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1[[quoteright:349:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wonderwomanvol1.png]]
2 [[caption-width-right:349:Diana sending [[Characters/WonderWomanAres Mars]] for a tumble]]
3
4ComicBook/WonderWoman's first self titled book, though she was already starring as the feature of the {{anthology comic}} ''ComicBook/SensationComics'' which was published concurrently with this volume until 1953. This volume was initially published from 1942 until 1986, used in 2010 for the ''ComicBook/WonderWomanOdyssey'' story line to celebrate the 600th issue of ''Wonder Woman'', and then returned to once more in 2020.
5
6''ComicBook/WonderWoman'' Volume 1 ran from 1942 to 1986, with [[LongRunners over three hundred issues]] to its name, through the [[MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden]] and [[MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver]] Ages of Comic Books into the [[MediaNotes/TheBronzeAgeOfComicBooks Bronze Age]]. These issues covered a ''lot'' of themes, characters and [[StoryArc story arcs]], with the tales starting out on what would eventually be called "Earth-Two" and ending on what would be termed "Earth-One" but can generally be organized by these writers and eras:
7* ComicBook/WonderWomanCharlesMoulton (issues 1 - 29)
8* Creator/RobertKanigher (issues 30 - 177 & 204 - 217)
9** Kanigher's Earth-Two (issues 30 - 97)
10** Kanigher's Earth-One (issues 98 - 177, 204 - 217 & 286)
11* Mod Era (issues 178 - 203)
12* Martin Pasko (issues 218 - 232)
13* Creator/GerryConway (issues 233 - 285)
14** ComicBook/WonderGirl Bonus (issues 265 - 266)
15* ComicBook/{{Huntress}} Monthly (issues 271 - 321)
16* Roy Thomas & co. (issues 287 - 300)
17* Dan Mishkin (issues 301 - 325)
18* Mindy Newell (issues 326 - 329)
19* Wonder Woman 600 (issue 600)
20* ''ComicBook/WonderWomanOdyssey'' (issues 601 - 614)
21* ''ComicBook/WonderWomanRebirth'' (issues 750 - 800)
22
23Volume 1 was brought to a close with ''ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' after which the Amazon princess and her people were reimagined for the new [[Franchise/TheDCU DC Universe]] in the pages of ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987''.
24
25!!Stories included:
26[[index]]
27* [[ComicBook/WonderWomanNumberOne "The Origin of Wonder Woman"]] (#1, June, 1942)
28* "ComicBook/JudgmentInInfinity" (#291-#293, 1982)
29[[/index]]
30----
31!!Tropes included in ''Wonder Woman'' volume one:
32[[foldercontrol]]
33
34[[folder:In General]]
35Tropes which apply across all of the eras in the book.
36----
37* AbsentAnimalCompanion: While Jumpa's long absences are explained by the fact that Diana keeps her on Paradise Island, Diana also owns a horse named Serge who never appears again without explanation after Paula von Gunther's HeelFaceTurn. Jumpa shows up occasionally in later iterations, only to once again go missing without explanation as the comic continues.
38* AcademyOfAdventure: Holliday College, where at least 100 of the students are spies in training, Paula von Gunther has a secret laboratory under the mess hall, and regular odd villains try to sneak in or attack.
39* AdvancedAncientAcropolis: Paradise Island had healing rays, invisible aircraft, and telepathic videophones along with classical architecture.
40* AlienSpaceBats: The desire to avoid this was a large part of the reason the book moved so swiftly away from the Golden Age continuity is that within a year of WWII ending Diana and Steve Trevor's efforts had ensured there were multiple extraterrestrial governments with treaties with the United States and embassies in Washington DC, which meant that Earth-Two's history should be diverging quite distinctly from what was actually happening post WWII.
41* AerithAndBob: The Amazons of Paradise Island were women from throughout history who had come to the island seeking refuge and chose to take an oath to uphold the Amazons' peaceful protective ways then drank from the Fountain of Youth and survived ingesting the dangerous water so their names were incredibly varied, including Althea, Diana, Fatsis, Gerta, Hippolyta, Mala, Metala, Orana, Sophia and Zoe.
42* AffectionateNickname: Steve Trevor affectionately calls Wonder Woman his "Angel".
43* ArbitrarySkepticism: Issue #16 has Wonder Woman skeptical of the story of Pluto's abduction of Persephone despite her own origins and the fact that Aphrodite herself is relating the tale.
44* BattleCouple: Wonder Woman, Amazon princess, hero and champion, has been working alongside and had romantic entanglements/relationships with Ace Pilot and spy Steve Trevor since her earliest appearances. Their Golden and Silver Age iterations each got married and had a daughter together.
45* BefriendingTheEnemy: A common tactic of Wonder Woman, most famously with Paula von Gunther. It doesn't always work, and it doesn't always stick, but she'll frequently make the attempt.
46* BlockingStopsAllDamage: Wonder Woman's braces are divinely created to block just about anything.
47* BoundAndGagged: Her creator was into bondage himself, and he ''definitely'' wrote it into the job description.[[note]]"The only hope for peace is to teach people who are full of pep and unbound force to enjoy being bound... only when the control of self by others is more pleasant than the unbound assertion of self in human relationships can we hope for a stable, peaceful human society."[[/note]] The original Wonder Woman has superhuman abilities... unless her vambraces were welded together by a man, at which point she became de-powered. So you can expect incredible amounts of bondage throughout the first couple decades of her comic, especially given that she nearly constantly allows herself to be captured in order to be a PlayAlongPrisoner. It's such a common occurrence - to the point of once suggesting that the villains threaten to ''untie'' her - that the [[http://www.superdickery.com Superdickery website]] has an [[http://www.superdickery.com/tag/suffering-sappho/ entire gallery]] devoted to it. Steve Trevor tended to end up captured and tied up pretty often as well, and unlike his girlfriend could not just snap the ropes and/or chains when he wanted to leave.
48* ChanceActivation: Etta Candy and Steve Trevor are discussing how impossible it's going to be to get a spacecraft they're in to do anything and Etta manages to launch them both into space by plugging in two wires and pulling a lever. Neither are pleased since it was accidental, the government is probably going to charge them with theft and they still have no clue how to actually control it
49* CharlesAtlasSuperpower: MediaNotes/{{The Golden Age|OfComicBooks}} ComicBook/WonderWoman got her super-powers from training in "Amazonian concentration" -- it was even a skill that Amazons could teach to normal human females. [[https://www.the-medium-is-not-enough.com/2015/11/weekly_wonder_woman_the_legend_of_wonder_woman_1.php Wonder Woman had been established]] (in the first issue of her own comic book, June 1942), as unquestionably a [[ArtificialHuman clay statue brought to life]] but having the same abilities as any other Amazon, just a bit more, or at an earlier than usual age. By MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks, new editor Robert Kanigher insisted on having the story retconned to establish her as having been conceived and born in the usual way and bequeathed [[SemiDivine powers straight from the Gods]] in a sequence reminiscent of ''Sleeping Beauty'''s Aurora having gifts bestowed upon her by the fairies.
50* ComicBookFantasyCasting: Creator/ConnieSellecca was used by some as a model to base the Silver Age Wonder Woman on.
51* ContinuityReboot: Wonder Woman was {{retool}}ed very heavily several times between 1965 and 1985. They finally gave up and restarted at [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 #1]], throwing out all previous continuity. Fans who only knew her from her job as the token woman in ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague''/''WesternAnimation/{{Superfriends}}'' didn't understand why suddenly she was ten years younger and could hover, but really, the new Wondie as published was less revisionist than planned. It had gotten ''that bad.''
