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NO ONE IS SAFE IN BLÜDHAVEN, part 1 By David Jamison
#David Jamison#dc comics#batman#nightwing#dick grayson#oracle#barbara gordon#two face#harvey dent#vigilante#adrian chase#deathstroke#slade wilson#copperhead#Sameer park#tiger shark#blockbuster#roland desmond#redesign
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So anyway remember when Blockbuster was strangling Dick, and all Dick could think about was Bruce telling him, "I need you to go to Bludhaven and find out who massacred twenty-one top mobmen. I’m counting on you to find the killer. Don’t fail me."
Nightwing (Vol. 2) #8
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Nightwing: The Animated Series
By David Jamison
#this looks really cool#nightwing#dick grayson#oracle#barbara gordon#deathstroke#slade wilson#blockbuster#roland desmond#two face#harvey dent#copperhead#tiger shark#vigilante#adrian chase#tarantula#catalina flores#dc animated series#fanart#twitter art
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BLOCKBUSTER and NIGHTWING in NIGHTWING (2016) #96
#russian nesting doll of vermin 😭 sorry i laughed#tt rly pulled out the thesaurus fr#comics#dc#nightwing comics#nightwing 96#dick grayson#nightwing#roland desmond#blockbuster#identity reveal#photo#tais toi lys#lys reads comics#*
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can anyone tell me what issue of nightwing the blockbuster arc starts at? i wanna read it for fic purposes but i can't find a reading order online.
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#nightwing deathstroke#nightwing blockbuster#sladick#dick slade#nightwing#deathstroke#blockbuster#richard grayson#dick grayson#roland desmond#slade wilson
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#kinktober#my writing#fanfic#dick grayson#bruce wayne#brudick#sladick#slade wilson#roland desmond#raptor#deathwing
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Welcome to the AO3 Batfamily Rarepairs Bracket!
graphic design is my passion
We've pitted your submitted romantic rare pairings including at least one Batfamily member against each other to see who will win.
FAQ / Rules
How were the pairings selected?
We searched AO3 for romantic/sexual ships that include at least one Batfamily member and have between 10 to 30 works. Matchups were decided at random.
What are your stances on voter fraud/bribery?
If you're going to do it, do it well. Just don't commit any actual crimes that can be traced back to us.
I have an issue with one of the ships included in this poll.
This poll is a celebration of fandom and its history. We've added all eligible ships, regardless of our personal opinions about them. Please be nice, treat each other with respect and refrain from harassment.
Pairings
Round 1
Tim Drake/Cullen Row vs Barbara Gordon/Ted Kord
Tim Drake/Jason Todd/Bruce Wayne vs Tim Drake/Dick Grayson/Damian Wayne
Stephanie Brown/Cassandra Cain/Harper Row vs Harvey Dent/Selina Kyle/Bruce Wayne
John Constantine/Dick Grayson vs Dick Grayson/Hank Hall
Eddie Bloomberg/Jason Todd vs Catherine Todd/Bruce Wayne
Dick Grayson/Raptor vs Kyle Rayner/Jason Todd/Donna Troy
Kate Kane/Kara Zor-El vs Tim Drake/Lonnie Machin
Dick Grayson/Grant Wilson vs Tim Drake/Jonathan Samuel Kent
Round 2
Duke Thomas/Damian Wayne vs Stephanie Brown/Barbara Gordon
Diana (Wonder Woman)/Dick Grayson vs Roland Desmond/Dick Grayson
Essence/Jason Todd vs Cassandra Cain/Brenda Miller
Stephanie Brown/Cassie Sandsmark vs Joker/Clark Kent/Bruce Wayne
Dick Grayson/Bruce Wayne/Slade Wilson vs Diana (Wonder Woman)/Jason Todd
Karen Starr | Kara Zor-L/Helena Wayne vs Artemis Crock/Dick Grayson/Wally West/Zatanna Zatara
Jim Gordon/Jason Todd vs Dick Grayson/Shawn Tsang
Stephanie Brown/Cassandra Cain/Tim Drake vs Dick Grayson/Joker
Round 3
Jean-Paul Valley/Tim Drake vs Cassandra Cain/Damian Wayne
Kate Kane/Selina Kyle vs Apollo/Dick Grayson
Dawn Granger/Dick Grayson vs Tim Drake/Connor Hawke
Tim Drake/Dick Grayson/Jason Todd/Bruce Wayne/Damian Wayne vs Cassandra Cain/Bruce Wayne
Garth/Dick Grayson/Roy Harper/Donna Troy/Wally West vs Barbara Gordon/Kate Kane
Janet Drake/Bruce Wayne vs Stephanie Brown/Cassie Sandsmark/Kara Zor-El
Dick Grayson/Roy Harper/Koriand'r/Jason Todd vs Helena Bertinelli/Bruce Wayne
Cassandra Cain/Dick Grayson vs Joker/Damian Wayne
Round 4
Bea Bennett/Dick Grayson vs Stephanie Brown/Kon-El | Conner Kent
Helena Bertinelli/Bette Kane vs Barbara Gordon/Zatanna Zatara
John Constantine/Dick Grayson/Zatanna Zatara vs Stephanie Brown/Tim Drake/Kon-El | Conner Kent
Apollo/Midnighter/Jason Todd vs Isabella Ortiz/Duke Thomas
Roy Harper/Kyle Rayner/Jason Todd vs Helena Bertinelli/Tim Drake
Tim Drake/Ariana Dzerchenko vs Barbara Gordon/Dick Grayson/Jason Todd
Roy Harper/Jason Todd/Slade Wilson vs Dick Grayson/Victor Stone
Cassandra Cain/Rose Wilson vs Lian Harper/Damian Wayne
#dc#dc comics#dcu#batman#batfamily#bruce wayne#dick grayson#cassandra cain#jason todd#stephanie brown#tim drake#damian wayne#duke thomas#barbara gordon#jean paul valley#kate kane#helena bertinelli#shipping#polls#fandom polls
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A (Negative) Review of Tom Taylor's Nightwing Run - What Went Wrong? Villains
Introduction Who is Dick Grayson? What Went Wrong? Dick's Characterization What Went Wrong? Barbara Gordon What Went Wrong? Bludhaven (Part 1, Part 2) What Went Wrong? Melinda Lin Grayson What Went Wrong? Bea Bennett What Went Wrong? Villains Conclusion Bibliography
During a discussion, Dick Grayson Fan C explained the importance of a balanced hero and villain dynamic by describing their relationship as inherently “symbiotic.” The two, after all, are interlinked, and the success and failures of one affects the way the audience perceives the other. When the audience knows that the hero will win the final confrontation, the questions surrounding how they will do so and what price they’ll pay to achieve said victory is what creates tension. In other words, the way in which a struggle unfolds is just as, if not sometimes more, important than its outcome.
