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* BladeReflection: When [[spoiler: ComicBook/{{Circe}} ]] reveals herself in "What Doesn't Kill You" and Diana mocks her and tells her she won't be driven to kill the witch even after having her prior turns to deadly violence thrown in her face Circe's glowing eyes dripping ichor are reflected in Diana's blade.

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* BladeReflection: When [[spoiler: ComicBook/{{Circe}} ]] [[spoiler:Circe]] reveals herself in "What Doesn't Kill You" and Diana mocks her and tells her she won't be driven to kill the witch even after having her prior turns to deadly violence thrown in her face Circe's glowing eyes dripping ichor are reflected in Diana's blade.



** "What Doesn't Kill You" has Diana encounter the specters of defeated enemies of hers from previous stories, courtesy of [[spoiler:ComicBook/{{Circe}}]]; Medusa from Creator/GregRucka's [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 first run]], and the Goddess Diana from Creator/WaltSimonson's run.

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** "What Doesn't Kill You" has Diana encounter the specters of defeated enemies of hers from previous stories, courtesy of [[spoiler:ComicBook/{{Circe}}]]; [[spoiler:Circe]]; Medusa from Creator/GregRucka's [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 first run]], and the Goddess Diana from Creator/WaltSimonson's run.



* FriendlyEnemy: Diana and ComicBook/{{Circe}} have this in "The Acquaintance".

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* FriendlyEnemy: Diana and ComicBook/{{Circe}} Circe have this in "The Acquaintance".
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* LetUsNeverSpeakOfThisAgain: [[spoiler:Franchise/{{Superman}}]]'s request at the end of "The Acquaintance" when Diana turns him back into human after Circe turned him into a guinea pig.

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* LetUsNeverSpeakOfThisAgain: [[spoiler:Franchise/{{Superman}}]]'s request at the end of "The Acquaintance" when Diana turns him back into human to normal after Circe turned him into a guinea pig.
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Another entry in DC's anthology series playing on the two-color palette concept, the series is a six-issue miniseries with each issue being a collection of stories from an assortment of different writers and artists with stories that can vary greatly in setting, tone, and genre, the choice of the color gold being in honor of the Lasso of Truth, Wonder Woman's [[WeaponOfChoice signature weapon]].

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Another entry in DC's anthology series playing on the two-color palette concept, the series is a six-issue miniseries with each issue being a collection of stories from an assortment of different writers and artists with stories that can vary greatly in setting, tone, and genre, the choice of the color gold being in honor of the Lasso of Truth, Wonder Woman's [[WeaponOfChoice signature weapon]].
weapon.
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* OutlivingOnesOffspring: In "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?", Cathy is slightly bitter that her parents are still in good health while she has terminal cancer. Even her friendship with Wonder Woman does not give her access to anything that will cure her, and she ends up destroying the magic talisman she had been using to give herself a little more time since it was endangering people around her.

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* OutlivingOnesOffspring: In "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?", Cathy is slightly bitter that both of her parents are still in good health while she has terminal cancer. Even her friendship with Wonder Woman does not give her access to anything that will cure her, and she ends up destroying the magic talisman she had been using to give herself a little more time since it was endangering people around her.
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* OutlivingOnesOffspring: In "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?", Cathy is slightly bitter that her parents are still in good health while she has terminal cancer. Even her friendship with Wonder Woman does not give her access to anything that will cure her, and she ends up destroying the magic talisman she had been using to give herself a little more time since it was endangering people around her.

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'''''Wonder Woman: Black and Gold''''' is an AnthologyComic published by Creator/DCComics in celebration of Franchise/WonderWoman's [[MilestoneCelebration 80th Anniversary]]. Another entry in DC's anthology series playing on the two-color palette concept, the series is a six-issue miniseries with each issue being a collection of stories from an assortment of different writers and artists with stories that can vary greatly in setting, tone, and genre, the choice of the color gold being in honor of the Lasso of Truth, Wonder Woman's [[WeaponOfChoice signature weapon]].