52* CostumeEvolution: Wondy's original flowing spangled culottes quickly tightened into bike shorts during the Golden Age, and then started shrinking into her iconic leotard look in the Silver Age. [[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/origin-story-wonder-woman-180952710/ There was considerable controversy over her being "underdressed"]] and M.C. Gaines consulted female psychologists to ascertain where, if anyplace, he should draw the line.
53* EatingOptional: The Amazons are immortal while on Paradise Island, meaning they don't need to eat, but do for enjoyment and to improve their quality of life. Off the island they're just as mortal as anyone else, if a bit stronger and hardier, and need to eat like any other human.
54* EraSpecificPersonality: Writer Robert Kanigher, who took over the book after Marston's death, started the infamous trend for each new writer to completely alter Diana's personality to their own desire and ignore what had come before. Diana ping pongs between demure, naive, gritty warrior, a women's liberation mouthpiece, ambassador to man's world, elegant royalty and military general.
55* FantasticRaceWeaponAffinity: Atlanteans typically use [[ProngsOfPoseidon tridents and bidents]]. They're mostly ApparentlyHumanMerfolk as the fish tailed merfolk she interacts with most commonly are her friends who live just off of Paradise Island.
56* FantasyKitchenSink: While primarily focused on Greek mythology, the Wonder Woman comics have dealt with characters and creatures from other myths (Egyptians, Norse and Aztec for example), metahumans, cyborgs, demons and aliens.
57* MortalityEnsues: Traditionally the Amazons were only immortal while on Paradise Island and while upholding their oaths. If they left and revoked their oaths they were just as human as anyone else and aged at the same rate.
58* MotherGoddess: Aphrodite was responsible for the creation of Paradise Island and the formation of the Amazon culture. She was also responsible for creating Wonder Woman herself.
59* MumLooksLikeASister: Hippolyta looks young enough to be Diana and [[ComicBook/WonderGirl Donna]]'s sister, but is actually their mother and is a lot older than she looks.
60* OneGenderSchool: Holliday College is a women's college.
61* OnlyTheChosenMayPilot: The original Robot Plane can reject pilots and only allow those they chose to pilot them. Despite its AI the Robot Plane doesn't start doing this until some aliens try to take it apart for parts, which makes it so selective it at one point abducts Steve Trevor so that it can have a pilot it approves of while Diana is busy.
62* ParryingBullets: The Amazons have made a game of it, called Bullets-and-Bracelets. They do wear armor to play the game though, as a precaution.
63* ReedRichardsIsUseless: '''Averted''' during Marston's run on the comic. Paula von Gunther's teleportation device causes space transportation to start becoming more common, with the Emperor of Saturn and Queen of Venus making alliances with the US and having ambassadors in Washington DC. This was promptly dumped by the wayside in favor of playing the trope straight after Martson died and Creator/RobertKanigher took up writing duties.
64* SingleLanguagePlanet: The Saturnians speak the same language across the several moons their empire encompasses, though their agents stealing humans as slaves have also learned English.
65* SolarSystemNeighbors: Lots of examples; Wonder Woman becomes fast friends with the winged Queen of Venus, gains a nemesis in Mars who rules the ethereal Martians, fights and then becomes allies with the Emperor of Saturn, and alongside the Venusians overthrows the despotic misandrist Queen of Mercury. Earth is also invaded by a group from Neptune.
66* SpeedEchoes: Diana's speed "playing" bullets and bracelets is usually depicted by her arms being visible in multiple positions.
67* SurveillanceAsThePlotDemands: The Amazons had a scrying device with which Hippolyta could view anything on earth, or elsewhere in the cosmos, with ease if she so desired. She mostly used it to keep an eye on her daughter's exploits.
68* ThouShaltNotKill: Diana was one of the most devout Technical Pacifist types in the DCU. That was part of the point of having a lasso (aside from Moulton's interests) — it was a non-lethal weapon. Back then, the Amazons certainly knew how to fight, but only for self-defense. Paradise Island was a "paradise" with lessons to teach us because unlike man's world, it was peaceful. There's a reason they were aided by the goddess of love and the arch-enemy of Amazon society was the god of war.
69* UndyingLoyalty: After Paula's brainwashed slaves are freed by the Amazons, and prior to Paula's HeelFaceTurn, one of her former slaves helps free Paula and tries to help Paula re-enslave her and the other freed victims.
70* WeaponsKitchenSink: In the original stories dodging and deflecting bullets was the most popular game on Paradise Island. This meant that the Amazons of Paradise Island used such weapons as guns, [[InescapableNet nets]], [[KnowsTheRopes lassos]], [[HeroesPreferSwords swords]], [[{{BFG}} cannons]], bows and arrows, [[CarryABigStick clubs]], spears, [[ImprobableAImingSKills throwing knives]], [[ImprobableWeaponUser plant toxins & seeds]], [[AttackDrone mentally controlled fighter planes]], [[KleptomaniacHero stolen Saturnian]] {{ray gun}}s, and magic as personal weapons all alongside each other, all while holding to a strict [[ThouShaltNotKill no killing rule]]. Most of them preferred [[BareFistedMonk unarmed combat]] or lassos though, as it made it easier to avoid killing opponents.
71[[/folder]]
72
73[[folder:"Charles Moulton"]]
74[-[[AC:Issues 1 - 29, from 1942 to 1948.]]-]
75Charles Moulton was a pen name used by Wonder Woman creator Creator/WilliamMoultonMarston and his assistant Joye Murchison, who used the pen name both together and separately. Their writing paired with Harry G. Peter's art marks the book's unmistakable [[MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden Age]] era. Issue 29 was Peter on his own after Marston's death.\
76\
77Each issue in this era contains three densely packed Wonder Woman stories, which are either three separate unrelated tales or three chapters telling one full tale, which may have large swaths of time between them. These stories are divided by a "Wonder Women of History" short story simplifying the life of a historically important woman into a short comic and a short two page written word story building around a central mystery. The stories in the early issues are almost entirely self contained save for Paula von Gunther's character development, and while all the stories remain easy to read as stand alone entities the final few issues start pulling together an overarching plot concerning the disgruntled slavers of Saturn, who are now out of a job.
78----
79* See ''ComicBook/WonderWomanCharlesMoulton''
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Robert Kanigher]]
83[-[[AC:Issues 30 - 177 (1948 to 1969), 204 - 217 (1972 to 1975), & 286, (1981).]]-]
84Robert Kanigher has had the longest run as a writer for ''Wonder Woman'' to date, which if one counts liberally could be considered to have spanned twenty-two years. While his first stories are arguably still part of MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks and kept traditional artist Harry G. Peter he swiftly departed from the idiosyncrasies that characterized "Charles Moulton"'s run for MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks. The official switch over from "Earth-Two", which is where DC's Golden Age stories reside, to "Earth-One" occurred in issue 98, but the stories had already had that Silver Age flavor for quite some time before this.
85----
86* AdaptationalJerkass: With the switch in writers after William Moulton Marston's death Steve Trevor and Gen. Darnell become noticeably more sexist, frequently saying things they'd once have been happy to have Wonder Woman and the Holliday Girls' help with are a man's job and belittling their once trusted ally Etta Candy. This changes were somewhat subtle at first, but the subtlety was dropped when the book switched from the Golden Age Earth-Two to the Silver Age Earth-One.