Note that this symbiotic antagonistic dynamic is not limited to physical confrontations. A good hero-and-villain relationship is also an exploration of the protagonist’s psychology, their motivations, and the thematic questions of a story. A well-crafted villain should not only be providing a challenge to the hero in the battlefield, but also call into question the truths — or lies — that the hero believes in.
Taylor’s antagonists fail to provide Dick with any such challenges. And, as such, they fail to provide Dick with the opportunity to truly demonstrate who he is and what values Nightwing embodies
To prove my point, I wish to compare Taylor’s handling of Blockbuster with that of Chuck Dixon and Devin Grayson. While I considered also analyzing Heartless in detail as well, because the main Heartless confrontation is currently unfolding as time of writing, and because my main gripes with how Heartless was handled during the beginning of the run have already been addressed in other parts of this essay, I opted instead to keep my mentions of him brief. Furthermore, not only does Taylor’s parroting of Dixon’s and Grayson’s runs makes the comparisons between their Blockbusters unavoidable, but his take on Roland Desmond perfectly demonstrates how his simplistic morality contradicts the nuanced themes of social justice that seem to interest him.
(Similar to an earlier disclaimer I made on Dixon, I want to make it clear that just because I am comparing Grayson’s run favorably to Taylor’s, it does not mean that I am unaware of the issues present in her own story, nor that I disagree with much of the criticism directed at it. Despite enjoying much of what she wrote, I also readily concur that there are problematic elements to it, and I often found myself questioning her intentions as I was unable to discern them. But that is something that would deserve its own essay and I do not want to further derail this one by discussing the extensive controversies about Grayson’s run and the way it is often regarded by Dick Grayson fans. Regardless of one's opinion of Grayson’s statements, I believe it is unquestionable that she handled Blockbuster’s ruthlessness and the way he personally terrorized Dick through a form of targeted persecution that was mentally and emotionally torturous was leagues above the generic intimidation tactics employed by Taylor’s Blockbuster.)
When I claim that Taylor’s characterization of Blockbuster reveals his simplistic morality, I do not mean to imply that I wish for Blockbuster (or even Heartless, for that matter) to be sympathetic. I do not believe that they must have redeemable qualities that endear them to the reader in order for them to be interesting. While I enjoy the tragic villain trope, I’m also a big fan of the terrible villain who gets under your skin and inspires such hatred that you cannot wait to see them defeated. I believe that just as a person can enjoy both comedies and dramas without thinking one genre is superior to the other, we can also have all sorts of villains and enjoy them on their own terms.
That being said, I do expect villains to be interesting. I expect them to be meaningfully contributing to the story not only in terms of narrative conflict, but in challenging the protagonist, in creating stakes, and in being in conversation with the themes explored in a story, whatever those themes may be.
So know that when I am criticizing Taylor’s villains, I’m not doing so because I wish they were completely different characters from whom they were intended to be. When I critique their simplistic morality, I do so because Taylor invited such criticism when he coated his run in the veneer of social and political justice commentary by alluding to real world problems and trying to show how Dick Grayson would resolve them.
Let’s start by defining who Roland Desmond is, what conflicts his presence generates, and what he is meant to stand for in the narrative.
When examining Redondo’s design for this character, their intentions come through almost immediately: Blockbuster is meant to be threatening, corrupt, and ruthless. He is meant to be the type of oppressor who enriches himself at the expense of others. He yields his power to remain on top of the food chain, shamelessly bribing politicians and threatening his enemies. He will stop at nothing to retain control, he will not hesitate to destroy those who so much as dare to think about standing in his way. He has no sympathy for others, he does not care about their suffering, and he will gladly sacrifice their lives and the lives of their loved ones to get what he wants. All of these characteristics are physically manifested in his design, in which his oppressive frame demonstrates how he overpowers others and his giant hands are shown to be the type that could crush one’s bones just as his shadowy reign over Bludhaven crushes the city’s soul.
(Taylor, Tom, writer. Redondo, Bruno, illustrator. Leaping into the Light Part Two. Nightwing: Rebirth. 79, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2021. pp 14)
We can see this also through the dialogue of the story. For example, in #81, Melinda gets sworn in as mayor and Blockbuster’s men, in order to demonstrate the power they have over the politicians in the city, give her a suitcase full of money as a representation of the bribes that will be coming Melinda’s way.
(Taylor, Tom, writer. Bruno, illustrator. Leaping into the Light Part 4. Nightwing: Rebirth. 81, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2021. pp 04)
Melinda, in order to continue her work undercover, plays into that by stating in a line that is as devoid of personality as it is of subtlety that, as mayor, she will make them all wealthier.
Similarly, in #83, Blockbuster states (also with little personality and little subtlety) that he owns the courts, that he sees himself as entitled to Bludhaven, and that because of the power he yields, he sees himself as invincible.
(Taylor, Tom, writer. Redondo, Bruno, illustrator. Leaping into the Light Part Six. Nightwing: Rebirth. 83, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2021. pp. 08)
Nightwing reaffirms this idea in that same issue when he says (also devoid of personality, subtlety, and this time charm or wit) that Blockbuster is “everything wrong with this city in one convenient, oversized package.”
This is what the conflict between Blockbuster and Nightwing is meant to symbolize — a struggle for the city’s future. Will Bludhaven continue to crumble under Blockbuster’s rule, or will Nightwing free it from his corrupt grip so that its citizens can finally have a chance to thrive? Even in the 1996 series, during both Dixon’s and Grayson’s runs, Blockbuster did not pose a threat to Dick’s morals or his world view. He did not make Dick question the way he saw people. Blockbuster’s targeting of Dick Grayson and his loved ones demonstrates how those with privilege go after the people who are fighting for change. Dick’s exhaustion and hopelessness mimics the same sense of helplessness one feels when it seems like the entire world is against you and the consequences for doing what is right can seem too great of a price to pay.
For this reason, Blockbuster does not need to be complex. He does not need to be sympathetic. But he does need to be powerful, threatening, and ruthless. He must push Dick to the edge, to make it seem like all it is lost, and in turn, when Dick finally pushes through and wins, it is a victory on both a personal and a societal level.