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'''''Wonder Woman: Black and Gold''''' is an AnthologyComic published by Creator/DCComics in celebration of Franchise/WonderWoman's [[MilestoneCelebration 80th Anniversary]].

Another entry in DC's anthology series playing on the two-color palette concept, the series is a six-issue miniseries with each issue being a collection of stories from an assortment of different writers and artists with stories that can vary greatly in setting, tone, and genre, the choice of the color gold being in honor of the Lasso of Truth, Wonder Woman's [[WeaponOfChoice signature weapon]].
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'''''Wonder Woman: Black and Gold''''' is an AnthologyComic published by Creator/DCComics in celebration of Franchise/WonderWoman's [[MilestoneCelebration 80th Anniversary]]. Another entry in DC's anthology series playing on the two-color palette concept, the series is a six issue miniseries with each issue being a collection of a stories from an assortment of different writers and artists with stories that can vary greatly in setting, tone, and genre. The choice of the color gold being in honor of the Lasso of Truth, Wonder Woman's [[WeaponOfChoice signature weapon]].

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'''''Wonder Woman: Black and Gold''''' is an AnthologyComic published by Creator/DCComics in celebration of Franchise/WonderWoman's [[MilestoneCelebration 80th Anniversary]]. Another entry in DC's anthology series playing on the two-color palette concept, the series is a six issue six-issue miniseries with each issue being a collection of a stories from an assortment of different writers and artists with stories that can vary greatly in setting, tone, and genre. The genre, the choice of the color gold being in honor of the Lasso of Truth, Wonder Woman's [[WeaponOfChoice signature weapon]].



* AnguishedOutburst: When Cathy Perkins realizes that her last hope of living a longer life while dying of cancer, a magic talisman, is not only endangering people but depowers Diana who could otherwise offset that danger she snaps it and angrily tells Diana that she hates her for making her accept her impending demise. It's more of a defeated yell than anything, as she then cries on her lifelong friend's shoulder while mourning her truncated life.

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* AnguishedOutburst: When Cathy Perkins realizes that her last hope of living a longer life while dying of cancer, a magic talisman, is not only endangering people people, but depowers Diana Diana, who could otherwise offset that danger danger, she snaps it it, and angrily tells Diana that she hates her for making her accept her impending demise. It's more of a defeated yell than anything, as she then cries on her lifelong friend's shoulder while mourning her truncated life.

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* CharacterNarrator: "How Wonder Woman Was Brought Low by a Mouse But Conquered the Stars" is revealed to be narrated by Philippus recounting an adventure Diana had to Hippoylta.



* TheNarrator: "How Wonder Woman Was Brought Low by a Mouse But Conquered the Stars" is revealed to be narrated by Philippus recounting an adventure Diana had to Hippoylta.
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moved trivia to trivia page


* DescendedCreator: Liam Sharp, the writer and artist of "The Prophet", is the main character of said story.
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* InstantlyWrong: In "I'm Ageless", right after Mac says "I'm telling you, Hitler and his Ratzis are a hundred miles from here", a German tank shell comes through the wall he and his men are walking behind.

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* InstantlyWrong: InstantlyProvenWrong: In "I'm Ageless", right after Mac says "I'm telling you, Hitler and his Ratzis are a hundred miles from here", a German tank shell comes through the wall he and his men are walking behind.
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* DisconDan: In "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?", Cathy has reopened the shop she ran with Diana [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 in the 1960's]] when she was a teenager despite being middle aged now. She dresses the same way and seems to be trying to relive her glory days. This ends up justified since she is dying of cancer, and only staving off death by using a magic talisman that requires her to be in the place she felt most alive. Understandably having adventures with Wonder Woman and saving people is what she went with for that.

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* DisconDan: DiscoDan: In "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?", Cathy has reopened the shop she ran with Diana [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 in the 1960's]] when she was a teenager despite being middle aged now. She dresses the same way and seems to be trying to relive her glory days. This ends up justified since she is dying of cancer, and only staving off death by using a magic talisman that requires her to be in the place she felt most alive. Understandably having adventures with Wonder Woman and saving people is what she went with for that.