87* BatmanCanBreatheInSpace: [[MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] Diana had ''earrings'' to provide life support in space by creating a "transparent envelope". Since she was also sculpted from clay and brought to life through magic it is entirely possible she does in fact not need oxygen to survive.
88* {{Chickification}}: When Robert Kanigher took over as writer after Marston's death a lot of Etta's "non womanly" strengths were either downplayed or portrayed as flaws. When H. G. Peter died too Kanigher took the chance to retool Wonder Woman entirely (into what became her Earth-1 incarnation) and made Etta a conventionally 50's feminine (in both appearance and mannerism) Damsel in Distress whose only remaining character trait was liking candy.
89* CreatorCameo: When working on a retool Robert Kanigher drew himself in the comic, and had his avatar personally "fire" a bunch of characters from the book.
90* NotQuiteFlight: Kanigher gave Diana the ability to "glide on air currents".
91* OurGiantsAreBigger: Long-time writer Robert Kanigher seems to have liked stories about giants, so giants of one sort or another kept showing up (usually as villains) all through the Silver Age.
92* StayInTheKitchen: When Robert Kanigher took over writing duties following Marston's death Steve started spouting this viewpoint at least three times an issue to and about every and any woman on the planet, including Wonder Woman, as whatever he was headed out to do was suddenly always "no job for a woman". He tended to be outright downgrading and insulting towards "Diana Prince" and Etta Candy despite having worked well with them before and only trying to exclude Diana, who in that identity supposedly had no fighting abilities, when going into a fight.
93
94[[AC:Earth-Two [-(30 - 97)-]]]
95* AlternateUniverse: Wonder Woman was officially the first DC comic to run an Alternate Universe story, predating even ''ComicBook/TheFlash'''s famous meeting with Jay Garrick. Diana helps her counterpart from another universe fight the race of giants that are tyrannizing her world.
96* ArtisticLicensePaleontology: When Wonder Woman goes back in time in "The Runaway Time Express" and finds a ''Tyrannosaurus rex'' terrorizing some cavemen, she figures out it must have somehow escaped the ice age.
97* BathtubMermaid: After shooting Di and Steve with his Kal-C-M Ray Uvo dumps them both in a giant fishbowl with a couple of angry aquatic extraterrestrials.
98* BigFancyHouse: South Haven, where Sunny South grew up, is an old southern mansion with enough rooms to house a family reunion and a bunch of the Holliday Girls at once without people tripping over each other.
99* BoardingParty: As the Amazons have a strict no-killing rule they have to use their fleet of spacecraft to get close enough to board the ships of Uvo's fleet and take those on board hostage in order to defeat them.
100* CanOnlyMoveTheEyes: When Di and Steve are hit by Uvo's Kal-C-M Ray and petrified they are still able to move their eyes to watch what's going on around them.
101* CaptainSuperhero: Steve spends a bit as "Captain Wonder"
102* CartoonBomb: While the explosive in the actual comic is of a sleek silver inconspicuous design the cover for issue #47 depicts Wonder Woman and a robot duplicate fighting over a round black bomb with a lit fuse.
103* ClingyCostume: ''Wonder Woman'' #80 has Diana fall asleep one day (near a pond, no less) then wake up to find herself trapped in a mask that's rigged to explode.
104* DeadAllAlong: Vance Trotter. His twin brother Globe kept his death a secret as part of a plan to get their uncle's fortune.
105* DeadPersonImpersonation: In a story from Issue #43, Globe Trotter uses a fake beard to impersonate his deceased twin brother and use him as a cover-up to get rid of his cousins and inherit their rich uncle's estate.
106* DistressedDude: Ronno the Mer-Boy qualifies, partly due to him always putting himself in harm's way just to impress Diana, and partly because, being a merman, he is pretty much helpless on land.
107* DrivenToMadness: Deborah "Debbie" Domaine was forced into the role of the second Cheetah by Kobra, and eventually went mad due to their control and manipulations of her life.
108* EpicShipOnShipAction: Capt. Storm's final battle against the Royal Navy is shown in a flashback, with his ship pulled up alongside a navy ship and each blasting away at each other with cannons until Storm's vessel starts to sink.
109* EvilIsHammy: Elektro claims to have captured Wonder Woman and dramatically sweeps back a curtain on a stage before his fellow gangsters and waits until they've all tried shooting at her and having their bullets repelled to declare that she's actually a robot which they can use to destroy the real thing.
110* EvilTwin: Vance Trotter's twin brother Globe kills their uncle for the inheritance.
111* FakeActionPrologue: Issue 32 appears to open with Uvo bombing the Empire State building and leaving it a pile of burning rubble. The next page reveals that this was a slightly sized down model on the planet Uranus and that the bombing is just a test for the intended attack on Earth.
112* FakeTown: Issue 32 opens on Uvo making practice bombing runs on scale models of several city blocks of New York, Paris and London in preparation for an attack on Earth.
113* FamilyDisunion: All of Col. South's niephlings and his daughter Sunny come to South Haven for a reunion. Col. South is then murdered, along with one of his nephews, by another nephew who also tries to kill Sunny. His remaining niephlings all prove to be jerks as well, with everyone more concerned about who's going to get the inheritance and the inconvenience of sticking around for the murder investigation than South's death.
114* {{Frameup}}: Elektro tries to frame Wonder Woman for a series of bank robberies by using a robot duplicate to commit them, but no one believes his attempt to defame her and the fact that the crimes are being committed by a robot is quickly made public in a fight with the real Wondy.
115* GenderFlip: After Marston died and Kanigher took over the book Kanigher quickly started replacing female supporting characters with male characters with no explanation, even though it was supposedly the same continuity. Characters replaced included Deisra of Venus, Queen Moonbeam and Queen Celerita, whom Kanigher replaced with Vertigo of Venus, King Moono and King Celerito.
116* GhostPirate: (#48) The title page for "The Treasure of Capt. Storm" depicts Capt. Storm and his crew as ghostly pirates aboard their sunken vessel, but in the story itself they only appear in flashback and the real villains are the modern day pirates who end up hunting for Storm's buried treasure.
117* GratuitousLatin: Hippolyta shouts "Venus Nobiscum" when leading the Amazons into battle against the Uranians. This doubles as a shout out to a book by the then recently deceased former writer on the book and creator of Wonder Woman William Marston who wrote a book by that title.
118* HatOfAuthority: While all non-slave Uranians wear headgear at all times Lord Uvo's pointed helm-hat is notably different and more distinguished than those of the rank and file.
119* HellHolePrison: Uvo consigns the women who oppose him to imprisonment in his walled in model cities, which he then tests nuclear weapons on.
120* HeManWomanHater: Uvo and his Uranians despise women and have conscripted all of theirs and any they capture in their never ending war to a life of slavery. He then uses many of those slaves by placing them in his several city-block models of earth cities and then dropping atomic weapons on them to observe the effectiveness of his planned attacks.
121* AHouseDivided: In "Who Killed Col. South?" all the cousins are antagonistic and cruel to each other even though they know there's a murderer in the house, save for the twin brothers. In the end it turns out the twins have actually been reduced to one as the killer offed his brother and has been using caring for his brother to hide his actions
122* InheritanceMurder: "Who Killed Col. South?" in Issue #43 features a villain planning to kill his relatives for their family's fortune. He does manage to kill two, but misses the rest.
123* JustLikeRobinHood: Robin Hood himself shows up as a merry scoundrel in "Wonder Woman Meets Robin Hood" and "The Amazing Movie Camera".
