Irey West
Iris West | |
---|---|
File:Impulse (Iris West).jpg Irey West as Impulse, art by Ethan van Sciver. | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Kingdom Come #3 (July 1996) |
Created by | Mark Waid (writer) Alex Ross (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Iris "Irey" West II |
Team affiliations | Teen Titans |
Partnerships | Flash (Wally West) |
Notable aliases | Kid Flash Impulse |
Abilities |
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Iris "Irey" West is a superheroine known as Impulse and Kid Flash in the DC Comics universe. She is the daughter of Flash (Wally West) and Linda Park-West. She first appeared in Kingdom Come #3 (July 1996).
Publication history[edit]
The character appears as Kid Flash in issues #3 and #4 of the 1996 Kingdom Come mini-series. She subsequently appears in the Kingdome Come sequel, The Kingdom, starring in her own issue The Kingdom: Kid Flash (February 1999). Characters similar to this one appear in The Flash (vol. 2) #143 (December 1998) and #146–149 (March–June 1999), as well as The Titans #23–25 (January–March 2001); it is not clear if they are the same character.
Fictional character biography[edit]
Kingdom Come[edit]
In the alternate future of the Kingdom Come series, Iris is the daughter of Wally West (the first Kid Flash, third Flash) and Linda Park, and the twin sister of Barry West. Both Iris and Barry inherited their father's superspeed abilities, but only Iris chose to use her powers for good, while Barry used his powers to become a slacker and has no interest in the "family legacy". Iris is constantly bitter that her father, who has almost completely given up his life to patrol Keystone City non-stop, never makes time for her but does make time for Barry, and considered him the potential successor to the Flash identity instead of Iris, despite her becoming Kid Flash.
In the sequel The Kingdom, Iris is recruited by Rip Hunter (along with several other heroes of her generation - Damian Wayne, Batman's son; Nightstar, the daughter of Nightwing and Starfire; and Offspring, the son of Plastic Man) to try to stop a madman named Gog from altering the past, before discovering it to be unnecessary due to Hypertime.
In The Titans #23–25 she becomes a member of a group comprising the children of the original five Titans: herself; Nightwing and Starfire's daughter Nightstar; Donna Troy's son Darkstar; the Red Hood, Arsenal's daughter; and Tula, Tempest's daughter. They return to the present in various Hypertimelines to save the existence of Donna Troy.
In the Dark Nights: Death Metal - Multiverse's End one-shot, Kid Flash is one of the heroes John Stewart leads on a mission to destroy Perpetua's tuning fork on Earth-3.
DC Universe[edit]
In The Flash (vol. 2) #225 (October 2005), Wally West's wife Linda gave birth to a daughter named Iris, renamed Irey in later comics. Initially, her only power is the ability to vibrate through objects. In The Flash (vol. 2) #240 (May 2008) Iris appears to grow into a teenager wearing a costume similar to her future counterpart. In issue 241, Iris now wearing a "kid flash"-like costume displays superspeed and states she may be faster than her father. However her joy is short-lived, as she ages into adulthood after defeating Gorilla Grodd. In The Flash (vol. 2) #243, Iris is returned to her original age, and her powers revert to molecular acceleration.
More than her twin brother Jai, Iris is a living conduit for the Speed Force, with absolute mastery over it almost rivaling the one briefly gained by her father during the Dark Flash Saga. Mind-controlled by Queen Bee, she exhibited the power of forming "cocoons" of Speed Force, bubbles in which she could control speed and time, freezing her targets or hastening their metabolism to death. Moreover, she repaired the weakening connection to the Speed Force that was crippling her father. Badly traumatized by her ordeal, she refuses to give in to her powers again.[1]
Her resolution wanes with the return of the first Reverse-Flash, Professor Zoom, during The Flash: Rebirth event. Since Jai's and Iris' connection to the Speed Force is still precarious, the attempts of Zoom to disrupt it force both kids to endure a large amount of crippling pain, until Iris decides to take the bulk of the Speed Power connection, freeing Jai but taking the pain for herself. At the last moment Jesse Chambers, guided by the late Johnny Quick, uses the Speed Mantra to save Iris' life, once again restoring her full potential.
Iris embraces her new role with childlike glee, choosing to take up the mantle of Impulse, which Bart used before he joined the Teen Titans as Kid Flash.[2]
Impulse is later shown being recorded on Flyover, a social networking feature devised to help villains stalk and kill teen superheroes.[3]
DC Rebirth (2016)[edit]
Iris and her brother Jai were absent from history due to the manipulations of Doctor Manhattan following Flashpoint. When Wally West returned in DC Rebirth #1 it was revealed that his wife, Linda Park, does not remember Wally, leaving the fate of Jai and Iris unknown at best. In Flash War #1 it was revealed by Hunter Zolomon to Wally that his forgotten children (and implied Bart Allen, Max Mercury, and Jesse Quick) not only existed in the altered timeline but are currently trapped in the speed force like he was. In the following issue Zoom urges a heartbroken Wally to break the speed force enough to save his family, leading to an altercation between Wally and Barry whether or not to rescue his children at risk of damaging the speed force and time once again.[4][5] Wally is then tricked by Zoom. Rather than breaking the Speed Force, the attempt broke the "Force Barrier", which unlocked hidden other forces related to the Speed Force, called the Sage and Strength Forces. Taking the power of these new forces to defeat the Justice League and the Titans, Zoom then claims that he does indeed know where the rest of the Flash family is, but Zoom withholds this information, and proceeds to claim the mantle of Flash before attacking Wally and Barry. [6]
Iris and Jai next make brief appearances in flashbacks and simulations regarding Wally while he attempted to recover at Sanctuary during "Heroes in Crisis".
Iris as Impulse and Jai are finally revealed to exist in the DC Rebirth universe, stranded on the problematic undying planet in the ever encroaching Dark Multiverse. She and Jai were emigrated to Earth 0 by Wally.[7]
After this events, she is commonly referred as Irey after her return in 2019.
Powers and abilities[edit]
Irey West has the same abilities as every speedster: superspeed, the ability to control and vibrate her molecules, and an aura that protects her from friction at high velocities. She is somewhat slower than her father because of her young age. In contrast, The Flash #771 (2021) states that an adult Irey might be the most powerful speedster in history than anyone else, as she has a deeper and greater connection to the speed force than any Flash who came before her, even than Wally West, her father.
Adult Irey is capable of open portals and can run through the cosmos without any actual ground to run on, by the Speed Force providing her both support and protection even in space.[8]
References[edit]
- ↑ The Flash (vol. 2) #247. DC Comics.
- ↑ Flash: Rebirth #5
- ↑ Supergirl (vol. 5) #60. DC Comics.
- ↑ DC Rebirth (2016) #1. DC Comics.
- ↑ The Flash (vol. 4) #48. DC Comics.
- ↑ The Flash (vol. 4) #49. DC Comics.
- ↑ Flash Forward #2-6. DC Comics.
- ↑ "The Flash: A Future Speedster Is Closer to the Speed Force Than Barry & Wally". CBR.
External links[edit]
This article "Irey West" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Irey West. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
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