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* BlindfoldVision: When dealing with the titular opponent in "A God With No Name", Diana obstructs her vision with a piece of cloth.

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* BlindfoldVision: BlindfoldedVision: When dealing with the titular opponent in "A God With No Name", Diana obstructs her vision with a piece of cloth.



* ComfortTheDying: Diana [[spoiler: brings Cathy Perkins, her old supporting character, to gaze upon a sunset in her last moments before she dies from cancer]].

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* ComfortTheDying: In "Whatever Happened To Cathy Perkins?", Diana [[spoiler: brings Cathy Perkins, her old supporting character, to gaze upon a sunset in her last moments before she dies from cancer]].


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* DisconDan: In "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?", Cathy has reopened the shop she ran with Diana [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 in the 1960's]] when she was a teenager despite being middle aged now. She dresses the same way and seems to be trying to relive her glory days. This ends up justified since she is dying of cancer, and only staving off death by using a magic talisman that requires her to be in the place she felt most alive. Understandably having adventures with Wonder Woman and saving people is what she went with for that.


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* EvilUncle: In "Beyond the Horizon" Thomas Chapman kidnaps his four neiphlings for a ransom and then drinks himself to death, leaving the children to starve to death while trying to figure out how to sail his boat back to land. Only the youngest lives long enough to be rescued.


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* FemalesAreMoreInnocent: In ''Golden Age'', a take on the [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Golden Age Wonder Woman]], a Diana early into her time in Man's World fights a group of banks robbers but tries reasoning with the female member as a sister who isn't her enemy and has been lied to by the patriarchy to make her violent. She is shown to be wrong, and the woman in question is infuriated by Diana's naivety and refusal to take her seriously so Etta knocks the woman out to put an end to the fight.
* FireBreathingWeapon: The lady thief in "Golden Age" brings a torch to cut into the safe, and quickly turns to using it as a weapon when Wonder Woman intervenes.


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* GhostStory: "Beyond the Horizon" sees Diana confront a violent marine ghost, only to find it is the mourning ghost of a child abandoned at sea who died trying to save her younger siblings who were abducted and abandoned with her. She is laid to rest when Diana tells her that she kept her youngest sibling alive long enough for him to be rescued and live a full life.


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* InstantlyWrong: In "I'm Ageless", right after Mac says "I'm telling you, Hitler and his Ratzis are a hundred miles from here", a German tank shell comes through the wall he and his men are walking behind.
* ItHasBeenAnHonor: After Diana convinces her old friend Cathy Perkins to accept that she's dying of lung cancer Cathy removes the talisman she was using to extend her life (that was drawing danger to her and those around her) and tearfully tells Diana she hates her, before thanking her for their adventures and her friendship.


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* RockPaperScissors: In "A Common Motivator", due to their competitiveness Diana and Nubia decide who will have what portion of a competition they're teamed up on with Rock Paper Scissors, to avoid arguing and wasting time.
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* AnguishedOutburst: When Cathy Perkins realizes that her last hope of living a longer life while dying of cancer, a magic talisman, is not only endangering people but depowers Diana who could otherwise offset that danger she snaps it and angrily tells Diana that she hates her for making her accept her impending demise. It's more of a defeated yell than anything, as she then cries on her lifelong friend's shoulder while mourning her truncated life.
* AttackHello: In "Golden Age" Etta reintroduces herself to the blowtorch wielding thief by swinging in on a rope to kick her in the chin while said thief is busy yelling at Wonder Woman for discrediting her motives as driven by men.


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* BackToBackBadasses: While Diana is reminiscing [[spoiler: about Steve in "We Built A Better World" and their love for each other at his memorial]] a flashback shows them fighting a bunch of armed guards back to back.


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* BladeReflection: When [[spoiler: ComicBook/{{Circe}} ]] reveals herself in "What Doesn't Kill You" and Diana mocks her and tells her she won't be driven to kill the witch even after having her prior turns to deadly violence thrown in her face Circe's glowing eyes dripping ichor are reflected in Diana's blade.


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* BlindfoldVision: When dealing with the titular opponent in "A God With No Name", Diana obstructs her vision with a piece of cloth.


