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|[[James Robinson (writer)|James Robinson]],<ref name=”:1″>{{Cite web |last=Truitt |first=Brian |date=March 4, 2013 |title=”Earth 2″ writer puts a new twist on Doctor Fate |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/03/04/earth-2-comic-book-series/1962607/ |access-date=May 23, 2022 |website=USA Today |language=en-US}}</ref> [[Nicola Scott]] |
|[[James Robinson (writer)|James Robinson]],<ref name=”:1″>{{Cite web |last=Truitt |first=Brian |date=March 4, 2013 |title=”Earth 2″ writer puts a new twist on Doctor Fate |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/03/04/earth-2-comic-book-series/1962607/ |access-date=May 23, 2022 |website=USA Today |language=en-US}}</ref> [[Nicola Scott]] |
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|”Earth 2” #9 (April, 2013) |
|”Earth 2” #9 (April, 2013) |
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|”’Khalid Ben-Hassin”’ is an [[Egyptian Americans|Egyptian-American]] [[Archaeology|archaeologist]] and expert on the occult and magic on Earth-2 who encounters the famed Helmet of Fate, a [[Mother Box]] containing the essence of the wizard [[Nabu ( |
|”’Khalid Ben-Hassin”’ is an [[Egyptian Americans|Egyptian-American]] [[Archaeology|archaeologist]] and expert on the occult and magic on Earth-2 who encounters the famed Helmet of Fate, a [[Mother Box]] containing the essence of the wizard [[Nabu ()|Nabu]], and dons it to become the superhero known as Doctor Fate, a member of the Wonders of the World.<ref name=”:0″>{{Cite book |last=Robinson |first=James |title=””Earth 2: The Tower of Fate” |publisher=[[DC Comics]] |year=2014 |isbn=978-1-4012-4614-3}}</ref> |
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|Richard John “Dick” Grayson |
|Richard John “Dick” Grayson |
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Latest revision as of 12:53, 19 December 2025
Through the publication history of DC Comics, several alternative versions of Doctor Fate have been created with usage of the codename in DC Comics. Often defined as a legacy hero within the fictional DC Universe, the first character to adopt the codename, Kent Nelson, was created by Gardner Fox and Howard Sherman. Over the character’s publication history, several other characters have adopted the name, such as Hector Hall and Khalid Nassour. Alternate versions of the character also exist within the DC Multiverse, such as Khalid Ben-Hassin and Doc Fate.
Mainstream versions
[edit]
Several other versions of the character exist in alternate versions of the DC Universe often to as the Multiverse. Within these fictional parallel universes, each of these characters appear within their own continuity and stories, often differing from versions depicted within the mainstream comic books. These versions of the character specifically are different characters and incarnations typically disassociated with the mainstream bearers (i.e. Strangefate) and/or possess varying different characteristics despite sharing aspects (i.e. Doc Fate).
| Alter ego | Creator(s) | First appearance | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Khalid Ben-Hassin | James Robinson,[1] Nicola Scott | Earth 2 #9 (April, 2013) | Khalid Ben-Hassin is an Egyptian-American archaeologist and expert on the occult and magic on Earth-2 who encounters the famed Helmet of Fate, a Mother Box containing the essence of the wizard Nabu, and dons it to become the superhero known as Doctor Fate, a member of the Wonders of the World.[2] |
| Richard John “Dick” Grayson | J.T. Krul, Mikel Janin | Flashpoint: Deadman and the Flying Graysons #1 (August, 2011) | In the Flashpoint timeline, Richard John “Dick” Grayson becomes Doctor Fate following Kent Nelson’s (a fortune teller in Haly’s Circus and a former hero of the JSA) death and being hunted by Starfire and the Amazons seeking the helm. He is assisted by Deadman.[3] |
Doctor Fates of the 31st Century
[edit]
| Codename | Alter-ego | Creators | First appearances | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doctor Strangefate | Charles Xavier | Ron Marz | Marvel Versus DC #1 (1996) | Charles Xavier of Earth-9602/Earth-1996 is a mutant and telepath who learns the mystic arts through Nabu the Ancient One. Taking the Helmet of Strangefate and mantle of Sorcerer Supreme, he becomes a powerful but unconventional hero who often assists the Judgement League of Avengers and employs others at his steed despite his power. He is assisted by his servant, Myx.[7] This character is an amalgamation of Doctor Strange and Professor X from Marvel Comics alongside Doctor Fate. |
Villain counterparts
[edit]
| Name | Creator(s) | First appearance | Fictional biography | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doctor Chaos | Burt Belker | Martin Pasko | The New Adventures of Superboy #25 (1982) | Burt Belker is a wealthy, college student studying archaeology and an assistant of Lewis Lang (father of Lana Lang) who briefly dated his daughter. Discovering a “Sumerian” helm revealed to be the Helmet of Chaos, he dons it and is taken over by the personality within it and comes into conflict with Superboy.[8] |
| Unknown | Steve Orlando
Hugo Petrus |
Justice League of America (2017) #18 | A new unnamed version of Doctor Chaos serves a protector of Chaos Realm, home of the Lords of Chaos. He is ambushed and seemingly killed by the villain, Queen of Fables.[9] | |
| Anti-Fate | Dr. Benjamin Stoner | J. M. DeMatteis | Doctor Fate #1 (1987) | Dr. Benjamin Stoner is a lead doctor in Arkham Asylum driven insane by Typhon, a Lord of Chaos. Targeting an aged Kent Nelson, Typhon uses him to battle Kent and his successor, Eric and Linda Strauss, with a dark variant of the Helmet of Fate as the adversary, Anti-Fate.[10] |
| Doctor Hate | Rachel Roth / Raven | Joshua Williamson
Howard Porter |
Knight Terrors: Night’s End #1 (August, 2023) | Raven is the daughter of Trigon and a superhero often portrayed with empathic and sorcerous powers. Sometime after the aftermath of “Lazarus Planet“, the dark counterpart of the Helmet of Fate, the Helmet of Hate, is created. Raven’s demonic self separates from her and becomes independent, donning the helm and the Nightmare Stone. As Doctor Hate, she has powers comparable to Doctor Fate and the power to manipulate minds.[11] |
- ^ Truitt, Brian (March 4, 2013). “‘Earth 2’ writer puts a new twist on Doctor Fate”. USA Today. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
- ^ Robinson, James (2014). Earth 2: The Tower of Fate. DC Comics. ISBNÂ 978-1-4012-4614-3.
- ^ Johns, Geoff (2011). Flashpoint. Andy Kubert, Sandra Hope, Jesse Delperdang, Alex Sinclair, Nick Napolitano. Burbank, CA. ISBNÂ 978-1-4012-3337-2. OCLCÂ 742511266.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (2021-01-19). Legion of Super-Heroes (2019-) #12. DC Comics.
- ^ Olortegui, Diego (October 28, 2025). “Diego Olortegui’s X Post”.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Johns, Geoff (2022). The New Golden Age #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Doctor Strangefate #1 (April 1996)
- ^ The New Adventures of Superboy #25 (January 1982)
- ^ Orlando, Steve (2018). Justice League of America. Vol. 4, Surgical strike. Kelley Jones, Hugo Petrus, Stephen Byrne, Michelle Madsen, Clayton Cowles, Josh Reed. Burbank, CA. ISBNÂ 978-1-4012-8058-1. OCLCÂ 1014090846.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ DeMattis, J.M. (1989). Doctor Fate #1-#4. DC Comics.
- ^ Taylor, Tom (2024-01-23). Titans: Beast World (2023-) #5. DC Comics.


