goes to undo it. Mazin visits his father as he dies and Batman believes his story, stopping some security men from going inside. Later Power Girl apologizes to Mazin for getting him locked up. Batman is looking into Mazin's case and has found out some federal investigators were interested in apprehending a metahuman terrorist, so they framed him to get more funding. The story ends with Batman investigating who's responsible for Mazin's detention while he visits the Justice Society of America.
  • Freudian Excuse: Discussed when Karen assumes that Ultra-Humanite's "behavior can be partly explained by childhood bullying and a lifetime of failure and humiliation, especially by women" since the guy transplanted his brain into an albino gorilla. Obviously he has issues.
  • Freudian Excuse Is No Excuse: In issue #11, Ultra-Humanite has his own -and healthy- body back thanks to Kara, and he still wants to have his revenge. From that point on, his deteriorating body stops working as an excuse for his terrible actions.
  • "Freaky Friday" Flip: In a story arc, Ultra-Humanite swaps bodies with Terra.
  • Funny Background Event: Amanda Conner's artwork is full of these, such as PG's cat not liking who she is interviewing or stealing shrimp from their Chinese take out. When a flasher tries to expose himself to PG and Terra PG uses her freeze breath on his exposed areas; after she calls for a cop the next panel pans back to reveal that they are standing in front of a dermatology clinic whose current special "will freeze off your..." When PG and Terra change out of their regular clothes into their costumes, a bum can be seen enjoying the show.
  • Genius Bruiser: Karen says that she's not just superpowered, but super smart and she shows it. When faced with a Sadistic Choice between saving the Leaning Tower of Pisa, rescuing Cyclone, or rescuing a Vietnamese girl held hostage by Typhoon with a time limit, PG buys herself time by setting up a tidal wave in the middle of the ocean timed to knock out Typhoon in Vietnam. She also frees Cyclone as backup to either stop him or help her stop the wave from causing collateral damage. While flying around the world doing this she uses her super hearing to triangulate the location the villain is talking to her from, using only the delay between her speaking and hearing it echo from the other end as reference. The only thing that kept her from capturing the Calculator is the fact that he was broadcasting by proxy.
  • Giving Someone the Pointer Finger: Karen does this a lot when she is making a dramatic entrance or someone (usually a villain or Vartox) is annoying her.
  • Good Is Not Soft: In issue #10, Karen finds out that Ultra-Humanite transplanted his brain into Terra's body. After beating him up, she visits Satanna and demands Terra's brain back. When Satanna tries to mock her, she blasts her arm off.
  • Goofy Print Underwear: PG's cherry panties.
  • Grand Theft Me: In issue #11, Ultra-Humanite attempts to take over Power Girl's body to gain her immense power, even temporary gaining control of Terra's as part of one of his plans until Power Girl defeated him and restored her young friend to her rightful body with the help of Atlee's people.
  • Green-Skinned Space Babe: Well, they do not have green skin, but other than that, the alien babes from issues #4-6 fit the idea.
  • Groin Attack: At the beginning of issue #19, Power Girl is reminiscing about a fight she had with a giant humanoid robot where she tried to inflict one on it, but since the robot had all of the plumbing of an action figure, all she succeeded in doing was kicking a hole in it while getting a bunch of goop on her boot.
  • Hand-or-Object Underwear: In issue #9, Karen runs from the shower and starts chasing after the kid blackmailing her and dashes down the stairs after him, runs past a neighbor, and literally collars the kid, at which point her towel drops, giving the kid and neighbor a good look at her naked body (the reader is not so lucky, due to a strategically placed bunch of carrots and an arm). She covers herself with bread and a pie pan.
  • Heroic Dog: Apparently, Max Lord gave Professor Ivo very strict instructions not to clone Krypto, Superman's dog.
    Max Lord: "We talked about this! Don't clone the dog! Dogs are weird! The whole loyalty thing just seems to be branded right in on a genetic level, for Pete's sake!"
  • How Do I Shot Web?: Power Girl actually discusses this trope when fighting her evil clone. She reasons that, even if "Divine" has all the same powers as her that does not mean she knows how to use those powers, since she has only been "alive" for ten minutes and has never worked with these abilities before.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: When Cho - formerly a hacker - calls Karen out on threatening to out him if he didn't help her, she answered that she did what she had to do.
