Trigon (comics) explained

Converted:y
Character Name:Trigon
Publisher:DC Comics
Debut:New Teen Titans #2 (December 1980) (cameo)
The New Teen Titans #4 (February 1981) (full appearance)
Creators:Marv Wolfman (writer)
George Pérez (artist)
Species:Demon
Homeworld:Unspecified dimension
Alliances:Church of Blood
Aliases:Satan
Lucifer
The Devil
The Lord of Madness
Skath
Ddrez
Cat:super
Subcat:DC Comics
Villain:y
Sortkey:Trigon (comics)

Trigon is a supervillain appearing in media published by DC Comics. He is one of the most powerful beings in the DC Universe, having enslaved many worlds and dimensions. He is an adversary of the Teen Titans and the Justice League, the father and arch-enemy of the superheroine Raven, and husband of the human Arella.

Trigon has appeared in several DC Comics-related media, such as Teen Titans (voiced by Keith Szarabajka in the first season and Kevin Michael Richardson in the fourth) and Titans (portrayed by Seamus Dever in the first two seasons and by Craig Burnatowski in the fourth).

Publication history

Trigon first appeared in a cameo in New Teen Titans #2 (December 1980), and made his first full appearance is New Teen Titans #4.[1] He was created by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez.[2]

Fictional character biography

Centuries ago, a pacifistic group following their spiritual leader Azar fled Earth to escape its violence. The group established a colony that exists between dimensions called Azarath. In the process of creating their new world, they underwent a ceremony that purged every member of their evil natures.[3] The people of Azarath thought the evil they had expelled would be gone forever, however, they were mistaken. In another dimension, the evil they had purged was summoned by a cult seeking to have a demon mate with one of their female members. Nine months later, Trigon was born. He immediately killed every person around him, including his own mother. He went on to rule the world of his birth by the age of one, and destroyed it when he was six. By the time he was thirty, he ruled over his entire home dimension.[4]

Trigon later forcefully impregnates Arella, a member of the Church of Blood, a cult that worships him. She is found by an extra-dimensional cult and is brought to Azarath, where she gives birth to Raven.[5] [6] During Raven's upbringing, Trigon is aware of her whereabouts, but rarely intervenes and allows the cult to care for her.

Raven learns of Trigon's intentions to conquer the Earth and vows to stop him; she initially approaches the Justice League, but they refuse her on the advice of Zatanna, who senses her demonic parentage. In desperation, she reforms the Teen Titans to battle Trigon, eventually sealing him in another dimension.

Trigon eventually escapes and comes to Earth, taking control of Raven and destroying Azarath. The Titans attempt to fight Trigon, but are contaminated by his demonic influence and kill Raven. This allowed the souls of Azarath to possess her and use her as a channel to kill Trigon with purifying light. Although Trigon is gone, his followers, led by Brother Blood, have tried to revive him several times.[7] [8]

The Sons of Trigon

Trigon is later resurrected under unspecified circumstances, but his sons, Jacob, Jared and Jesse, betray him and steal his powers.[9] [10] [11] They corrupt Raven before being defeated by her and the Titans.[12]

The New 52

In The New 52 reboot, Trigon is a minor demon of an unspecified species targeted for extermination by an alien group calling themselves the Divine. They control an entity called the Heart of Darkness which feeds on evil beings, destroying them in the process. However, when it attempts to feed on Trigon, he gains control and manages to absorb all of its power, thus granting him the power to conquer worlds.

Once he absorbs all the power from the Heart of Darkness, he kills the Divine and attempts to cross over to a new dimension, but is blocked by a lingering spell by the Divine. To circumvent this, he summons a woman from the realm he attempted to cross over to and impregnates her, before sending her back to her home world. Later, she gives birth to Trigon himself, giving him access to her dimension.

Trigon begins a quest to sire as many children as possible to aid him in his conquests, however, only three boys survive, and he considers them failures. Eventually, he impregnates a woman from Earth named Arella, who gives birth to Raven, finally giving Trigon a child he views as a worthy heir.[13]

Trigon's only true rival is a woman named Alazandria, who possesses a magical suit of armor known as the Silent Armor that was enchanted specifically to resist Trigon. She battles him to a standstill, but neither are able to kill the other. Her armor is eventually inherited by Wonder Girl.