124* KneelPushTrip: In issue 42 a fixer tries to bribe the Holliday Girls so that Rita will intentionally lose a race. In response Rita kneels behind him while Bobby and Etta sock him in the jaw, sending him tripping over Rita as he tries to regain his footing and hit the girls.
125* LightningGun: The Uranians have guns that shoot out jagged bolts of electricity. Unfortunately for them Di can deflect these projectiles with her bracelets just as easily as she can regular bullets.
126* MadeASlave: Uvo has made every woman in his empire, and every one he captures in combat, into a slave.
127* TheManInTheMirrorTalksBack: Priscilla Rich would find herself being mocked and belittled by her reflection, which would usually take the appearance of Cheetah rather than how she was currently dressed. This was not actually happening, but a visual indicator of her fractured mind.
128* MessageInABottle: The evening before his execution the cruel pirate Capt. Storm tossed a bottle containing a map to the location of his BuriedTreasure into the sea, which is found decades later by the Barnacle Gang.
129* MirrorMatch: In the '50s & '60s Robert Kanigher had Wonder Woman ended up with an improbably large number of storylines that involved her fighting doppelgangers of one sort or another.
130* NeverBareheaded: Lord Uvo and his Uranians never remove their helmet-hat combination headgear, and the only locals on Uranus shown without a head covering are slaves.
131* NeverMyFault: Mona Menise crashed her car while speeding and says it's the policeman's fault for trying to make her stop.
132* NoWomansLand: Uranus is a bad place to be a woman, as Uvo enslaves every woman he comes across and likes to use them to test out the effects of atomic weapons.
133* OnOneCondition: In "Andy Gorilla - Prize Pupil", unless Ms. Gates' school meets Mr. Scragg's in its annual baseball game, she must close and merge with his in accordance with the terms of Mr. Scragg's grandfather's will.
134* OurMermaidsAreDifferent: In #93 "Menace of the Mermen!" Paradise Island is attacked by mer-men with their own submarine, who get shot out of the thing like torpedos.
135* ParentalMarriageVeto: As part of mellowing and sweetening Sourpuss into a kindly lady from her tough no nonsense original she was given a backstory in which her "bitterness" is due to her father refusing to allow her sweetheart to marry her as a teenager, then they meet again and get married and her personality is given a complete 180.
136* PirateBooty: Before his execution the long dead pirate Capt. Storm buried his famous treasure in a location which would decades later be right by the bandstand at Holliday College.
137* ProducePelting: In #32 Wonder Woman stops some hecklers who are throwing old vegetables as some street musicians whose instruments aren't tuned and who are playing off key.
138* ProsceniumReveal: Issue 32 opens with Commander Uvo bombing the Empire State building and laughing maniacally as he flies over New York City, then on the next page the view of his ship zooms out to show that the burning New York city blocks are a scale model rather than the whole city with a chunk of model Paris and London visible while Uvo's second in command talks about what a smart way this is for practicing their attack on the real cities.
139* RapePillageAndBurn: Capt. Storm was notorious for giving no quarter, stealing everything of value when he attacked, killing all his victims and sinking those ships he couldn't steal for himself.
140* SailorsPonytail: The Royal Navy members shown fighting Capt. Storm back in the Golden Age of Piracy are depicted with short ponytails.
141* TheShowMustGoOn: (#32) When the bandstand starts to sink into the pond during a Holliday College band performance the girls keep playing even though they're in water up past their knees.
142* ShrinkRay: The shrinking formula named "Reduso Liquid" in issue 31 is used to shrink humans down to microscopic size and was intended by the woman who created it to be used in surgery.
143* SpikesOfDoom: The fourth of the "Four Dooms" Inventa and Torcha force Wonder Woman to face is a "field of dragon teeth", which looks like a grassy field strewn with many sharp spikes about 6" long, and which turn out to each be an explosive device that is triggered by touch.
144* StickySituation: Uvo manages to trick Diana and Steve into walking right into a "Magnetic Glazite" wall which they stick to and can do nothing to escape until Di tricks Uvo into shooting it, which disables the power to it and lets them drop to the floor.
145* StockCostumeTraits: One of the hecklers who was throwing food at the off key street musicians is wearing a felt hat cut into a crown, which was at the time used as shorthand for youths who were troublemakers or shirked responsibility as such hats were generally made out of boy's father's fedoras.
146* TakenForGranite: Lord Uvo's Kal-C-M Ray turns those it's fired upon into statue-like figures, though they're still able to move their eyes.
147* TenLittleMurderVictims: In "Who Killed Col. South?" a handful of Holliday Girls go with Sunny South for a visit to the gloomy mansion on an island in a swamp where she was raised. Her father ends up murdered with Sunny's many cousins as the suspects, and by the end it turns out the cousin responsible has killed his brother as well and nearly killed Sunny while she was investigating.
148* TalkLikeAPirate: Capt. Storm and his crew talk like they've come from the film which started the trend, as amusingly do the Barnacle Gang for a brief unremarked upon bit after they discover the map to Storm's buried treasure.
149* TreasureMap: In #48 the Barnacle Gang discovers the map made by the long dead ruthless pirate Capt. Storm which leads to his buried treasure.
150* UselessBoyfriend: Kanigher is the writer who turned Steve from a badass spy & pilot into the poster boy of the UselessBoyfriend trope.
151* TheXOfY: "The Planet of Plunder" (issue #31)\
152"The Trail of Thrills!"(issue #39)\
153"The Trial of Steve Trevor"(issue #41)\
154"The Moon of Peril"(issue #46)\
155"The Wizard of Castle Sinister"(issue #54)\
156"The Carnival of Peril"(issue #74)\
157"The Mask of Mystery!"(issue #80)
158* WalkThePlank: Capt. Storm and his pirate crew are shown forcing an injured prisoner to walk the plank in #48.
159
160[[AC:Earth-One [-(98 - 177, 204 - 217, & 286)-]]]
161* AdaptationDyeJob: Kanigher's Hippolyta had blonde hair, unlike the black haired Hippolyta of the Moulton run.
162* AdaptationNameChange: Paula von Gunther becomes Paula von Gunta.
163* AmusementParkOfDoom: Dazzleland from issue #122, where the life force is drained of park visitors to maintain the cryogenically frozen corpse of park founder Wade Dazzle.
164* BackFromTheDead: After Creator/RobertKanigher turned Steve Trevor into the quintessential UselessBoyfriend he was killed off to give Wondy some angst for her depowered mod era. Eros decided Steve's corpse looked like a nice way to court Diana and wore it for a while as "Steve Howard," then Aphrodite took what she could recover of Steve's memories, abducted and mind wiped a Steve from another universe and implanted those memories into that Steve to give Diana the love of her life back in a decidedly creepy fashion.
165* BeenThereShapedHistory: Professor Andro was present at and claims at least partial responsibility for numerous disasters throughout human history, including the eruption of Vesuvius, Atlantis' fall into the sea, and the Chicago fire of 1871.
166* BlobMonster: ComicBook/WonderGirl's aptly named Impossible Tales enemy The Glop is an alien who is essentially a living bit of very mobile orange slime.
167* BodyBackupDrive: Earth-One Aphrodite treats versions of Steve Trevor from other universes as handy back up bodies for the memories and essence of the Earth-One Steve. As a gift to Diana she brought Earth-270 Steve to Earth-One, erased his memories and implanted the memories and essence of the deceased local Steve.