  • "I Know You're in There Somewhere" Fight:
    • Simultaneously played straight and lampshaded in issue #10. When Terra was taken over by the Ultra-Humanite and fighting Power Girl she kept taunting PG.
      TerraUltra-Humanite: Let's have one of those totally cliched hero-slash-friend fights. You get to say things like, "I know you're stronger than this", or "You can fight it"... oh, and "This isn't you"! And I'll say things like... "I know your secret identity" and "All the people you care about are going to die!"
    • In the crossover with Justice League: Generation Lost Power Girl has been brainwashed into believing that the members of the Justice League International are other heroes planning to conquer and rule humanity. The members of JLI, dreading the destruction and loss of life that would come from fighting Power Girl in earnest (Assuming they could survive such a fight), try to get through the brainwashing and have her recognize them.
  • Insistent Terminology: They are not "monsters," they are G.E.L.F.s. It is not that hard to remember.
  • Kaiju: One that looks almost exactly like the King of the Monsters himself appears in the fourth issue.
  • Kick the Dog: Ultra-Humanite and Satanna were murderers and psychopaths long before this series started, but when they put Atlee's brain inside the burned gorilla body it is just wrong.
  • Lampshade Hanging:
  • Large Ham:
    • Vartox is either the single greatest event to happen to comic-books since an artist thought "Wait a second, I can make them as big as I want," or he has come to murder all Power Girl fans with overexposure to the "sexy superstud from planet Valeron."
      Vartox: "Bask in the seduction musk distilled from tears of the ghost poets of dimension seven...to prove his manly prowess, Vartox has arranged for a demonstration of masculinity."
    • Karen herself flies into a Les Grossman style rant at the beginning of issue 14.
  • Let's You and Him Fight:
  • Lingerie Scene: Vartox decides to dress appropriately for his dinner with Power Girl. The results are... not quite right for a formal dinner, but Power Girl can not help but peek through her fingers just a little.
  • Lovely Angels: Usually Kara fights at the forefront as Terra handles group control and attacks from afar with her geokinesis.
  • Mad Scientist: For your convenience, models come both with and without "Moo-Ha-Ha!"
  • Mars Needs Women: Vartox needs Kryptonian women in particular.
  • Mass "Oh, Crap!": In issue #11, all of Satanna's minions stare terrified when Power Girl blasts Satanna's arm off and they realize Miss Kryptonian Powerhouse is pissed.
  • Medium Awareness: The narrator is quite aware of how things work in comic-book land:
    Power Girl, Kara Zor-L... Life Expectancy: It's her series, what do you think?
    Dr Mid-Nite...Life Expectancy: Shaken, not stirred
    Blue Snowman...Life Expectancy: Panel 4, Page 14
    Vernon O'Valeron A.K.A. Vartox... Life Expectancy: Waiting to hear back from the editors
  • Megaton Punch: Karen gave one to Vartox when he hit on her.
  • Mirror Match: Kara fights her evil clone, "Divine".
  • Motherly Scientist: Subverted. When Power Girl strikes Cadmus, she breaks the jails keeping the cloned creatures, hoping that Dr. Ivo stops focusing on her in order to save his creations. However he runs away, and Karen notes that he isn't motherly at all.
  • Mundane Utility: Karen has been seen using her heat vision to shave her legs. Since she is nigh invulnerable, her options are limited.
  • Naked People Are Funny: Karen accidentally exposes herself to some of her neighbors chasing down the teenager who was blackmailing her.
  • Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot: Magic dinosaurs with minigun arms, carrying axes and shooting lasers from their eyes are just some of the creations of Siphon, a man who copied Zatanna's powers.
  • No OSHA Compliance: "Note to mad scientists and would-be world-conquering psychopaths... safety regulations exist for a reason."
  • Nobody Poops: Averted. The first two panels of issue #9 has Karen on the toilet.
  • Oh, Crap!:
    • Power Girl utters the line after realizing that she only has 3 seconds until a ship explodes. Her face in that panel totally sells it.
    • Later on both Power Girl and Superman have this when they realize the dinosaurs they're fighting can actually wound them.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business:
    • Normally, Power Girl is just as noble and heroic as her cousin. With that said when her sidekick Terra's brain was switched with Ultra-Humanite's, Power Girl demanded that the one responsible switched it back... By using her heat vision to blast off her arm.