And this is where Taylor fails miserably.
Now, I have stated previously how, despite Taylor’s attempts, his rendition of Blockbuster comes off as flatly incompetent rather than threatening. I have discussed this under the context of how it influences the way Dick’s and Bludhaven’s portrayal. Now, I wish to dig deeper into this issue.
We are told of countless attempts on Dick’s life, but the only ones shown are overcome by Dick and his allies with ease. Either that, or the tension is undermined by a one-line joke or a general tone of casualness that fails to properly convey the stakes of the moment. Any threat that could have been created with Haley’s kidnapping or any intimidation tactic is destroyed by the gimmicky nature of the issue. This makes Blockbuster less of a threat.
And yet, we are told by Wally that Dick is stressed and overworked. But because there is not a lot of tension on screen, that telling rings hollow. The reader is not shown that Dick is overworked, and he is not shown truly struggling alone against the obstacles he does face, so this idea of Dick coming apart at the seams because of Blockbuster is not something the reader gets to truly experience. As a result, it often appears that Dick is coddled by his loved ones as everything always ends up alright with little effort made on their part. Rather than witnessing true danger take a toll on Dick, we are simply told this is something that is happening.
(Taylor, Tom, writer. Redondo, Bruno, illustrator. Get Grayson Act Three. Nightwing: Rebirth. 90, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2022. pp 16)
By comparison, when Grayson first wrote this same story nearly twenty years ago, she made it carry weight. She made it have consequences. While Dick was already coming apart from a myriad of different stress factors that unfolded on screen (overworking himself as Nightwing, as a police officer, saving Amy from Deathstroke, being fired from his job, Babs breaking up with him, and finally the circus fire), it was the explosion that made Dick fall apart, serving as the catalyst for his downward spiral. As Dick hunts down those Blockbuster employed, the readers get to see Dick’s exhaustion, Dick pushing himself to his limits, sleeping on fire-escapes while wearing his Nightwing uniform because he cannot bring himself to stop.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Zircher, Patch, illustrator. Rekindle. Nightwing no 91, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2004. pp. 15)
Similarly, when the Judge returned to Bludhaven in The Untouchable, we see Dick keeping count of the bodies he left behind, we see Dick push through a bullet wound and beatings, we see him chase the Judge restlessly while neglecting his personal life. In both cases, we see the consequences of what Dick’s failure means, we see him struggle with those outcomes, we see what is at stake if Dick loses. And that, in turn, makes us not only care, but become invested in his success.
(Humphries, Sam, writer. Chang, Bernard, illustrator The Untouchable: Chapter Four: Infiltration. Nightwing: Rebirth no. 38, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2018. pp. 19)
By contrast, in Taylor’s run we never see any of that danger, and the few times we are presented with some threat, the conflict is handled with laughable ease. Blockbuster’s plots are foiled without Dick ever needing to do much of anything as he mostly relies on others to come to his aid. In this Nightwing solo series, the Titans, Batman, Robin, and Batgirl often do much of the hero-ing. Rather than putting the spotlight on Dick as a hero, Taylor lets others take the center stage, making this into an almost ensemble book. Because of this, the idea of Dick being near a breaking point, exhausted, and feeling unsafe wherever he goes is not supported by the narrative. By not giving Blockbuster a win, Taylor undermines the story he is attempting to tell.
This continues on through Nightwing #91. While Wally and Dick’s friendship were portrayed rather nicely, the villain that Taylor so ominously built up is taken down with an ease that is devoid of tension. The villain who is supposedly so good they’ve kept their existence a secret from Batman himself is quickly undermined by Taylor’s unwillingness to have his characters struggle.
(Taylor, Tom, writer. Redondo, Bruno, illustrator. Get Grayson Act Three. Nightwing: Rebirth. 91, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2022. pp 16-17)
Besides the poor execution of his plans, however, it must be stated that Blockbuster’s plans and his motivations are poorly developed. Again, I’m not saying that Blockbuster needs to have a single sympathetic aspect to his character, but he does need to be threatening, and he must have some internal logic. Looking at the story Taylor has created, I wonder… Why does Blockbuster care that Dick Grayson created the Alfred Pennyworth Foundation? Why does he care about the creation of Haven? I understand that Blockbuster is meant to be a corrupt crime boss who wants to retain control of the city, but how does Dick building Haven interfere with his plans? Why was one billionaire throwing his money around to help homeless youths a bleep in his radar? Blockbuster already has politicians and the police force in his pocket while Bludhaven’s systems were constructed to benefit him and those who endear themselves to him. So why is he so focused on destroying Dick Grayson and not Nightwing?
I am trying to restrict my comparisons to DC Comics media, but in this, I cannot help but think of President Snow’s portrayal in the Hunger Games movie adaptations. In a movie-only scene, President Snow tells Seneca Crane about the importance of having a winner in the games. He explains how it is about letting the people have hope. As he put “A little hope is effective, a lot of hope is dangerous. A spark is fine, as long as it's contained.”
In other words, giving the people a spark of hope to keep them distracted can help prevent mass mobilization required to disrupt the system. Give them a goal to focus on, and you can redirect their attention. It would, then, be far more sinister and make far more sense from a narrative standpoint if Blockbuster allowed Dick to focus on his one project so that instead he would not turn his attention to Blockbuster. Perhaps he could have attempted to manipulate the project from within, folding it into Bludhaven’s corrupt social systems. Dick would have been that little spark that Blockbuster could have cultivated, giving the people of Bludhaven "hope" so that they would focus on that and not on what is going on behind the scenes. The narrative arc, then, would focus on Blockbuster failing to contain the spark as Dick became the flame that breathed true systematic change.
I do not want to dwell too much into fixes, as I merely wished to analyze Taylor’s run and not to go full on script-doctor and rewrite the entirety of his story. Rather, I just wished to use that as an example of how Blockbuster does not have sound plans or internal logic, and that, too, contributes to how his character comes across as incompetent and nonthreatening, and as a result, even his supposed ruthlessness is undercut.
Taylor’s Blockbuster does not have a concrete goal. He wants power and money, yes, but for what purposes? And how does he acquire said power and money? Why is he threatened by Dick Grayson’s personal project? How are his intimidation tactics challenging Dick in an interesting way? How are Blockbuster and Nightwing meant to narratively play off each other? How are Taylor’s Blockbuster tactics any different from a generic villain with any other name?