168* {{Brainwashed}}: Osira—an extraterrestrial self proclaimed goddess who landed in ancient Egypt—saw that Steve Trevor looked like her dead husband Hefnakhti and hypnotized Steve into believing that he was Hefnakhti.
169* BrainwashedAndCrazy: Kobra decided to craft his own personal ComicBook/{{Cheetah}}. To this end he placed Debbi inside of a monitor station, suspended from the ceiling by electric cables. Using a brainwashing technique involving holographic projections, Kobra exposed her to a barrage of violent images of ecological disasters. With every flickering image she was forced to witness, an electric charge was sent coursing through her body. Within a short period of time, the process drove Debbi Domaine irrevocably insane.
170* TheCollector: In #106 Tooroo, a giant alien, tries to collect Diana for his significant other Rikkaa who has a charm bracelet decorated with "souvenirs" from other planets.
171* ClamTrap: In the Impossible Tales ComicBook/WonderGirl story in #107 Diana's foot becomes trapped when a giant clam snaps shut on her ankle. She escapes by using a piece of nearby corral to force the clam open again.
172* CockFight: Ronno the Merman and "Wingo" the male Harpy fight over Diana's affections pretty much any time they're in the same issue. While she befriended them both as a teenager in the ComicBook/WonderGirl Impossible Tales her affections ultimately lie with Steve Trevor rather than either of her constantly fighting childhood friends.
173* ConfusedQuestionMark: When Diana lifts a car that was about to hit a child a large question mark appears by the driver's side of the windshield, as both Diana and the child had been in a blind spot.
174* ConvectionSchmonvection: HandWaved In one of the Wonder Girl Impossible Tales Diana jumps into a bubbling volcano to retrieve her lasso, and while doing so thinks to herself how handy it is all Amazons "train" to be more heat resilient since a regular person would die doing what she's doing. Why her clothes aren't set on fire is not addressed.
175* CostumeCopycat: The first time the Earth-Two Wonder Woman meets the Earth-One version she believes her to be someone wearing her costume in an attempt to imitate her and considers it more likely that she's a villain than a hero from another earth, but does stop trying to turn her in to the authorities and hear her out however skeptical Di may be.
176* CreepyCentipedes: Part of ComicBook/WonderWoman's rogue's gallery in [[MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks The Silver Age]] included the Crimson Centipede, an abomination of a man with [[GreenAndMean green skin]] and [[MultiArmedAndDangerous 100 arms and legs]] with GunsAkimbo, created by [[BigBad Ares, the God of War]].
177* CrystalPrison: Osira traps Wonder Woman and other ComicBook/JusticeSocietyOfAmerica members in pyramid shaped force fields which she then solidifies into crystal prisons.
178* CuteMonsterBoy: In the Silver Age ComicBook/WonderGirl had two PrettyBoy monster boys vying for her romantic attention: Ronno the Merman and "Wingo", a male harpy.
179* DerelictGraveyard: In #115 a mysterious current sweeps a bunch of miraculously intact ships from over the ages off the ocean floor to float on the surface, one of which has a figurehead that looks mysteriously like Wonder Woman.
180* DuelToTheDeath: In issue #177 GalacticConqueror "Klamos" has his minions gather up women to force them to fight to the death to find his bride. It doesn't work out as Wonder Woman and Supergirl sabotage the event and unveil Klamos as a robot controlled by his "assistant" Grok, destroying the despot's new empire.
181* EndOfSeriesAwareness: In a Creator/RobertKanigher issue of ''Wonder Woman '' during MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks, [[http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2011/08/26/i-love-ya-but-you%e2%80%99re-strange-when-robert-kanigher-personally-fired-the-supporting-cast-of-wonder-woman/ one story]] was about Kanigher himself dropping most of the supporting characters to retool ''Wonder Woman'' into something closer to MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks, as well as [[RunningGag characters wondering whether or not he has a yellow bowtie]].
182* EngagementChallenge: Kenyah imposes a challenge for Nubia expecting to fight other men for ownership of her more than anything resembling marriage, instead she furiously answers him with:
183-->''"I claim the right right to name my champion, Kenyah! One who will meet you on equal ground to battle for possession of me! I [name] '''myself'''!"''
184* EvilerThanThou: Wonder Woman considers the second ComicBook/{{Cheetah}} "far worse than Priscilla Rich" because all Priscilla "cared about was personal revenge on her imagined enemies" while the new Cheetah sees "the whole world as her enemy".
185* EvilIsHammy: Professor Menace claims to have captured Wonder Woman and dramatically sweeps back a curtain on a stage before his fellow gangsters and waits until they've all tried shooting at her and having their bullets repelled to declare that she's actually a robot which they can use to destroy the real thing. He somehow manages to be even more dramatic than his Golden Age predecessor, possibly because he controls his robots with his mind rather than having to sit at a console like Elektro.
186* FadSuper: Supporting character Nubia was introduced as a painfully inept attempt at creating a heroine to reflect the Black Power movement of the 1970s.
187* FemmeFatalons: Debbi Domaine's costume came equipped with chrome talons that could rend through steel.
188* FlagBikini: Wondy's outfit shrinks into what could easily be described as a USA flag leotard.
189* FuturisticPyramid: Osira creates multiple pyramid shapes out of energy shields, which she uses to protect herself, fly around in and imprison superheroes.
190* GiantSpider: In the ComicBook/WonderGirl Impossible Tale in #116 Ronno tries to steal a necklace from the cave of a sea spider, and gets caught in its web as the truck sized arachnid approaches to make a meal of him.
191* GhostShip: In #115 Wonder Woman investigates a mysterious fleet of ghost ships, which were brought to the surface from their resting places on the ocean floor by a strange current.
192* GottaCatchThemAll: The Impossible Tales Wonder Girl story in #107 has Diana seeking out each piece of her Wonder Girl costume hidden around Paradise Island by the Amazons, without knowing what the finished product is going to look like until she has all the scattered and hidden parts.
193* GottaGetYourHeadTogether: Professor Menace clutches his head with both hands and yells when the Wonder Woman robot he's been controlling mentally is shorted out with electricity by Wonder Woman.
194* HarpingOnAboutHarpies: Wingo the Bird Boy is a CuteMonsterBoy harpy with a crush on ComicBook/WonderGirl who despises his merfolk rival for her attention Ronno.
195* ImprovisedWeapon: In the Impossible Tales ComicBook/WonderGirl story in #107 Diana uses a piece of long corral to fight off a swordfish and then wack the giant clam clamped around her ankle to force it to let her go.
196* KidnappingBirdOfPrey: The Roc that lives on a spire near Paradise Island grabs Ronno out of the sea in #107 and Diana has to rescue him before the giant bird flies off and makes a meal of him.
197* KillerRobot: Professor Menace builds a killer Wonder Woman robot, which functions just as he'd intended until Wondy shorts it out in a fight.
198* LeaveNoWitnesses: After burying his treasure with four of his men Capt. Storm kills everyone involved and who saw them to ensure its location remains secret.
199* TheManInFrontOfTheMan: Emperor Klamos is not only the puppet of his supposed loyal minion and current minister Grok [[spoiler:he's just a war robot controlled by Grok, without even an AI]].
200* TheMaze: The Red Panzer forces Wonder Woman to run a basement maze with a homing missile chasing her.
201* TheMentallyDisturbed: Deborah was declared unfit to stand trial, and remanded to Arkham Asylum upon her defeat. Given her fragile mental state, emotional instability, and bouts of berserk rage, this is not surprising.
