How does Batman's origin story compare to other DC heroes? Like besides probably Superman...

How does Batman's origin story compare to other DC heroes? Like besides probably Superman, who got a shittier deal than "watches his own parents get shot to death"?

Take your facebook memes and fuck off

Martian Manhunter watched his wife, daughter, and entire civilization die and burn in front of his eyes.

>Superman
>Adopted by some kind farmers
>Raised with strong moral values in a peaceful countryside
>Lived, superpowers aside, a fairly normal and pleasant childhood/adolescence
>Adoptive father died of a heart attack and not violent murder
Superman's backstory is like the ideal childhood; are you implying he had it worse than Batman?

Only if you're Mark Waid.

Supergirl who grew up on Krypton and remembers what she lost vividly. Then crash landed here confused as fuck as to why nobody speaks her language and why she can suddenly fly and punch the moon in half if she needed to.

>Watched father die in a horrific jet crash.

I think the issue is that a lot of heroes have dead parents but most of them while often still hurt by the tragedy move on with themselves. And they didn't have a giant pile of money to cry on.

If a young Bruce Wayne saw his parents die in a fighter jet crash, would he become a masked vigilante waging a one man war against all aircraft?

He would've crashed every single plane with no survivors.

The Kents more often than die relatively young in some freak accident or the other, DCAU is the only universe where they're both alive at the end, while Martha was around in DCEU and Post Crisis.

Hell they still haven't retconned them back, so as of now they were still killed in a car accident on Clark's prom night just before he was about to kiss Lana.

>And they didn't have a giant pile of money to cry on.

Why do you arrive at the idea that that would help? Or be helpful? Or cause anything good? Isn't half the Court of Owls rich young orphans managing their estate over champagne and coco puffs every morning?

>Why do you arrive at the idea that that would help? Or be helpful? Or cause anything good?

Because he doesn't have to worry about being fed, warm, or having to take care of his aging care takers. Oh, and buy therapy.

If you don't think money is helpful I really don't know what to tell you but you're an idiot.

CW Flash. Saw his mom get killed by a yellow blur and his dad went down for the murder and literally nobody believed him.

Would Captain Boomerang senior killed Bruces parents, what would be Batmans main weapon of choice?

An Emu

Oh of course money is helpful! Comic book characters fall into two types- rich and successful. And morlocks who are hunted by SHIELD/JLA
But the money didn't help Batman, Alfred did. (and the direction the writers wanted to take it). Without Alfred, Batman would be living in a cave, trying to survive on bat/chicken wings, venturing out in an insanely overpowered vehicle to beat up random Gothamites who did bad stuff until he gets mass tazered by the Gotham PD, is rescued by the car, and goes back to the cave to eat more bat. And that's with the money. At least for this generation, who's Batman comics focus on Batman the fighter and ignore Bruce Wayne the upper-crust higher-order of human being.

Batman has a demon behind his Orign the other heroes don't

...

Superman also used to remember Krypton before COIE. Byrne just turned Superman mythos completely bland.

>Black Condor
When he was an infant, his parents were killed by bandits in Mongolia. After that he was raised by Condors who taught him to fly. He was then found by a mountain hermit who taught him to speak English. He returned to America where he takes up the identity of a recently assassinated senator.

Eh, personally I never liked the whole Superman is the alien and always earning for Krypton etc etc like in the Man who has Everything.

Clark is the real persona.

>But the money didn't help Batman


Right Batman was just able to travel the world getting all the training and education in the world on a blue collar salary.