To be fair to Taylor, I do not believe Dixon managed to fully nail this part of Blockbuster’s character. I did not find Dixon’s writing of Blockbuster to be a particularly compelling part of his run. However, Dixon countered this lack of substance by leaning into what Blockbuster was meant to represent — the system inside the machine that allowed evil to flourish. Blockbuster’s influence may have been everywhere, but Blockbuster himself was hardly ever confronting Nightwing directly. Dick was fighting a war on multiple fronts, and while he could stop an enemy on his right, two more appeared on his left. The way the struggle between Blockbuster and Nightwing played out during Dixon’s run emphasized why protecting Bludhaven was so difficult — because there were so many immediate crises that needed to be dealt with on the surface, it was difficult to get to the root of the problem.
This was why, during Dixon’s run, Blockbuster could remain a threat even if he would remain unseen for long stretches of time. And this was why when Dick stopped one of the underlings, Blockbuster himself could remain an intimidating force. Blockbuster’s machinations were varied — some of his plans targeted Nightwing directly; others Dick only stumbled upon when investigating a matter he believed to be unrelated. Furthermore, the limited number of allies and the prospect that Blockbuster could only be taken down for good once his grip on other institutions of power and influence were weakened emphasized just how this was no ordinary fight, but rather a mission requiring Dick to operate on multiple fronts and strategize on a long-term basis.
Taking down Blockbuster was a multi-step process. Each of said steps offered their own challenges and opportunity for storytelling, for fleshing out Bludhaven, and for allowing Dick to grow as the protagonist of the story.
Dixon’s approach to Blockbuster requires Blockbuster to stay in the background, looming over the city as Dick fights his way forward. It’s why he remains present for all 70 issues of Dixon’s run without undermining Dick’s competence or his dedication to his city — as a stand-in for corrupt power, Blockbuster himself is not an immediate threat even if he is the powerful underlining one. Dick must constantly fight others in order to eventually be able to fight Blockbuster. To borrow video-game terminology, Blockbuster is the final boss, and Dick must first go through a myriad of levels and smaller enemies before he gets to finally take down Blockbuster for good.
It was Grayson who made the conflict between Dick and Blockbuster personal and, as a result, far more sinister. After the death of his mother in a car pile up caused by Nightwing’s activities, Blockbuster was determined to get his revenge on Nightwing. After finding out Nightwing’s civilian identity, Blockbuster came up with a chilling plan that was specifically made to destroy Dick from the inside out. Blockbuster understood that Dick did not value his own life, but rather, those of the people around him. And so, he decided that rather than killing Nightwing, he would instead kill everyone around Dick, tormenting and terrorizing him until he felt as if he were poisonous. What was so poetic about this strategy was that it mirrored what, in Blockbuster’s eyes, was Nightwing’s biggest sin: the danger he imposed on others through his actions which resulted in the death of Blockbuster’s mother.
As you can see, in this scenario, Blockbuster has become more of a proper character rather than just a stand in for corruption. That is not to say that wielding power for self-serving purposes at the expense of others isn’t a factor in his character during Grayson’s run, but rather that while Dixon’s Blockbuster was more of an embodiment of an idea, Grayson’s was more human, with more personal motivations. One approach is not inherently better than the other, they simply lean towards opposing sides of the spectrum, and that affected the type of story told and the type of confrontation Dick and Blockbuster had during their runs.
Because Grayson took a more personal approach towards Dick and Blockbuster’s dynamic, she also fleshed out their relationship to the point that it was not generic. Blockbuster’s campaign of terror against Dick was intimate, for it was something that could only have played out between these two characters. And while Dixon laid out the groundwork to build Blockbuster into a threatening figure by the time Grayson took over the title, Grayson’s strategy to have Blockbuster go after those around Dick allowed her to have Dick win and lose simultaneously.
Blockbuster starts his campaign of terror slowly. First, getting Tarantula to contribute to Dick and Babs’ breakup. While she is not the sole reason why they break apart — they are shown to have had some tension long beforehand that comes from incompatible personalities and desires — she does become a factor in their falling out. This ends up isolating Dick even further, who was already stressed due to the fact he lost his job once his boss and superior Amy discovered he was Nightwing.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Zircher, Patch Snowball. Nightwing. 87, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2003. pp 17 - 18)
Then, Blockbuster strikes closer to home by hiring Firefly to set fire to the circus Dick grew up in. While Dick was able to save many people who were inside the tent (and had his own life saved by Zitka), over twenty people lost their lives in this incident.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Davis, Shane, illustrator. Flurry. Nightwing no 88, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2003. pp. 16)
While that certainly worked in breaking Dick’s spirit, it wasn’t until Dick’s building exploded that he realized this was a targeted attempt to get to him. All of those innocent people died not because Blockbuster was trying to kill Dick, but rather, because Blockbuster knew that their deaths would destroy him.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Zircher, Patch, illustrator Avalanche. Nightwing no 89, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2004. pp. 12)
What follows is a downward spiral that demonstrates just how thoroughly Blockbuster is able to break Dick. Even as Dick gains new ground by taking out some of Blockbuster’s hired assassins, the threat still looms over him. And even when it seemed like Dick finally found a way to take down Blockbuster for good, that hope is snatched from him. The anger and helplessness Dick experiences in this moment truly speaks to the same feeling many of those who stand up against their oppressors feel whenever they are faced with setbacks in their constant battle.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Garcia, Manuel, illustrator Flashpoint. Nightwing no 92, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2004. pp. 21)
The carnage continues. The reporter who had uncovered Nightwing’s identity and just so happened to be standing next to Dick is mercilessly shot dead in front of Dick’s eyes.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Zircher, Patch, illustrator. Slowburn. Nightwing no 93, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2004. pp. 07)
And as Blockbuster chases Dick down, putting others in harm, we can see as Dick tries to protect innocent people around them that Blockbuster will not stop. He will not rest.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Zircher, Patch, illustrator. Slow Burn. Nightwing no 93, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2004. pp. 10-11)
Blockbuster says it himself in a speech where he lays out exactly what his plans for Dick are. Dick is at a breaking point. The enemy, huge and impossible to overcome, towers over him. As the climax reaches its crescendo, Blockbuster asserts his power by mocking Dick and laying out a future in which Dick can never escape this hopeless terror. This city belongs to Blockbuster. Dick is powerless. There is no winning.