202* OurMermaidsAreDifferent: One of Diana's suitors in the Silver Age was Ronno the Mer-Boy (later changing his alias as Manno the Mer-Man). He's a typical example of a male merfolk, though strangely he seems to have knee joints on his tail and can stand on his fins and hop about when on land.
203* MildlyMilitary: In the early Silver Age, you would never have guessed that being a lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force required Diana Prince to do anything more onerous than wear a blue uniform.
204* MistakenForRomance: In the ComicBook/WonderGirl Impossible Tale in #116 Wonder Girl mistakes Renno's interactions with the mermaid Firra as Renno finally finding a girlfriend he doesn't have to pretend to be someone he's not to be with, but he and Firra are just friends. WG leaving has Renno once again setting himself off on a task he has no hope to complete in order to try and win her over.
205* MockyMouse: Wade Dazzle is assisted by robots based on his creations Jerry Gerbil and Harriet Hamster, who are pastiches of Mickey and Minnie Mouse.
206* MultiArmedAndDangerous: The Crimson Centipede, a Silver Age villain, has sixteen arms and can reliably wield eight guns simultaneously.
207* MummyWrap: Countess Draska Nishki tries to "turn Wonder Woman into a mummy" in issue 161 by throwing the bandages she's wearing as a disguise on her. She's actually using the bandages to disguise that she's stolen the magic lasso and is lassoing the princess with it.
208* MyBrainIsBig: #116 Professor Andro has a misshapen large cranium and boasts of his various "mento" powers implied to be mental powers tied to his large mind. However once Wondy catches him it becomes clear his human form was just a disguise he was wearing as he escapes the body in his true far more alien crystalline body.* AndNowYouMustMarryMe: Emperor Klamos kidnapped Wonder Woman and Supergirl and tried to force them to fight to the death for the "honor" of marrying him. They overthrew him and set free the people he'd subjugated instead.
209* NavelDeepNeckline: Deborah Domaine's Cheetah costume has a neckline that reaches her midsection.
210* NomDeGuerre: In the Silver Age Steve Trevor's air force callsign was ST9.
211* NoQuarter: Capt. Storm became notorious as a pirate for granting the ships he targeted no quarter and killing everyone on board.
212* OperationJealousy: Firra suggests that Renno pay more attention to her than ComicBook/WonderGirl at a dance to make Wonder Girl jealous, but the mermaid had rather underestimated how much her friend had already annoyed Wonder Girl and the plan backfires.
213* OurCentaursAreDifferent: In the Silver Age ComicBook/WonderGirl Impossible Tales the hidden merfolk village in the waters off Paradise Island has a longstanding feud with a herd or sea-centaurs.
214* PolarOppositeTwins: Wonder Woman and her twin sister Nubia are very different in personality and appearance. Diana is a Technical Pacifist raised in an all-female paradise with a Caucasian appearance and Nubia is a Combat Pragmatist raised in a hellish male-dominated culture with a Sub-Saharan appearance.
215* PossessingADeadBody: After Steve Trevor was murdered Eros decided to wear his body to make a move on Diana as Steve "Howard".
216* PsychoElectricEel: In #111 Wonder Woman is able to defeat her killer robot duplicate by kicking it towards the giant electric eels near Paradise Island which zap and short out the robot.
217* RageAgainstTheReflection: When Priscilla Rich sees her alter ego ComicBook/{{Cheetah}} as her reflection talking to her her reaction is to punch the mirror until it cracks.
218* ReplacementGoldfish: After Steve Trevor was murdered by Doctor Cyber, and Eros was done masquerading around as "Steve Howard" in Trevor's lifeless corpse Aphrodite kidnapped the Steve Trevor from Earth-270 wiped his memories and put what she could recover of Earth-Two Steve's memories in his head as a gift to Diana (of Earth-Two).
219* RetGone: Bob Kanigher, declared ComicBook/WonderGirl gone from continuity, even retroactively so as she had never appeared at all, in ''Wonder Woman'' #158 in 1965 (although in a very tongue-in-cheek way)
220* RightHandCat: Red Panzer has a pet cat which he strokes while brooding and thinking up plots.
221* RoboticReveal: When Wonder Woman and Supergirl are abducted to be forced to fight other women warriors taken from various planets for the "honor" of marrying the GalacticConqueror Klamos they instead reveal that he is a robot war machine without even an AI being remotely controlled by his supposed right hand man, and blow him up.
222* RocBirds: In the Impossible Tales ComicBook/WonderGirl story in #107 Ronno the merboy gets grabbed by the giant Roc that lives on a spire near Paradise Island and Diana has to rescue him from the bird.
223* SameSexTriplets: Joey, Jackie and Johnny Star, the "Triple Stars".
224* SapientSteed: #128 retconned the robot plane to have originally been a pegasus transformed into a plane by Athena.
225* SeashellBra: The mermaids in [[SpellMyNameWithAnS Ronno/Renno]]'s underwater village wear seashells over their breasts, while the mermen just go naked.
226* SeparatedAtBirth:Diana's twin sister Nubia was stolen away at birth and they did not meet until they were both adults.
227* SheIsNotMyGirlfriend: The young merfolk Firra and Renno who live just off Paradise Island have to explain empathically that they are not dating and are just good friends. In this case neither of them have any romantic interest in the other, but ComicBook/WonderGirl has a hard time believing them since Renno was spending so much time at a dance with Firra.
228* ShooOutTheClowns: Bird Boy, Merboy, the Glop, Wonder Girl, Wonder Tot[[note]]all created by Robert Kanigher when he was the head writer in the early 1960s[[/note]] and even the Holiday Girls, Steve Trevor and Queen Hippolyta were deemed "silly" and [[https://twitter.com/shurwitt/status/1068624350725660673/photo/1 booted from the title]]. Shooing the clowns kind of crippled the title, because virtually her entire supporting cast had been deemed silly and eliminated (Steve Trevor kept popping in and out, but the rest were just gone). ([[http://www.mikesamazingworld.com/mikes/index.php?page=fanboy&articleid=20 Here, Mike's Amazing World of Comics attempts to sort out the "Wonder Family]]".) In all the years since, she has never really been able to settle on a single, stable supporting cast or even setting.
229* ShooOutTheNewGuy: The first thing Kanigher did when he was made the writer again after the derided "Mod Era" was kill off I Ching, one of the characters introduced and central to that era in the book, then have Diana lose her memory of him, all in issue #204.
230* SiblingsInCrime: The Triple Stars are a villainous group made up of the triplets Joey, Jackie and Johnny Star.
231* SoftGlass: When Elektro has the Robot Woman jump through a giant skylight in #48 at a ball/exhibition there's understandably no concern about harming the robot, however all the people who were dancing beneath aren't concerned or injured by the many shards of falling glass.
232* SpaceMaster: Although he starts out as a simple con artist, Wonder Woman's foe Angle Man becomes this after obtaining an alien device shaped like an artist's drafting triangle, which has the ability to distort space.
233* SpreeKiller: In issue #204 an unnamed man sets himself up in a tall building and starts shooting the people down below, his highest profile kill being I-Ching, and he only stops killing when he falls out of his perch and dies trying to kill Diana.
234* StockMoneyBag: An alien robs a high speed train disguised as Billy the Kid atop a flying horse for a lark and he leaves with the loot in a white bag with a $ printed on the side.
235* StrappedToABomb: This happened at least once. She wasn't just tied to the bomb, the bomb was dropped on a city. It was on the cover of issue 205.
