Everything You Need To Know Before Watching ‘Young Justice: Outsiders’

by Chris Foti
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Young Justice has finally made its triumphant return as season three debuted via the DC Universe subscription service. Fans begged and begged four years and now we have the first 3 episodes to enjoy, with another 3 episodes being released every Friday in January, and 4 episodes on the 25th. The second half of the season will air in June 2019.

Since the show’s original cancellation in 2013, DC’s Ashley V. Robinson put together a breakdown of everything fans need to know to refresh their memories before heading into Young Justice: Outsiders.

What the heck is Young Justice? I thought the sidekick team was called Teen Titans!

Young Justice is a superhero team created in 1998 by Todd DeZago and Todd Nauck that debuted in TEEN TITANS: SECRET FILES #1 and was originally just a trio comprised of Connor Kent (Superboy), Tim Drake (Robin) and Bart Allen (Impulse). In 2010, it got an animated adaptation which is not a direct adaptation of the original storyline, but an entirely original—and very awesome—take on this second distinct team of young heroes.

The animated team is led by the legacy character who really should be in charge of the first generation of a team—Robin! However, unlike in the comic book iteration, this is Dick Grayson. He’s joined by Miss Martian, Aqualad (Kaldur’ahm, who was created specifically for the show, despite a take on the character debuting in the comics around the same time), Wally West (yaaaay!) and Artemis. Speedy was originally a founding team member, but as the oldest member of Young Justice, he left the team behind pretty quickly in order to graduate into his Red Arrow identity, leaving the door opent for the aforementioned Artemis (who you may know as “Arrowette” from the comic continuity).

Fun fact: Artemis’ sister is the villain Cheshire, who in the comics gets romantically involved with Roy Harper. They eventually have a baby together.

The Justice League encourages this new young team to work together out of Happy Harbor, a former Justice Society of America HQ and the original headquarters of the Teen Titans in their original 1960s comic book introduction, under the watchful eye of Red Tornado. As you might imagine, they’re not the best at working together, but they find their feet just in time to break into Cadmus Lab (who you should be familiar with if you’re watching Supergirl), and rescue Kon-El a.k.a. Superboy to round out the full team.

Black Canary moonlights as their combat instructor and gets some of my favorite scenes with Kon that have ever been written. I highly recommend seeking them out!

The big bad in the first season is a group of supervillains known as “The Light” who have a mole inside Young Justice. SPOILER ALERT: The mole turns out to be a Roy Harper clone. At the end of the first season, the real Roy is fine except for losing his arm—a classic character moment drawn from the comics. I’m here for one-armed Roy!

The second season was subtitled Young Justice: Invasion, and it takes a leap five years into the future. All of the characters we loved from the debut have matured, and some have even taken on new identities. Dick Grayson is now Nightwing (and it’s awesome!), Miss Martian has ended her relationship with Superboy and begun a relationship with Lagoon Boy. Things get awkward.

Tim Drake is now Robin and he’s just the beginning of the vastly expanded cast we get during the second season. And I mean VASTLY EXPANDED. One of the things the fans love about Young Justice, but that also tends to scare people off, is how deep into DC’s bench it goes. In Season 2, we get Batgirl (Barbara Gordon), Beast Boy (who has a new origin tying him directly to Miss Martian), Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandsmark), Bumblebee, Guardian, Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes) and Impulse (Bart Allen). Impulse is a late addition who travels back in time in a storyline I’m still holding out to see on The Flash live action television show.

Blue Beetle’s introduction proves to be integral to the second season because the primary villains are a group of invading aliens called “The Reach.” They turn out to be secretly working with The Light (the main villains from season one), who are still hellbent on wiping Young Justice from the face of the Earth. Jaime proves to be a big help, The Reach are defeated…but all is not completely well! Artemis fakes her death with the help of her teammates (and some magic) and goes undercover with Aqualad to learn more about The Light.

To celebrate the release of Young Justice: Outsiders, DC have also released a prequel comic for the series, which you can read our review for here.

The first 3 episodes of Young Justice: Outsiders are available now on DC Universe, along with the first two seasons in their entirety.

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