(Grayson, Devin, writer. Zircher, Patch, illustrator. Slow Burn. Nightwing no 93, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2004. pp. 13 - 15)
This speech is visceral. Personal. Evocative and filled with character and emotion. These words could not have been uttered by anyone else but Grayson’s version of Blockbuster. And they could have not been directed at anyone but Dick at this very moment. This speech has specificity that was purposefully crafted to raise the tension of this moment to its fullest potential.
By comparison, Taylor’s “I am this city” line is generic. Like much of his dialogue, it lacks character — nothing about what Blockbuster says feels distinctive to him. Nothing sets it apart from how other characters speak in Taylor’s world, and nothing about it is unique to this particular confrontation. Even the way he bangs his hands on the ground like a toddler throwing a tantrum (and resulting in Dick’s second unmasking in this run) is childish and undermines the tension of what is meant to be a climatic moment.
(Taylor, Tom, writer. Redondo, Bruno, illustrator. The Battle for Bludhaven’s Heart Part Four. Nightwing: Rebirth. 95, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2022. pp 20)
The themes in Grayson’s run are not the same as the themes in Taylor’s run. However, Blockbuster still invokes the threat of an oppressor. By isolating Dick from his support system, his terror and the helplessness it generates are intensified. Rather than making Dick question his own morality, he makes Dick doubt his abilities to be a hero.
While Dixon used Blockbuster’s intimidating build and power to explore the ways in which systematic corruption is responsible for the immediate evils we encounter in everyday life, Grayson used those very same characteristics to explore how one copes with being oppressed on a personal scale. Grayson’s Blockbuster pushes Dick to the darkest place he’s ever been, and the aim of her run was to see how he would be able to put himself back together again after he lost faith in his ability to make a difference.
Those two runs demonstrate how Blockbuster’s grip on power can be used to oppose Nightwing in two very different ways. Dixon’s approach requires Blockbuster to stand at a distance, the unseen machine that Dick will have to eventually destroy. This allowed Blockbuster to remain Nightwing’s main opponent for all 70 issues of Dixon’s run without ever calling into question Dick’s competence or his dedication to his mission as Blockbuster, the themes he embodied, and the struggle Dixon built clearly signaled that, no matter how great Nightwing was or how much he might wish to do so, the circumstances were not at a point where Dick could take on Blockbuster and succeed. By contrast, Grayson shifted Blockbuster from a long term, simmering threat to an immediate and personal one. This, though, also meant that the conflicts in Grayson’s run were more internal than those of Dixon’s. While Blockbuster was the enemy, the true antagonistic force that Dick would be forced to battle throughout Grayson’s run was Dick’s depression, his self-loathing, and his self-doubt. For this reason, rather than standing in the background while others did his bidding, Grayson’s run pushed Blockbuster to center stage. As he became an urgent threat who was costing people their lives every minute he roamed around free, apprehending him was no longer something Dick could afford to create a strategy around — it was something that demanded prioritization.
Nearly twenty years later, Taylor’s attempts to merge these two approaches only serves to lessen Dick’s competence and Blockbuster’s threat. Like Dixon, Taylor uses Blockbuster to represent, as it was plainly stated in his run, everything that is wrong with Bludhaven – the men in power who “have everything and still want to take more.”
(Taylor, Tom, writer. Redondo, Bruno, illustrator. Battle for Bludhaven’s Heart Finale. Nightwing: Rebirth. 96, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2022 pp. 08)
And yet, it is Grayson’s plot beats that he copies by having Blockbuster personally target Dick in a myriad of unsuccessful ways.
While Grayson’s Blockbuster targets Haly’s Circus, Taylor’s Blockbuster targets Dick’s dog, Haly. While Grayson’s Blockbuster successfully kills Dick’s neighbors, Taylor’s Blockbuster fails to kill Dick’s neighbors thanks to Melinda and Wally’s intervention.
Because of this personal persecution, Blockbuster becomes Dick and his allies’ priority. However, because Taylor’s Blockbuster’s actions never have any negative consequences; because the humorous tone is always undermining the tension; and because the reader does not get see Dick struggle or fail against Blockbuster’s attempts the way he does in Grayson’s run, Blockbuster’s does not come across as the larger than life villain he is meant to be. Rather, his constant failures, his generic dialogue and unclear motivations, and his straightforward intimidation tactics make him more into a fumbling fool whose powerful position is incidental rather than the result of merciless oppression.
And yet, he becomes Nightwing’s priority. Thematically, Taylor’s Blockbuster is meant to imitate Dixon’s, but the narratively he acts like Grayson’s Blockbuster. This makes it so he is more of an immediate threat than Dixon’s villain, but less effective in his terror tactics than Grayson’s.
With the consequences of Blockbuster’s crimes being non-existent plot-wise, the stakes of the plot are never elevated. Blockbuster’s threat remains abstract because in Taylor’s run, everyone who is not an explicit bad guy has plot armor so thick that they cannot be forced into an uncomfortable on-screen situation for more than two or three pages at a time.
The clashing of theme and plot create enough of a dissonance as it is, but the presence of Heartless, who is actively and brutally murdering people and leaving children orphan, only deepens the problem. Heartless’ gory crimes not only overshadow Blockbuster’s failed assassination attempts, but the sheer amount of people who have fallen victim to his deeds creates an urgency and a tension that demands to be resolved.
Though Dick is aware of Heartless' existence, he does not make the serial killer his priority. When Grayson made Blockbuster’s threat more immediate and Dick became aware of the rising body count, stopping Blockbuster became his sole focus, to the detriment of his own health. Dick’s obsession with catching Blockbuster at all costs helped add to that intimidating aura around him.
Humphries understood this when crafting the dynamic between Dick and the Judge in The Untouchable. Heroes and their villains have a symbiotic relationship. When the Judge kills people in brutal ways, Dick jumps into action and stops at nothing until he catches him. This shows the audience that the Judge is a threat to be taken seriously, and it shows Dick to be a hero who will always put others first. When Dick fails to take the same approach with Heartless and instead focuses on Blockbuster, Dick comes across as an incompetent and self-centered.
