Gen¹³ | |
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Cover to Gen¹³ vol. 4, #1 (2006).
Art by Talent Caldwell. |
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Group publication information | |
Publisher | Wildstorm (DC Comics) |
First appearance |
Cameo: WildCats Trilogy #1 (June 1993) Full: Deathmate: Black (September 1993) |
Created by |
Jim Lee Brandon Choi J. Scott Campbell |
In-story information | |
Base(s) | La Jolla, California |
Member(s) |
Caitlin Fairchild Grunge Freefall Sarah Rainmaker Burnout John Lynch |
Gen¹³ | |
Cover to Gen¹³ vol. 2, #6 (1995). Art by Jim Lee and Scott Williams. | |
Series publication information | |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format |
(vol. 1) Limited series (vols. 2-4) Ongoing series |
Publication date |
(vol. 1) Feb. – Sept. 1994 (vol. 2) March 1995 – July 2002 (vol. 3) Sept. 2002 – Feb. 2004 (vol. 4) Oct. 2006 – Feb. 2011 |
Number of issues |
(vol. 1) 5 (plus #½) (vol. 2) 80 (plus #-1, 3 Annuals) (vol. 3) 17 (vol. 4) 39 |
Creator(s) |
Jim Lee Brandon Choi J. Scott Campbell |
Gen¹³ is a fictional superhero team and comic book series originally written by Jim Lee and Brandon Choi and illustrated by J. Scott Campbell. It was published by Wildstorm under the Image Comics banner, which went on to become an imprint for DC Comics, who continued publishing the Gen¹³ title. The comic features a loosely organized team of super-powered beings composed of five teens and their mentor.
The series takes place in Jim Lee's Wildstorm Universe, and Gen¹³'s stories and history intertwine with those from his own works, such as Wildcats and Team 7 (in fact, each of the main characters in Gen¹³ is the child of a Team 7 member).
The setup of the series is that a group of teens is invited to take part in a government project, which is in actuality a prison-like testing ground on "gen-active" teens. The teens make their escape, but not before they manifest superhuman powers, and are labeled dangerous fugitives. They rely on each other to fight their foes and unveil the personal secrets that linked them to Team 7 and International Operations.
After a very successful run ending with issue #20, co-creator and illustrator J. Scott Campbell handed the reins of Gen¹³ over to other creative teams, saying that leaving freed him up to work on both the Gen¹³/Batman crossover and his own new series (Danger Girl).
Following the run of Choi and Campbell were John Arcudi and Gary Frank. Their realistic style, both in writing and art, was a drastic change from the title's more fantastic elements. Following their run, Scott Lobdell returned the title to its less serious, more sexual roots, but still the title was not received well by fans.