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* CapturedOnPurpose: Diana allows herself to be captured, in "Espionage", and interrogated in order to find and capture an enemy general the US had no pictures of and thus couldn't identify and capture by other means.
* CatharticCrying: Cathy Perkins, who Diana has been friends with since she was a teenage runaway, has been fighting the fact that she's dying of untreatable lung cancer. When Diana talks her into accepting her death, and Cathy breaks the magic talisman that has been extending her life since it endangers those around her and was depowering Diana she cries while leaning on her lifelong friend as she accepts her impending demise.


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* CombatTentacles: Eleanor's hair as a ghost turns to octopus-like tentacles, which she uses to fling Amazons away and wreck their ships before Wonder Woman finds her and her sibling's remains and tells her that her youngest brother survived being abandoned at sea long enough to be rescued.
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** "What Doesn't Kill You" has Diana encounter the specters of defeated enemies of hers from previous stories, courtesy of [[spoiler: [[Characters/WonderWomanCirce Circe]]]]; Medusa from Creator/GregRucka's [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 first run]], and the Goddess Diana from Creator/WaltSimonson's run.

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** "What Doesn't Kill You" has Diana encounter the specters of defeated enemies of hers from previous stories, courtesy of [[spoiler: [[Characters/WonderWomanCirce Circe]]]]; [[spoiler:ComicBook/{{Circe}}]]; Medusa from Creator/GregRucka's [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 first run]], and the Goddess Diana from Creator/WaltSimonson's run.



* FriendlyEnemy: Diana and [[Characters/WonderWomanCirce Circe]] have this in "The Acquaintance".

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* FriendlyEnemy: Diana and [[Characters/WonderWomanCirce Circe]] ComicBook/{{Circe}} have this in "The Acquaintance".



* SiblingRivalry: Diana and Nubia are stated to have this in "A Common Motivator", though they put it aside when it comes to besting [[Characters/WonderWomanArtemis Artemis]] in a competition between the Themyscira and Bana Amazon tribes.

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* SiblingRivalry: Diana and Nubia are stated to have this in "A Common Motivator", though they put it aside when it comes to besting [[Characters/WonderWomanArtemis Artemis]] ComicBook/{{Artemis}} in a competition between the Themyscira and Bana Amazon tribes.
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** The ending of "We Built A Better World" has Diana and Hippolyta paying tribute to the memorial of [[spoiler: [[Characters/WonderWomanSteveTrevor Steve Trevor]] on Themyscira]].

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** The ending of "We Built A Better World" has Diana and Hippolyta paying tribute to the memorial of [[spoiler: [[Characters/WonderWomanSteveTrevor Steve Trevor]] ComicBook/SteveTrevor on Themyscira]].



** "We Built A Better World" is revealed to be one of Diana and Hippolyta conversing about her history with [[Characters/WonderWomanSteveTrevor Steve Trevor]] [[spoiler: as they pay tribute to his grave on Themyscira]].

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** "We Built A Better World" is revealed to be one of Diana and Hippolyta conversing about her history with [[Characters/WonderWomanSteveTrevor Steve Trevor]] ComicBook/SteveTrevor [[spoiler: as they pay tribute to his grave on Themyscira]].
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* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: The nameless woman in "Role Model" is an amalgam of several real-life feminists like Gloria Steinhem.
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* BlackSheep: "Feet of Clay" deals with this in regards to Antiope, Diana's aunt and Hippolyta's sister, stating she always felt like something of an outsider to the other Amazons and how she prefers her more secluded lifestyle after years of being a General.


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* DescendedCreator: Liam Sharp, the writer and artist of "The Prophet", is the main character of said story.


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* HostageSituation: "A Lesson in Truth" sees a desperate man use to one in order to get a conversation with Wonder Woman, it turns she rescued him from one as a child back in the 60s.


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* LastOfHerKind: "Memories of Hator" plays this for tragic effect with old Golden Age Wonder Woman villain, Badra. Showing her tearful last moments on her home planet before being sent away on an escape pod by her mother.