(Humphries, Sam, writer. Chang, Bernard, illustrator. The Untouchable: Chapter One: Hunter. Nightwing: Rebirth no. 35, e-book ed. DC Comics, 2018 pp. 20)
At this point, one might be wondering why high stake conflicts and ruthless villains are even needed in a Nightwing comic. I have seen many people defend Taylor’s writing by claiming that they enjoy the fact that it has no tension. They like the easiness of it, the slice-of-life nature of his storytelling. And while even his slice-of-life writing is not really my cup-of-tea, I can understand this sentiment. Taylor seems to truly enjoy writing the more sitcom-aspects of Dick and Babs’ life together. It is not the fights, the mystery, the intrigues, the nuances of living a double life that interest him — it’s the taking care of the rescue puppy, the sharing of a pizza in the park, the two childhood friends finally getting to live an idealistic millennial adult life together without having to worry about everyday problems like work, rent, family troubles, or disagreements. He thrives when writing stories that remain static, with simple episodic plots that never truly lead to character development or a change in the status-quo. He excels in quippy yet straight-forward dialogue where things don’t need to be taken seriously.
And to be clear, I don’t think that is a bad thing. I don’t think slice-of-life or sitcoms are a lesser art form than dramas or action series. Like many people, I too, have been comforted by that type of entertainment. I, too, find escape in those sorts of stories. I daydreamed about a life where I could just enjoy time with my friends without thinking about work, where the worst problem I face is how to avoid going to a party without appearing rude. Those stories have value, they have their place in our culture… But Nightwing's solo series is not that place.
Now, this will probably be the one of the most controversial things I will say in this entire essay, but despite my love for Nightwing, I do not believe that the Nightwing mantle is Dick’s ultimate true form.
In DC Secret Files: Nightwing Secret Files #1, Dixon explores the aftermath of Dick being fired as Robin by having Dick confess, with a certain amount of shame, that he always thought that he would eventually become Batman. Bruce understood that and he was preparing Dick to be his successor. Losing Robin, then, means losing any certainty Dick has for his future. Suddenly, he is adrift, not only having lost Robin, but also Batman. And that’s when Clark tells him the story of Nightwing.
(Dixon, Chuck; Grayson, Devin; Peterson, Scott; writers. Ha, Gene; Scott, Damion; Land, Greg; Stelfreeze, Brian; Guice, Jackson; Eaglesham, Dale; Floyd, John; Jimenez, Phil; Brown, Eliot R.; McDaniel, Scott; Nolan, Graham; Rosado, William; Kuhn, Andy, illustrators. DC Secret Files: Nightwing Secret Files #1. DC Secret Files: Nightwing Secret Files #1 no. 01, e-book ed. DC Comics, 1999. pp 15)
Personally, I think there’s something really special about that idea. The Nightwing story grounded Dick during one of the most uncertain times in his life. Dick wanted Robin and Batman, but once both were taken from him, he created Nightwing as a way of coping with the trauma of having his identity, future, and certainty taken from him.
Braxi concludes his essay On Superman, Shootings, and the Reality of Superheroes by saying that “I don’t need Batman to end homelessness. I need Batman and Superman to provide moral and spiritual guidance to show us a better world is possible. I read Batman to transform trauma into will power.” (Braxi, Steve, “On Superman, Shootings, and the Reality of Superheroes” Comics Bookcase, September 2021)
The same, I believe, is true for Dick. As the character created to accompany Bruce and mirror him in as many regards as he foils him, Dick transforms trauma into power. He makes his own suffering a source of good.
As I said, I do not believe Nightwing to be Dick’s ultimate, truest form. I believe that to claim that Dick’s only happy ending is to have him be Nightwing not only diminishes the importance that Robin and Batman played in his life, but it also undermines what is so unique about Nightwing as a mantle.
Dick loves being Nightwing. Nightwing is an extension of who he is. But Nightwing is not the only happy ending Dick could have had, and to treat Nightwing as inevitable is to ignore the fact that Nightwing was born out of a trauma and a loss that could have been prevented had the circumstances that led to Dick losing Robin been different. Nightwing means transformation. He means change. Nightwing is a phoenix-like Kryptonian myth, raising himself from the ashes. But for the ashes to exist, a deadly fire must first occur. Nightwing, this great hero of light, can only be born out of pain. He can only arise from conflict.
This is one of the things that makes Dick so special. When he is overpowered, he does not give up. When he is hurt, he transforms that pain into power. No matter how many times he loses, no matter how many times he is lost, he always rises again, with a beautiful smile and an unwavering kindness that inspires others — including Superman, especially Batman — to do the same.
That is why a Nightwing story needs conflict. This is why he needs ruthless villains. That’s why a Nightwing story needs the occasional failure. Because it is only when we see Dick at his lowest that we also get to see him overcoming darkness, showing why he is the best of the best and why we love him so much.
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How many people know who Batman is? Obviouslly Babara, but who else?
hmmmm off the top of my head (obviously is varies wildly from iteration to iteration)
barbara gordon
dick grayson
jason todd
tim drake
cass cain
duke thomas
talia al ghul
ra's al ghul
damian al ghul
i mean. this is off topic. but like. roland desmond knew dick grayson's identity before tarantula shot him. so i feel like if he worked from there he could pretty easily find out who batman is? but that's like not important to his deal at all so never mind. cross him off the list
stephanie brown (but by god did she have to work for it)
also under a roland desmond clause, i feel like a good amount of the titans could figure it out by virtue of knowing dick graysons identity but they dont really count because they dont actually know
........i thinnnnnnnnkkkkkk mayyyyyyybe in some continuities leslie thompkins knows???? don't quote me on that
well i know the bats know superman's identity. so i think maybe it goes the other way around? maybe?
this is the best kept secret in the world guys
#asks#honorable mention: slade wilson; who i think knows dick grayson's identity and also sometimes works for the al ghuls#dont crucify me if im wrong i dont know anything
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Just thinking about what Amy's husband said about Dick in the scene before Blockbuster was killed.
"That’s the same kid who saved us when our house blew up? No offense, hon, but I hope you sent him to the hospital… he doesn’t look like he could beat up a parking ticket right now, let alone a supervillain."
Then Blockbuster blew a woman's brains out right in front of Dick after that. He told Dick he'd never stop. He'd go after strangers. Dick's loved ones. No one was safe.
And Dick—mentally, emotionally, and physically worn down—couldn't take it anymore. So he stepped aside.
#that many deaths on his conscience... his never ending pursuit after all the trauma... he was so broken down 😭#he was getting that itadori yuji treatment fr#Dick Grayson#Jim Rohrbach#Roland Desmond#Nightwing (Vol. 2) 93
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writing patterns tag game
Rules: list the first line of your last ten posted fics and see if there's a pattern!
I was tagged by @fire-fira
Sealed With a Kiss “I’m bi.”