236* StupidJetpackHitler: Red Panzer shows up in the "present" (1970s) in a time-traveling rocket plane. Though unbeknownst to him he actually arrived by traveling from Earth-Two to Earth-One.
237* SwordfishSabre: In the Impossible Tales ComicBook/WonderGirl story in #107 Ronno sees a swordfish about to attack a teenaged Diana from behind and ends up wounded by it, then Diana uses a piece of corral as a makeshift "sword" and fences with it until is has enough and swims away.
238* TailfinWalking: Subverted with Manno the Merman, who hops on land.
239* {{Technopath}}: Professor Menace can control his Wonder Woman duplicate robot remotely using his mind and when the thing is electrocuted and shorted out he gets a painful bit of feedback. He later controls three different robots this way, but seems to have sorted out the feedback problems.
240* ThreateningShark: In the ComicBook/WonderGirl Impossible Tale in #111 a massive shark tries to take a bite out of Diana while she's floating on her back near Paradise Island. Renno is able to warn her of its approach, and get knocked for a loop by the shark himself, in time for her to dodge it, grab it by the tail and toss it away.
241* TragicVillain: Debbie Domaine had no motivation to become a supervillain, nor any interest in becoming one. Kobra, however, wanted a Cheetah for himself, and targeted Debbie since she was the niece of the original. He kidnapped, tortured and drugged her until she was suitably BrainwashedAndCrazy for his use, and she never recovered from his project, becoming unstable and unable to control her emotions and outbursts. She spent the rest of her life in Arkham.
242* TrainJob: A couple of aliens rob a train disguised as Jessie James and Billy the Kid riding flying bulletproof horses, mostly because they think it's hilarious.
243* TraintopBattle: Di fights a bulletproof alien disguised as Billy the Kid atop a high speed train he's trying to rob.
244* TokenMinority: Nubia, who was even explicitly called the "Black Wonder Woman" in The '70s.
245* VillainousLineage: While the Wonder Woman mythos is full of examples proving the idea that villainy runs in the blood false Kobra was a firm believer in the concept, which was rather unfortunate for Debbi Domaine when he decided he wanted his own Cheetah. As she was the niece of the original Cheetah he kidnapped her, tortured and drugged her until she went insane for his little pet project.
246* AVillainNamedZrg: In issue 107 Wonder Woman fights an alien named Zugggm whose people are thinking about invading earth.
247* VoluntaryShapeshifting: The Glop is a BlobMonster alien that can shape itself into pretty much any form that doesn't take up less or more mass than it's made of and can form and eject things based on substances it's "digested", like rocket propelled explosives.
248* WalkingShirtlessScene: Manno the Merman is never seen with a shirt, even as Mer-boy (and also technically can't walk, making him a Hopping Shirtless Scene.)
249* WritersCannotDoMath: In Issue #96, Angle Man traps Wonder Woman inside a Time Machine and sends her to the year 4457 but later says he sent her 2700 years into the future. By that math, he sent her from the year 1757.
250* TheXOfY: "The Forest of Giants"(issue #101)\
251"The Box of Three Dooms"(issue #103)\
252"The Bridge of Crocodiles"(issue #110)\
253"The Chest of Monsters"(issue #112)\
254"The Cave of Secret Creatures!"(issue #116)\
255"The Secret of Volcano Mountain"(issue #120)\
256"The Return of Multiple Man"(issue #129)\
257"The Capture of Mer-Boy!"(issue #134)\
258"The Kite of Doom"(issue #138)\
259"The Academy of Arch-Villains"(issue #141)\
260"The Amazon of Terror"(issue #160)\
261"The Curse of Cleopatra"(issue #161)\
262"The Return of Minister Blizzard"(issue #162)\
263"The Secret of Tabu Mt.!"(issue #167)\
264"The Cage of Doom"(issue #169)
265[[/folder]]
266
267[[folder:Mod Era]]
268[-[[AC:Issues 178 - 203, from 1969 to 1972.]]-]
269Written by Dennis O'Neil, Mike Sekowsky & Samuel R. Delany.
270----
271* ActionFashionista: During Diana's depowered "Mod" phase she was constantly getting new hip outfits to fight in.
272* AllWitchesHaveCats: Morgana is a witch from another dimension, and is quite attached to her black cat.
273* AudienceAlienatingEra: Diana gave up her powers after Steve's murders and became a fashionable non-powered kung-fu superspy in a white pantsuit. This move backfired completely, considering it angered prominent feminists like Gloria Steinem, who denounced it as a profoundly sexist move to remove the power of one of the greatest female superheroes.
274* BewitchedAmphibians: Morgana turns one of Cathy's friends into a frog when they summon her while playing with magic rituals. He is returned to human by his girlfriend giving him a kiss.
275* BrieferThanTheyThink: The controversial 'I Ching' period was only twenty-five issues of her original run, extended to five years' time-wise by an intermittent publishing schedule. But it was during that period that the [[Film/WonderWoman1974 pilot movie]] starring Creator/CathyLeeCrosby was developed, which lead it to look InNameOnly in comparison with the better-known take of the character, and in turn led to the {{pilot movie}} for [[Series/WonderWoman the series featuring the more traditional take]] starring Creator/LyndaCarter being called ''The New Original Wonder Woman''. The Pilot Movie is known to even non-comics' fans, the original storyline, not as much, except for Gloria Steinem's denouncement of it.
276* DeflectorShields: Doctor Cyber had deflector shields built into her armored suit.
277* DemotedToExtra: They really didn't want to use much of Steve, partially because Kanigher had turned him into the quintessential useless boyfriend, and kept trying to kill him off. These deaths were never allowed to truly stick.
278* {{Depower}}: The I Ching kung fu period.
279* DespotismJustifiesTheMeans: Doctor Cyber ran an international criminal syndicate dedicated to world domination and was willing to do whatever it took to take over the world.
280* DuelingWorks: #161 presents an InUniverse example with two rival films based on the "Curse of Cleopatra" in production at the same time which Countess Draska Nishki tries using to disguise her involvement in the murders of a few cast members.
281* FairytaleMotifs: A trio of psychotic lesbians who called themselves THEM! kidnapped a girl named Cathy and made her their slave. Cathy was portrayed as Cinderella, THEM! as the evil stepmother and stepsisters, and Wonder Woman as the Fairy Godmother.
282* GoodScarsEvilScars: Doctor Cyber had her face horribly scarred in her first confrontation with Wonder Woman, it is usually hidden behind the faceplate of her PoweredArmor but the injuries left her face disfigured.
283* HeartbrokenBadass: Wonder Woman had her heart broken when the love of her life Steve Trevor died. Then, because this is comics we're talking about, Eros possessed Steve's body and tried to recreate Steve's personality and then Steve was reanimated using a version of himself from another universe.
284* HighCollarOfDoom: Doctor Cyber wore a purple costume with a standing green collar that was taller than her head. It matched her cape.
285* LaterInstallmentWeirdness: Diana, trying to help Steve Trevor, changed up her looks and ended up forsaking her powers as Wonder Woman, only to have it be All for Nothing when he's killed, leading to a period where Diana was now wearing catsuits and training in martial arts under the assistance of a monk known as I-Ching. This would only last three years.
286* MagicalAsian: I-Ching, Wonder Woman's mentor from the period at the beginning of the Bronze Age where she lost her powers for four years' worth of stories, is a textbook example.
287* PoweredArmor: Doctor Cyber wore a suit of powered armor equipped with lasers and an invisibility screen.