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* PowersAsPrograms: "Attack of the 50-Foot Wonder Woman" sees Giganta and Diana's powers swapped courtesy of spell by [[spoiler: ComicBook/KlarionTheWitchBoy]]
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* SchmuckBanquet: The first sign that the kindly old lady in "What Doesn't Kill You" is not what she appears is when she implores Diana to eat something from the feast laid out in the Necromanteion. She doesn't even lie about it helping Diana communicate with the spirits, but Diana had the right of it when thinking it would be a bad idea.
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* AdaptationAmalgamation: "The Golden Age" has the basic premise and characterizations of [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Golden Age Wonder Woman and Etta Candy]] but set in Gateway City. A city Diana wouldn't become associated with or operate out of until the 90s in Creator/JohnByrne's run.

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* AdaptationAmalgamation: "The Golden Age" has the basic premise and characterizations of [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Golden Age Wonder Woman and Etta Candy]] but set in Gateway City. A city Diana wouldn't become associated with or operate out of until the 90s in Creator/JohnByrne's run.[[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 run]].
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* TakeThat: "We Built A Better World" has one towards the [[ComicBook/WonderWoman2011 New 52 version of Wonder Woman and its depiction of what happened to male children of the Amazons]]. Diana is asked in a press conference of how Themyscira deals with male children. Her response being they are no male babies on Themyscira because they're are no babies or men at all on the island.
--> '''Wonder Woman:''' ''"I mean...It's pretty simple, really"''

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* TakeThat: "We Built A Better World" has one towards the [[ComicBook/WonderWoman2011 New 52 version of Wonder Woman and its depiction of what happened to male children of the Amazons]]. Diana is asked in a press conference of how Themyscira deals with male children. Her response being they there are no male babies on Themyscira because they're are there’s no babies or men at all on the island.
--> '''Wonder Woman:''' ''"I mean... It's pretty simple, really"''
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** ComicBook/{{Vixen}} cameos near the end of the story "No No Harm".

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** ComicBook/{{Vixen}} cameos near the end of the story "No "Do No Harm".
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* TheNarrator: "How Wonder Woman Was Brought Low by a Mouse But Conquered the Stars" is revealed to be narrated by Philippus recounting an adventure Diana had to Hippoylta.

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** "Clay of Feet" is a PerspectiveFlip of Diana's origin from the P.O.V of Antiope, Dian's aunt and Hippolyta's sister.

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** "Clay of Feet" is a PerspectiveFlip of Diana's origin from the P.O.V of Antiope, Dian's Diana's aunt and Hippolyta's sister.


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* DemonLordsAndArchdevils: "Hellazapoppin" has Diana battle journey through Hell to fight a variety of Demon Lords and monsters to rescue Hephaestus. These including; Beelzebub, Amduscias, Andras, Sallos, Haborym, Lamia, Volac, Flauros, Deumus.

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* TheBusCameBack: Cathy Perkins, a supporting character from the Mod era of Wonder Woman, makes her first appearance since ''1972'' in the titular story "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?''.

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* TheBusCameBack: TheBusCameBack:
**
Cathy Perkins, a supporting character from the Mod era of Wonder Woman, makes her first appearance since ''1972'' 1972 in the titular story "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?''.Perkins?".
** Badra, a one-shot villain from ''1947'', shows up again the story "Memories of Hator". Diana's reformed her in the interim and she works out of a museum.



* ADayInTheLimelight: "The Stolen Lasso of Truth" focuses in on a young girl using the Lasso of Truth for her own benefit in her daily life. She got the lasso after Diana flew off from a crime scene to deal with a criminal.

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* ADayInTheLimelight: ADayInTheLimelight:
**
"The Stolen Lasso of Truth" focuses in on a young girl using the Lasso of Truth for her own benefit in her daily life. She got the lasso after Diana flew off from a crime scene to deal with a criminal.
** "Clay of Feet" is a PerspectiveFlip of Diana's origin from the P.O.V of Antiope, Dian's aunt and Hippolyta's sister.



