![]() ![]() When he arrived at the Central City zoo, Grodd was hot on his heels, eager to learn his powers and "force of mind" to control the residents of Gorilla City and bend them to his will. ![]() Since he was trying to keep the existence of his home a secret, he played along, pretending to be a normal ape. It started when Solovar, the well-meaning, telepathic ruler of Gorilla City was captured by humans. Even so, it was chance that led Grodd and The Flash together in the first place, leading to a decades-long feud. But in the world of comic books, things don't need to make total sense, so claiming that Barry Allen or Wally West's brains function "too quickly for Grodd to control" is all the explanation needed. The intelligent ape may seem a poor opponent for The Flash, since his powers have nothing to do with speed. He Became a Villain of The Flash By Accident It was even hinted at in The Flash as existing on a parallel world. Whatever its links to the world beyond its borders, Gorilla City remains a refuge for smart apes. before a bomb plot sabotaged the entire thing. Gorilla City even petitioned to join the United Nations. Once the aura dropped, that changed forever, but the city's relationship with the outside world has changed over the years.ĭepending on who was in charge - Solovar, Grodd, or any of their allies - Gorilla City has gone from being a protectionist, isolationist city-state to a player on the world stage. Before long, the apes showed that they were far, far smarter than humans, building a veritable city of the future under a protective aura that kept man from sticking his nose into their business. Just so we're clear, the alien whose technology imbued Grodd and his fellow apes with super-intelligence didn't direct them to build a home out of stone hovels or straw huts, but a civilization worthy of their advanced evolution. Grodd was revealed to be the culprit, mind-controlling the alien's would-be savior into killing it. But the alien could sense one of its followers was plotting, looking to kill the ruler, take its place as king, and in the process, remove the technology keeping their home a secret to the world. The alien would lead the gorillas to build a city for themselves, spending a decade being ruled as something of a god-king by the apes. It's hard to know if Grodd was evil even before the event, but when both he and a rival gorilla named Solovar were given telepathic abilities along with their smarts, the two were permanently established as opposite ends of the moral spectrum. As in, a small pink alien crash landed in its spaceship on Earth, forever changing the nature of the gorillas who stumbled upon the crash site. His Origin Was Changed To The Disciple of an Alien VisitorĪside from one origin story which claims Grodd and his fellow intelligent apes were relocated to Earth from another planet, the later origin story made the source of his powers completely alien in nature. The origin story would later be retconned (like most other DC Comics characters), but the shared origins led to a team-up of the villains in the crossover story "Gorilla Warfare" (1992), also the name of the episode of The Flash in which Grodd makes his second appearance. When Gorilla Grodd made his debut in The Flash #106 (1959), it was a piece of that same meteorite that caused their own evolution, gifting some with telepathic abilities of their own. Seeing the potential, he used the meteorite to eventually evolve himself, causing his brain to explode in size, granting him telepathic and telekinetic powers while his body withered. When a strange meteorite crashed into Earth near Hammond, he noticed that its alien radiation caused life around it to rapidly evolve. The villain Hector Hammond may have had his reputation seriously tarnished by the version seen in the ill-fated Green Lantern (2011), but in the comics, the large-headed psychic juggernaut has proven a lasting foe (and an exceptionally creepy one). However, in the Prime Earth continuity, Gorilla Gregg first appeared as part of the New 52 DC Universe in Infinite Frontier #0 by Tim Sheridan.Grodd Got His Powers From The Same Place as a Major Green Lantern Villain Gorilla Gregg was created by Tim Sheridan and Rafa Sandoval, first appearing in Future State: Teen Titans #1.Telepathy:Although he has yet to fully unlock his power Gregg is a powerful telepath, even by his uncle admission.Super-Leaping: Gregg can leap dozens of feet in the air.You can help DC Database by expanding it. ![]()
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