    • In an issue crossing over with Justice League: Generation Lost, Kara (who finally remembers Maxwell Lord's existence after he mind-wiped the world into forgetting him) is trying to get Dick Grayson to remember Lord. Batman (who also remembers Lord) shows up to make Dick go over the death of Blue Beetle, who Max had murdered but, thanks to the mindwipe, everyone thinks killed himself. Every time Bruce points out inconsistencies in the bullet wounds, etc, Dick offers an explanation. When Bruce points out that Dick is going out of his way to avoid the evidence, Dick stops, realizing that goes against everything he's been trained for. This finally allows him to break through the mindwipe and realize Beetle was murdered.
  • Pervert Revenge Mode: While Power Girl is used to being ogled by people (specially dudes) around her, she does have her limits. In one issue while going on a subway in her civilian persona, a pervert groped her from the behind and she knocked him out of the train, and in a later instance, some creep flashed her and she used her super-breath to freeze his junk so he would have no choice but to let the police catch him.
  • Please Put Some Clothes On: When Vartox decides to slip into something more comfortable the result is not quite what he intended, and Power Girl rather firmly insists that he puts more clothes on. Now.
  • Porn Stache: Deliberately employed for Vartox, who claims to 'embody masculinity.'
  • The Real Heroes: When a firefighter is helping her limp away from a bomb crater he comments that he does not often get the opportunity to help somebody like her ("Like me?" "Yeah... a hero") and she replies "I can say the same thing about you."
  • Reality Warper: Who turns out to be a young girl who reads a lot of fantasy.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: Inverted. Power Girl blasts Satanna's arm off first, then gives her the mother of all stink eyes.
  • Right in Front of Me: In issue 4, Dexter - one of Karen's employees - asks her if she can tell Power Girl that she's fantastic.
  • Rise from Your Grave: In issue #11, Ultra-Humanite makes use of Terra's geokinesis to bury Karen alive. She only needs a few seconds to escape. Justified because she's a Kryptonian, ergo she is super-strong and she doesn't need to breathe.
  • Samus Is a Girl: Blue Snowman is short, stocky and wears a Powered Armor which resembles a cartoony robot. When the villain takes her helmet off, and Karen sees she's been fighting a girl, she's shocked.
    Power Girl: What the hell? You're a chick?
  • Sci-Fi Bob Haircut: PG's most famous cut, that she has had for most of her life.
  • Security Cling: Terra does this to Karen after being rescued from the Ultra-Humanite and Satanna.
  • The '70s: The planet Valeron might actually be an alien world perpetually stuck in the era of disco.
  • Shopping Montage: With Atlee to get furniture for her new apartment. Also Cinnamon Buns.
  • Shout-Out:
    • When Power Girl knocks out Siphon and reverses his spell to "Unleash Hell," the demonic maelstrom vanishes and she says "so long H. P. Lovecraft."
    • "Rue the day?" Who talks like that?
    • At the cinema Power Girl and Terra are approached by Howard and the other boys of The Big Bang Theory. Naturally Karen gives him a short lesson on how to treat a woman.
  • Shut Up, Hannibal!: When Satanna tries to taunt Karen after transplanting the Ultra-Humanite's brain into her best friend's body, Karen isn't in the mood for her crap and blasts Satanna's arm off.
    Satanna: My arm! What kind of heroine would do that to someone's arm?
    Power Girl: Quit your bawling, Satanna! You're a surgeon, you can pick your arm up and do whatever you want with it — after you tell me where I can find my friend Terra!
  • Shut Up, Kirk!: Whenever Karen tries to talk down a villain she sees needs at least a second chance she's dismissed as being sanctimonious and condescending.
  • Sidekick: Terra generally fills this role, though she does complain about always being put on crowd control.
  • Slip into Something More Comfortable: Vartox decides to attire himself properly for his dinner with Power Girl. She instructs him, rather firmly, to put more clothes on. Now.
  • Strange Minds Think Alike: When Zatanna is in the presence of a man who can copy her powers, she realizes that just beating him in a Wizard Duel will not solve the problem, she needs to physically leave his presence to keep him from getting her powers permanently.