A Civilian With A Badge “Richard Grayson, you are under arrest for the murder of Roland Desmond, better known as Blockbuster, committed under the alias Nightwing.”
A Cord of Three Strands The ribbon drops slowly, clinging to Nightwing’s hand like the last leaf of autumn clinging desperately to its branch. Eventually it falls, sticky with honey, to the stone below, a fall more hopeful than the one its last owner took.
WHIZcast! Episode 238 - Gar Logan "It was really startling when the Jaybird protocols came out. It took a child dying to make it happen?"
The Noose About My Neck It’s not a slippery slope the way his father said.
The Sweet Sacrifice You Offered (Was Bitter Dark Chocolate) Jason dances ahead of him on the rooftop edge, flipping and flying gracefully as only a mulo can.
Sample Bias The autopsy report lays on the table in front of him, stark black on white.
Speeding Together Down the Dark Avenues Dick’s first thought is that the manor is too damn big.
Cherry Wine The man in the metro station in Bludhaven is the kind of man Catalina is sure must have women - and men - falling over his feet.
the Righteous Side of Hell It starts with a rumor, first.
I'm gonna tag @magnetothemagnificent, @simonlorden and @gement
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If you're still taking them, #1 for the three word prompts? Some (angsty/soft possibly) Sladick, please?
"You are enough" Dick Grayson/Slade Wilson
(warning, Dick deals with dark thoughts and ptsd. There's a brief episode of self-harm but nothing graphic)
Slade doesn't know what, but something must have happened in Dick's life to leave such a deep, jagged hurt that permeates everything the kid does. It's the opposite to the airy lightness Dick used to carry around when he was younger, and even if at times it god dampened by a loss or a hardship, the kid always, invariably bounced back to his hopeful self.
Not this time.
This time, whatever this is, left Dick rarely smiling, often cold, wanting to be left alone. Friends and family alike stopped visiting him, and Slade understood that Dick is the one who pushed them away. As Nightwing he's quiet and strikes fast without letting his presence known, doesn't break a joke, doesn't humor his opponents. From hating him, criminals started fearing him even if the kid hadn't gotten more violent, just less friendly.
He tries to push Slade away too, but Slade isn't anyone. He doesn't mind the silent treatment, content to sit on rooftop with a soda and take away at the end of the night patrol, before the kid retires back into his lonely apartment. He doesn't mind the ways Dick tries to be disagreeable either; Slade is used to being hated, and Dick's veiled insults and attempts to make him leave sound like compliments compared to most of the things Slade has had to hear from people who wanted away with him.
It takes him months, but eventually Dick starts to relax around him. And Slade put the pieces together, and got to understand that whatever happened, happened around the time Roland Desmond died.
Dick won't talk about it though. Some days he needs warmth and he lets Slade sit behind him and cage him in his arms, nosing at his head from time to time. Dick doesn't ask but when it's those kind of days, Slade stays and sits on the kid's bed while he dozes off, or lays down and lets him sleep tucked under his chin. On one of those days Slade asks if it was Desmond who hurt him, and Dick huffs and maybe it should be a laugh but it doesn't sound happy. The he makes himself small and holds his own chest with both hands, and despite having turned so tense, Slade doesn't let up and keeps holding him, palms running slow and steady on his back and nape until the kid is relaxed again, tethering on the edge of sleep. Dick doesn't know what he did to cause Slade to act like this, but if initially he was frustrated and a little desperate to push him away, now he's... he's not sure. He's afraid Slade is going to get hurt like everyone else. Dick knows he should not by any means be around people, he's tainted enough lives with his presence already, but Slade... Slade is not like the others, he doesn't care. He wouldn't judge him. Sometimes Dick feels like Slade knows, and it's a feeling so strong it scares him and makes him want to pack up and leave and disappear forever, but then tells himself he's just being paranoid.
There's no way Slade knows. There's no way Dick would tell him, because at some point he realized that he wouldn't know what to do if Slade ended up judging him.
It wouldn't change anything, Dick knows it wouldn't, he knows he's poison and filth and he doesn't deserve an ounce of the kindness and warmth the man has inexplicably shown him. But Slade is not like the others, he's a mercenary and a murderer and so maybe, just maybe, he would understand and wouldn't hate him.
And as the days pass Dick feels less close to the edge, less like everything is happening around him in a blur. He finds himself cracking a joke during breakfast (because Slade is there). He finds himself comforting a child after helping families get out of a partially collapsed five stories. He hears himself hum to a song (because Slade turned on the radio). He's better. It's strange to consider because he wasn't fully aware of being unwell, but now that there's a shred of light he's able to look around and notice all the darkness.
And then one day he breaks down for something idiotic, maybe exactly because he feels less like he's suffocating so his emotions find a way to pour out, and he's not even sure what went down but he saw something in the mirror that made him recoil, bump into the nightstand and knock it down with lamp and everything. He blinks, and he's not sure how he ended up there but he's kneeling on the floor bleeding, and wrapping a piece of bedsheet around a long cut on his forearm, panting and sweating like he'd ran for miles. Slade's first thought is that the kid's been attacked, but then realizes that he just hurt himself. The mechanics of it aren't entirely clear to him but given how graceful and weightless Dick is, he's under the impression that this is not exactly an accident, even if luckily Dick tried to at least stop the bleeding.
«Let's get these checked out.» Slade considers while examining the wounds. They're not overly deep, not life-threatening. Slade is so relieved he needs to keep his own breathing in check. «Come on, kid. Put on some pants and let's go to the hospital.»
«No. No, no doctors.» Dick says, his expression scrunched in a strange wince as he look at his own blood pearling on the edges of the cuts. One of them resumed bleeding and his arm drips red in the sink. «You are enough.»
Slade doesn't react despite something tight just settled in his chest, and proceeds to stop the bleeding carefully, disinfect the cuts, and eventually stitch the worst of them. He does it slowly and methodically as opposed to his usual terse practicality, and it takes the better part of an hour but eventually Dick's arm is clean and securely bandaged. His expression is oddly plain at this point. He's pale, but Slade saw him lose way more blood than this and keep fighting. Seeing him so blank is scary, and it's the reason why Slade suggested the hospital, but Dick said no and he's going to respect that.
«If I only knew who hurt you,» Slade says in a low voice once he's put the kid to bed, tucking a lock of hair behind his ear. «if you'd tell me, Dick. I promise I wouldn't kill them. But I would make them regret every breath they took from the moment they were born.»
