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Orca (DC Comics)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| character_name | Orca |
| image | Orcanightwing12.jpg |
| caption | The Grace Balin incarnation of Orca as depicted in Nightwing (vol. 4) #12 (March 2017). Art by Marcus To (penciller/inker) and Chris Sotomayor (colorist). |
| real_name | Grace Balin |
| Dean Toye | |
| species | Metahuman |
| publisher | DC Comics |
| debut | Batman #579 (July 2000) |
| creators | Larry Hama (writer) |
| Scott McDaniel (artist) | |
| alliances | Rogues Gallery |
| United States Military | |
| Aquamarines | |
| powers | (Both): |
Dean Toye Scott McDaniel (artist) United States Military Aquamarines
- Superhuman strength, stamina, durability, reflexes, and swimming
- Enhanced olfactory sense
- Sharp fangs and claws (Balin):
- Marine biology
- Gene therapy (Toye):
- Transformation
- Military mastery
Orca is the name of two fictional characters who appear in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly known as one of the adversaries to the superhero Batman.
Publication history
The Grace Balin incarnation of Orca first appeared in Batman #579 (July 2000) and was created by Larry Hama and Scott McDaniel.
The Dean Toye incarnation of Orca first appeared in Aquaman (vol. 8) #12 (February 2017), and was created by Dan Abnett and Philippe Briones.
Fictional character biography
Grace Balin
Grace Balin is a marine biologist who is involved in an accident that leaves her paralyzed and dependent on a wheelchair for mobility. She continues to work at the Gotham Aquarium until it is supposed to be closed for lack of funding. Grace experiments with spinal cord tissue regeneration using orca spinal cord tissue, giving herself the ability to transform into an orca hybrid. She can easily switch between her normal and powered forms, though she remains paraplegic in her human form. While battling Batman, Orca is forced into an underwater cave and begins to revert to normal, forcing Batman to give her a serum to permanently transform her and prevent her from drowning. Having ingested the formula, Orca swims away.
In One Year Later, Orca is found dead in the sewers under Gotham City. She appears to have been shot in the head by Harvey Dent, although Batman is convinced Dent is not the true killer. Orca's murder was orchestrated by the Great White Shark, who plans on becoming the top crime boss in Gotham.
Orca is reintroduced in Nightwing (vol. 4) #11, where she is a part of a criminal group in Bludhaven called the Whale's Enders and is ordered to kill Nightwing. Orca was formerly a member of the Run-Offs, a rehab group for former Gotham supervillains, but left because she considered herself too much of a monster to relate to them.
Dean Toye
Sergeant Dean Toye is a member of the Aquamarines, task-forced military operations trained and transformed to combat Atlantis in case of a crisis. As the second-in-command to Major Rhonda Ricoh who has the codename of "Great White", Orca and the Aquamarines are dispatched by the government to kill Aquaman.
Powers and abilities
Both Orcas possess immense physical attributes, an enhanced sense of smell, and the ability to operate underwater. However, they must periodically rehydrate themselves to avoid drying out.
In other media
- The Grace Balin incarnation of Orca appears in The Lego Batman Movie, voiced by Laura Kightlinger.
- The Grace Balin incarnation of Orca appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.
- The Grace Balin incarnation of Orca appears in Lego Dimensions via The Lego Batman Movie DLC pack.
- The Grace Balin incarnation of Orca appears in the Injustice 2 prequel comic. This version is a member of Ra's al Ghul's Suicide Squad and lover of squad-mate Killer Croc, who she later has a child with and leaves the Squad to live a normal life.
References
References
- (2008). "The Essential Batman Encyclopedia". Del Rey.
- Sawan, Amer. (May 14, 2021). "Joker's Partner Punchline Just Got Pulverized by Gotham's Silliest Villain".
- Melrose, Kevin. (December 22, 2016). "Nightwing Ushers in the Year of Orca (Seriously)".
- Matadeen, Renaldo. (August 22, 2021). "Suicide Squad: King Shark's Future Depends on Batman's Weirdest Villain".
- ''[[Batman (comic book). Batman]]'' #579 (July 2000)
- ''[[Detective Comics]]'' #819 (July 2006)
- ''[[Nightwing (comic book). Nightwing]]'' (vol. 4) #11 (February 2017)
- ''Nightwing'' (vol. 4) #12 (March 2017)
- ''[[Aquaman]]'' (vol. 8) #14 (March 2017)
- Harley, Joel. (January 3, 2022). "Batman's Most Ridiculous Villain Just Became King Shark's Savior".
- Eisen, Andrew. (October 2, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - ''Scribblenauts Unmasked'' Guide".
- Kurland, Daniel. (July 23, 2023). "10 Batman Villains You Didn't Even Know Existed".
- ''[[Injustice 2 (comics). Injustice 2]]'' #1 (July 2017)
- ''Injustice 2'' #35 (December 2018)
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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