    Zatanna: (In Narration) He's good right out of the gate. I'm just better. But being better isn't really the issue, I just need to get the heck away from this idiot!
    Power Girl: "We need to get Zatanna the heck away from that idiot!"
  • Squick: Power Girl's in-universe reaction to learning that the Ultra-Humanite had sex with his girlfriend Satanna... in gorilla form. Because Satanna was turned on by his new body.
  • This Is Wrong on So Many Levels!:
    • When she finds out that Kyrpto has been cloned.
      Power Girl: "No! No, you didn't!! You cloned Krypto?!?! What kind of sick @#$#$—this is Superman's dog. For crying out loud! Is nothing sacred!?"
    • After Power Girl, Superman and Zatanna are turned into rock people she looks down at her new rocky body and comments that "this is wrong on many, many levels."
  • Too Dumb to Live: Satanna has two moments, in back-to-back issues; first when Karen busts down the door to her lair, demanding to know where the real Atlee is, Satanna decides that taunting a visibly pissed off Kryptonian is a good idea. This costs her her left arm. Then, after sleeping with Dr. Sivana in an effort to get him to give her more weapons to fight Power Girl with, treats him with contempt and disgust, which he responds to by throwing her out a window since he got what he wanted and no longer had to bargain with her.
  • Underground City: Strata, Atlee's people's secret underground city.
  • Underwear of Power: Her normal costume is a pretty standard superheroine outfit, but Terra has not yet grasped the importance of always having your costume handy and one time she was forced to go into battle wearing nothing but adorable ladybug underwear when she and Power Girl were attacked while out at the movies.
  • Ungrateful Bastard: Averted with the citizens of New York. They are nothing less than extremely grateful and friendly to Power Girl.
  • Unwilling Roboticization: Randall Mikavic, a Russian Arms Dealer, becomes an android when one he is inadvertently buying boots up, determines its CPU isn't fully operational and decides to use nearest available one. His main complaints are having to follow his programming, which he only vaguely knows, and no longer having any "pork and beans" to have fun with. He enjoys being able to hulk out and cause mass destruction though.
  • Use Your Head: She employs this technique multiple times throughout Volume 2. On one occasion, she knocked a giant Godzilla-like monster out cold by headbutting it in the nose.
  • Vertical Kidnapping: Exaggerated when Ultra-Humanite does this to Manhattan.
  • Villain Ball: Siphon is a person capable of leeching magical power from nearby people, the stolen power becoming permanent after three hours in proximity. He plans to steal Zatanna's power, but for some reason involves Superman and Power Girl by siccing magically animated dinosaur statues at them. This causes Power Girl to call Zatanna's line, which alerts her to Z's distress when it goes straight to machine. This directly leads to his downfall, all because he couldn't just wait.
  • Wall of Text: Karen's real estate agent gives two in as many panels when she is introduced exiting the elevator; the first of which before it was fully opened.
  • Was It All a Lie?: When Cho deduces Karen is Power Girl he accuses her of being a fraud whose secret identity is not something she actually cares about since she drags civilians into her conflicts. This is mostly a What the Hell, Hero? because he's connecting the dots after she had just blackmailed him into helping her.
  • Weirdness Magnet: Lampshaded by Karen in the issue 6 of the Palmiotti run as she recaps the events of the previous issue.
    An alien ship landed in Prospect Park, three fashionable women got out and caused some trouble, I got caught in the self-destruction of the ship and now they turn up in midtown Manhattan throwing cars at some guy in a Buck Rogers backpack. Seems I'm becoming a magnet for this sort of thing.
  • Well, This Is Not That Trope: In the first issue, Karen begins describing what apparently is her cousin's story, before saying "But it isn't that story. It's mine."
    Power Girl: It's the classic tale of a distant and doomed planet named Krypton. The one where a small child is the last hope of a dying race. A refugee cast among the stars in search of a new home where he becomes the savior of an alien world... This isn't that story. Not exactly...
  • Who Writes This Crap?!: She does not say the actual line, but Power Girl simply can not believe the story of Vartox and the infertility bomb that requires him to find a mate to save his planet. Power Girl is stifling laughter by the time he gets to the part about the "pregno-ray".

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