The kid smiles, surprising him enough. Slade thought he hadn't really been there for a while. «Come to bed with me...?» He asks and the man complies, shedding some of his clothes and pulling Dick on his chest once he's laying down.
«Was it Desmond?» Slade asks, searching the answer in the kid's swollen eyes. He caresses his cheek gently, slowly like he could break him.
«Why are you so good to me, Slade...?» Dick asks instead of answering, eyes slipping closed at the touch. Not like he's relaxing, more like he's just so tired. «I did nothing to deserve it.»
«I thought you were asking why an asshole like me was acting like a decent human being...» He starts replying but stops as he sees the kid's frown. He leans in and kisses it, pulling him even closer, hoping he's not holding too tight but there's not way he's letting him go now. «This is not about what you deserve, little bird. I just care, and I want you to be better. That is all.»
Dick seems to make do with that answer, and nuzzles a place for himself under Slade's chin.
-
Thank you for asking anon ♥ I hope it was as angsty/soft as you wanted it.
Here's the prompt list for whoever wants to peruse it, or send me another prompt :)
#my asks#long post#my fanfictions#three words prompt game#sladick#not necessarily dark but not light either#surely not fluff#Dick is in a bad place
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Ana..since its friday night...
Can I have a sneak peek at my commission... just a nibble
OF COURSE, BABY, IM SORRY I DIDNT ANSWER EARLIER I WASN'T CONSCIOUS-
Here, your well-deserved nibble;
"Are you going to tell on me?" Dick asked calmly after a moment of silence that Slade granted him.
He considered the boy for a moment, leaning his hip against the desk.
"Maybe I should." He answered with a hum, letting the grin slip away from his lips. "After all, whenever you find me while I'm on a job, you always do your best to stop me."
"That's not the same and you know it." Dick insisted. He put a few more documents away, the rustle of paper the only sound between them for a few another seconds. "This is important."
"Insulting me isn't really helping your case." Slade replied dryly. "You could also try acting at least a bit sorry that I caught you. You know, maybe beg me to not alert anyone that Desmond's personal slave is a spy-"
Dick stood up in a quick, graceful move and crossed the distance between them in two steps. His feet were still bare, Slade noticed absently, as Dick's fingers flexed just barely against the document he was holding.
"Please." The boy said, looking him straight in the eye, voice firm and steady but still quiet. Still a prayer.
Slade's face hardened. He didn't actually expect Dick to beg – he expected teasing, Grayson's usual banter, maybe some more insults thrown his way - but what he said earlier in the ballroom was true. He quite literally held Dick's life in his hands right now, and Dick had to realize that too. No matter their shared history, they were still enemies and just a few words from Slade would be enough to have Dick caught and punished for being a traitor.
And one'd have to be completely stupid not to know just what Roland Desmond did with the last man that tried to betray him.
I literally cannot thank you enough for being so patient with me, love, you're a real angel! This week has been a nightmare, I barely had time to do anything so I didn't write much but now that it's weekend I can finally sit down with my laptop and it's such a good feeling! I should be finished before monday rolls around (and for real this time! jhkdhajsh)
Also, maybe it's a good time to mention that it's going to be a little bit longer than we were talking about :3 as a little treat, because you had to wait to long
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Sea Spray and Seal Skin
read it on AO3 at https://ift.tt/weT8kOU by timbitsandpieces “Listen, we’re going to pack up soon. The selkie or the gold?” Wilson reached for the coat. Dick could feel the moment the power transferred. When he went from belonging to Desmond to Wilson, when Wilson had the power. Any word he spoke, Dick would obey. There was no choice in the matter. He would do as he was told, or he would do as he was told and suffer for a moment before. After a year spent under Roland Desmond's command, Dick is given as payment to one Slade Wilson. It's more bearable than he would've expected, but he needs to remember just why he's here, that Slade took him to keep. Slade knows that he has to obey. His coat is hanging on the door. Words: 8795, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English Fandoms: Batman - All Media Types Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Categories: M/M Characters: Dick Grayson, Slade Wilson, Roland Desmond, mentioned batfam Relationships: Dick Grayson/Slade Wilson Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Selkies, Selkie Dick Grayson, Misunderstandings, Miscommunication, they're literally so dumb, Slade is not as much of an asshole as he pretends to be, he's actually flirting!!, Angst, Angst with a Happy Ending, Hurt/Comfort, Slade Wilson is Bad at Feelings, as in he's incapable of saying words about them, Dick Grayson Needs a Hug, Hurt Dick Grayson, romance in the form of slade taking Dick on jobs with him, aka flirting, Dick Grayson Has a Bad Time, But it gets better! read it on AO3 at https://ift.tt/weT8kOU
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A VERY DESCRIPTIVE PROFILE OF YOUR MUSE. repost with the information of your muse, including headcanons, etc. if you fail to achieve some of the facts, add some other of your own!
NAME. Richard John Grayson
NICKNAME(S). Dick, Dickie, Dickiebird, Rekya, 'Wing, [past]Rob, Robbie
TITLE(S). Nightwing, [past]Robin
AGE. Verse dependent [mid 20-something]
SPECIES. Human
SEX. Cis male
NATIONALITY. American
ALIGNMENT. Lawful good. He has a code and he sticks to it. Lawful just means sticking to a code, no one said it had to be the actual law, otherwise you couldn't have lawful evil, now could you?
INTERESTS. Gymnastics, acrobatics, history, anthropology, psychology
PROFESSION. co-owner of Haly's Circus, vigilante, CEO of Wayne Enterprises[mainverse]
BODY TYPE. Athletic, toned, gymnast's build
EYES. Blue
HAIR. Black
SKIN. Light olive, white-passing
FACE. Behold, the boy.
HEIGHT. 5'10"
VOICE: Baritenor, generally passes for tenor unless he drops his voice [usually only done when he has to impersonate Bruce/Batman]
SIGNIFICANT OTHER? No
COMPANIONS. Alfred Pennyworth, Bat-family
ANTAGONISTS. Roland Desmond[deceased], Court of Owls, League of Assassins, a smattering of Batman's old rogues
COLORS. Varying shades of blue, steel grey, black
FRUITS. Cotton Candy Grapes, mangos, mandarins
DRINKS. Coffee, chai, orange juice
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES. Cider or a good lambic, very rarely.
SMOKES? No
DRUGS? No
DRIVERS LICENSE? Yes
tagged by: @cxpedcrusxder tagging: you!
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