* GhostlyGoals: "Beyond the Horizon" has Diana helping lay to rest the ghost of a young girl who died in the late-1880s. She and her siblings had been held hostage on the ship and had gradually died off while she desperately tried to find a way back home.



* InternalHomage: Diana's first line of dialogue in "The Stolen Lasso of Truth" is "...I will fight for those cannot fight for themselves". A famed line from Diana's first theatrical solo film, ''Film/WonderWoman2017''.

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* InternalHomage: Diana's first line of dialogue in "The Stolen Lasso of Truth" is "...I is "I will fight for those cannot fight for themselves". A famed line from Diana's first theatrical solo film, ''Film/WonderWoman2017''.



* MythologyGag: "Beat the Heat" has Diana trying to lasso the Sun to pull it away from the Earth after the planet has been taken off its axis and gotten too close to the star. She makes reference to having done this before, which she did back in the [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Golden Age Wonder Woman comics]].

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* MythologyGag: MythologyGag:
**
"Beat the Heat" has Diana trying to lasso the Sun to pull it away from the Earth after the planet has been taken off its axis and gotten too close to the star. She makes reference to having done this before, which she did back in the [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Golden Age Wonder Woman comics]].comics]].
** Creator/KurtBusiek's story, "How Wonder Woman Was Brought Low by a Mouse But Conquered the Stars", sees the return of Wondy's (in)famous Golden Age WeaksauceWeakness where she loses her powers if bound by a man.



* ShootTheDog: "Prayer" centers around Diana comforting an aged/elderly Gryphon in last moments after she was forced to MercyKill it after it had attacked a vacationing family when they unknowingly encroached on it's territory.

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* PerspectiveFlip: "Feet of Clay" is a look at Diana's creation and early years from her aunt and Hippolyta's sister, Antiope.
* SequelEpisode: "Memories of Hator" posits itself as a sequel to the last, and only other, appearance of Wonder Woman villain, Badra.[[note]] Comics Cavalcade #25 from 1947 for reference[[/note]] Diana having reformed her following their encounter.
* ShootTheDog: "Prayer" centers around Diana comforting an aged/elderly Gryphon in it's last moments after she was forced to MercyKill it after it had attacked a vacationing family when they unknowingly encroached on it's territory.



* ShownTheirWork: The Woman Airforce Service Pilots program that the female pilot in "Wing Woman" is a part of was a RealLife organization. Her reference to only the Russians allowed female pilots to fly planes that were armed during the war.

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* ShownTheirWork: The Woman Airforce Service Pilots program that the female pilot in "Wing Woman" is a part of was a RealLife organization. Her reference to only the Russians allowed female pilots to fly planes that were armed during the war.World War Two is also a true statemen rooted in history.


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* VillainTeamUp - Wonder Woman villains Dr. Cyber, Mouse Man, and Human Firework team up in "How Wonder Woman Was Brought Low by a Mouse But Conquered the Stars".

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* ComfortTheDying: Diana [[spoiler: brings Cathy Perkins to

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* ComfortTheDying: Diana [[spoiler: brings Cathy Perkins Perkins, her old supporting character, to gaze upon a sunset in her last moments before she dies from cancer]].


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* ShownTheirWork: The Woman Airforce Service Pilots program that the female pilot in "Wing Woman" is a part of was a RealLife organization. Her reference to only the Russians allowed female pilots to fly planes that were armed during the war.
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** "I'm Ageless" the ComicBook/JusticeLeague cameos including ComicBook/{{Batman}}, ComicBook/{{Superman}}, ComicBook/BlackCanary, ComicBook/TheFlash, [[Characters/TeenTitansCyborg Cyborg]], ComicBook/{{Aquaman}}, and ComicBook/GreenLantern.

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** "I'm Ageless" the ComicBook/JusticeLeague cameos including ComicBook/{{Batman}}, ComicBook/{{Superman}}, ComicBook/BlackCanary, ComicBook/TheFlash, [[Characters/TeenTitansCyborg Cyborg]], ComicBook/{{Cyborg}}, ComicBook/{{Aquaman}}, and ComicBook/GreenLantern.