He has four children: Raven, Belial, Raskoff, and Suge.[14]

Trigon rules six kingdoms known as the Under-Realms, but has grown bored with the responsibility of ruling them, and attempts to pass leadership to Raven. Raven, feeling lonely at the prospect of one day ruling Earth alone, begins to magically spy on the Titans. Trigon allows her to go to Earth to infiltrate the team to learn their secrets before betraying them and conquering Earth.[15] However, Raven ultimately loses the ability to contact Trigon[16] and finds joy in the fact that she no longer has to obey him.[17]

During the DC Rebirth event, Trigon is killed by Bizarro, but is eventually resurrected.[18] [19]

Powers and abilities

Trigon is a demon who possesses vast mystical abilities. He has superhuman physical abilities and can fly, generate energy blasts, teleport, manipulate matter, resurrect the dead, alter time, reconstruct reality, warp universal forces, shapeshift, devour souls, control the minds of others, and generate illusions.

Other versions

In other media

Television

Film

Video games

Miscellaneous

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cowsill . Alan . Irvine . Alex . Korte . Steve . Manning . Matt . Wiacek . Win . Wilson . Sven . The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe . 2016 . DK Publishing . 978-1-4654-5357-0 . 313.
  2. The New Teen Titans #2
  3. Tales of the New Teen Titans #2. DC Comics.
  4. New Teen Titans #4. DC Comics.
  5. New Teen Titans #6. DC Comics.
  6. Book: Cowsill . Alan . Irvine . Alex . Manning . Matthew K. . McAvennie . Michael . Wallace . Daniel . DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle . 2019 . DK Publishing . 978-1-4654-8578-6 . 181.
  7. Teen Titans #8. DC Comics.
  8. Teen Titans #10. DC Comics.
  9. Titans (vol. 2) #1. DC Comics.
  10. Titans (vol. 2) #3. DC Comics.
  11. Titans (vol. 2) #4. DC Comics.
  12. Titans (vol. 2) #5. DC Comics.
  13. Teen Titans (vol. 3) #23.1 DC Comics.
  14. Teen Titans (vol. 3) #20. DC Comics.
  15. Teen Titans (vol. 3) #22
  16. Teen Titans (vol.3) #25
  17. Teen Titans (vol.3) #30
  18. Red Hood: Outlaw #47. DC Comics.
  19. Web site: Gibson . Avi . August 26, 2024 . Raven's Ultimate Form Is Revealed in Titans' Worst-Case Scenario . October 21, 2024 . ScreenRant . en.
  20. Web site: Trigon Voices (Teen Titans) . June 14, 2024 . Behind The Voice Actors. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  21. Web site: Petski . Denise . January 17, 2018 . Quantico Casts Vandit Bhatt; Seamus Dever Joins Titans; Jimmie Saito In Sweetbitter . June 14, 2024 . Deadline . en-US.
  22. Web site: Mitovich . Matt . January 19, 2018 . Castle Vet Seamus Dever Cast on Titans Superhero Series . https://web.archive.org/web/20180119030659/https://tvline.com/2018/01/17/seamus-dever-castle-titans-dc-superhero-series/ . 2018-01-19 . June 14, 2024.
  23. Web site: Sands . Rich . January 18, 2016 . Roll Call: Meet the Cast of Justice League vs. Teen Titans . January 18, 2016 . TVInsider.com.
  24. Web site: Zachary . Brandon . July 25, 2019 . REVIEW: Teen Titans Go Vs. Teen Titans Is A Goofy Love Letter To The Team . June 14, 2024 . CBR . en.
  25. Web site: August 1, 2013 . Announcing Sons of Trigon! . June 14, 2024 . DC Universe Online . en.
  26. Web site: Jenkins . David . March 19, 2013 . Injustice: Gods Among Us preview and interview – superhero kombat . 7 February 2018 . Metro.
  27. Web site: Eisen . Andrew . October 2, 2013 . DC Characters and Objects - Scribblenauts Unmasked Guide . June 14, 2024 . IGN . en.
  28. Web site: Michael . Jon . Veness . John . November 2, 2018 . Characters - LEGO DC Super-Villains Guide . June 14, 2024 . IGN . en.
  29. Web site: Injustice: Gods Among Us Year Three #18 - Chapter Eighteen: Fight or Flight (Issue) . June 14, 2024 . Comic Vine . en.