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** 'Wing Woman" sometime in late-World War 2 with Diana helping a female pilot fend off a German jet in the airspace over New Jersey.



* TheBet: The premise of "The Wager" is revealed to be a bet between Wonder Woman and Batman that she can get a confession out of a suspect without using the Lasso of Truth.



* TheBet: The premise of "The Wager" is revealed to be a bet between Wonder Woman and Batman that she can get a confession out of a suspect without using the Lasso of Truth.

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* TheBet: The premise TheBusCameBack: Cathy Perkins, a supporting character from the Mod era of "The Wager" is revealed to be a bet between Wonder Woman and Batman that she can get a confession out of a suspect without using Woman, makes her first appearance since ''1972'' in the Lasso of Truth. titular story "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?''.



* ChurchOfHappyology: "Loved Failed" has Wonder Woman villain, Hypnota, running a cult going by the name of The Guiding Light.



* ComfortTheDying: Diana [[spoiler: brings Cathy Perkins to



* GenreThrowback: "Whatever Happened to Cathy Perkins?" is one to the Mod era of Wonder Woman (1968-73) with Diana unexpectedly running into her old supporting character Cathy Perkins after decades, revisiting the bouquet shop they used to run, and fending off the old villain trio of THEM!.



* ShootTheDog: "Prayer" centers around Diana comforting an aged/elderly Gryphon in last moments after she was forced to MercyKill it after it had attacked a vacationing family when they unknowingly encroached on it's territory.



* UsefulNotes/WorldWarII: "I'm Ageless" is set during the war in 1944 France.

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* UsefulNotes/WorldWarII: UsefulNotes/WorldWarII:
**
"I'm Ageless" is set during the war in 1944 France.France.
** "Wing Woman" has Diana, in her Invisible Jet, helping a Women Airforce Service Pilot ([[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_Airforce_Service_Pilots WASP]]) fend off a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messerschmitt_Me_262#:~:text=The%20Messerschmitt%20Me%20262%2C%20nicknamed%20Schwalbe%20%28German%3A%20%22Swallow%22%29,was%20the%20world%27s%20first%20operational%20jet-powered%20fighter%20aircraft German Messerschmitt Me 262]].

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Per this ATT, reverting this to that pending formal name change.


* ClimateChange: Premise of the "Beat The Heat" story.



* GlobalWarming: Premise of the "Beat The Heat" story.



* NotMeThisTime: Apollo shows he's not ultimately responsible for the temperatures rising on Earth. When he does move the planet back, he states the underlining problem is because of human-caused ClimateChange.

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* NotMeThisTime: Apollo shows he's not ultimately responsible for the temperatures rising on Earth. When he does move the planet back, he states the underlining problem is because of human-caused ClimateChange.[[GlobalWarming climate change]].

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* AdaptationAmalgamation: "The Golden Age" has the basic premise and characterizations of [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Golden Age Wonder Woman and Etta Candy]] but set in Gateway City. A city Diana wouldn't become associated with or operate out of until the 90s in Creator/JohnByrne's run.



* AdaptationAmalgamation: "The Golden Age" has the basic premise and characterizations of [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Golden Age Wonder Woman and Etta Candy]] but set in Gateway City. A city Diana wouldn't become associated with or operate out of until the 90s in Creator/JohnByrne's run.
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** "I'm Ageless" the ComicBook/JusticeLeague cameos including ComicBook/{{Batman}}, ComicBook/{{Superman}}, ComicBook/BlackCanary, ComicBook/TheFlash, [[Characters/TeenTitansCyborg Cyborg]], ComicBook/{{Aquaman}}, and [[Characters/GreenLanternJohnStewart Green Lantern]]

to:

** "I'm Ageless" the ComicBook/JusticeLeague cameos including ComicBook/{{Batman}}, ComicBook/{{Superman}}, ComicBook/BlackCanary, ComicBook/TheFlash, [[Characters/TeenTitansCyborg Cyborg]], ComicBook/{{Aquaman}}, and [[Characters/GreenLanternJohnStewart Green Lantern]]ComicBook/GreenLantern.

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