288* PowerLossMakesYouStrong: Part of the thinking behind the Depower. Feminists shouted back "No it doesn't!"
289* PsychoLesbian: Them! is made up of three very heavily queer coded criminals who chase down a teenager that escaped from them and try to order her to put on a leash and be their "pet", find Diana pretty and want to keep her in bondage too, and kidnapp and sell people.
290* PutOnABus: All the Amazons who aren't Diana had to go to another universe to recharge their power since being connected to earth has drained their magic.
291* {{Retool}}: At the dawn of the Bronze Age, Dennis O Neil infamously had all of Themyscira Put on a Bus and turned Diana into a Badass Normal kung-fu fighter, apparently to tap into the popularity of Emma Peel; she also ran a boutique by day and pretty much gave up both her Secret Identity and her star-spangled costume. This so-called "mod" era was derided by many (most notably Gloria Steinem) but hung on for about three years before unceremoniously fading away.
292* RoundHippieShades: I-Ching, Wonder Woman's mentor during her depowered phase wore sunglasses with perfectly round lenses.
293* ShowWithinAShow: Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor get involved with the production of a film about "the Curse of Cleopatra" after the stars are attacked by the WW villain Countess Draska Nishki.
294* SpyCatsuit: When she lost her powers and operated as "Diana Prince, Wonder Woman", ComicBook/WonderWoman sometimes wore a white catsuit (though less often than popularly imagined -- much of the time, she simply wore "normal" all-white outfits including minidresses, pantsuits, etc).
295* TotalitarianGangsterism: Them! are a group of human traffickers who rule over a little corner of New York with fear and violence, until they try attacking Diana to get to one of their escaped victims.
296* UnlimitedWardrobe: During her "mod" years Diana had a large constantly changing wardrobe.
297* WritersCannotDoMath: In Issue #96, Angle Man traps Wonder Woman inside a TimeMachine and sends her to the year 4457 but later says he sent her 2700 years into the future. By that math, he sent her from the year ''1757.''
298* TheXOfY: "The Wrath of Dr. Cyber!"(issue #181)\
299"The Battle of the Mer-Men"(issue #199)\
300"The Fist of Flame"(issue #201)
301[[/folder]]
302
303[[folder:Martin Pasko]]
304[-[[AC:Issues 218 - 232, from 1975 to 1977.]]-]
305----
306* LifeDrinker: Issue #222 had a theme park mogul named [[MrAltDisney Wade Dazzle]] who was being kept alive by life force drained from visitors to his theme park and fed into his preserved body.
307* MrAltDisney: One of her minor Bronze Age villains was Wade Dazzle, a LifeDrinker who sustains himself through life force drained from visitors to his theme park and fed into his preserved body.
308[[/folder]]
309
310[[folder:Gerry Conway]]
311[-[[AC:Issues 233 - 285, from 1977 to 1981.]]-]
312This section of issues were primarily written by Creator/GerryConway with Jack C. Harris as the writer for issues 243 - 254 which introduced Orana and Paul Levitz writing issues 255 - 258. At the close of Conway's run Kanigher was brought back for his final two issues. Conway would later write the final issue in this volume.
313----
314* BrainwashedAndCrazy: Kobra decided to craft his own personal Cheetah. To this end he placed Debbi inside of a monitor station, suspended from the ceiling by electric cables. Using a brainwashing technique involving holographic projections, Kobra exposed her to a barrage of violent images of ecological disasters. With every flickering image she was forced to witness, an electric charge was sent coursing through her body. Within a short period of time, the process drove Debbi Domaine irrevocably insane.
315* ClothesMakeTheLegend: As Orana attempts to exploit after winning the right to become the new Wonder Woman.
316* ColorCharacter: The Red Dragon.
317* InterchangeableAsianCultures: The WWII-set stories of the mid-late 70s featured a villain called Kung, a Japanese-American Imperial ultra-nationalist zealot. His costume's ChestInsignia is a yin-yang symbol and his {{animorphism}} powers are said to be inspired by the various animal-style forms of kung fu. Both of those things, and really the name "Kung" itself, are Chinese. This would be bad enough, but it goes against the grain of the character's core concept -- the uber-patriots who worshiped the Emperor weren't known for remotely ''tolerating'' anything Chinese.
318* MoreThanMindControl: Kobra used this to turn Deborah Domaine into the new Cheetah after her aunt, Priscilla Rich, died, in #274.
319[[/folder]]
320
321[[folder:Wonder Girl Bonus]]
322[-[[AC:Issues 265 & 266, 1980]]-]
323A two issue back-up story featuring Donna Troy with writing by E. Nelson Bridwell and art by Ric Estrada.
324----
325* RememberTheNewGuy: Remember that little orphan girl Diana [[ComicBook/WhoIsDonnaTroy rescued from a fire as a toddler and brought back to Paradise Island where she was adopted by the Queen and raised as Diana's beloved sister]]? No? That's because in creating Wonder Girl as a seperate character and fleshing her out these things had to be added in retroactively.
326[[/folder]]
327
328[[folder:Huntress Monthly]]
329[-[[AC:Issues 271 - 321, from 1980 to 1984]]-]
330A a feature which ran after the main Wonder Woman story for four years following Helena Wayne. The initial writer for the series was Paul Levitz with art by Joe Staton, and the final writer was Joey Cavalieri working with penciler Rod Whigham.
331----
332* AttackHello: [[Characters/GreenLantern1941 Solomon Grundy]] knocks out both of the guards accompanying the museum curator with one punch as he introduces himself to the curator, and makes it clear that he's stealing the entire contents of the vault.
333* BadGuysPlayPool: In issue 301 Huntress goes to a shady pool hall when looking for a suspect, and finds him and his mob pals playing pool.
334* BankToaster: During ComicBook/{{Huntress}}'s fight with Pat Pending in a bank he was attempting to rob she knocks him into a shelving unit containing gift toasters and blenders. Pat takes the opportunity of being partially obscured by the appliances to take a pill that allows him to fake his death.
335* TheBeastmaster: In the Huntress feature she fights Herbert Hynde, who goes by "Earthworm" and can controll rats, reptiles and other vermin.
336* ColorCharacter: Blackwing
337* ConveyorBeltODoom: Huntress is tied up and placed on a conveyor belt meant to slide her into a blazing furnace by the Undertaker.
338* EatenAlive: The "Earthworm" has his rats swarm and consume those who annoy him, usually starting with the face and neck.
339* GraveMarkingScene: In issue 295 Alfred visits Bruce's grave and talks to Bruce's headstone about how Helena is doing.
340* {{Hallucinations}}: Helena starts hallucinating after being drugged by Professor Fether.
341* HoistByHisOwnPetard: In issue #290 the "Crimelord" gets pulled over the edge of his own fortress while trying to grab Huntress and falls to his death due to the weight of the armor he'd bragged about.
342* InformingTheFourthWall: The bank robber Pat Pending has a truly bizarre habit of talking aloud to himself on heists describing the objects in his utility belts and what the one he is selecting can be used for in his current situation despite working alone.
343* KnifeOutline: In "Into Darkness Once More" Helena pins the fence Sidney to the wall to question him by firing about ten arrows into his sleeves while not hitting his arms.
344* MaliciousSlander: Helena has her very own crooked reporter who insists on twisting the facts and outright lying to try and make Huntress seem like an out of controll murderer in a cape despite Helena's very strict no killing or even seriously maiming rule. At one point Dedra Borrower blatantly misquotes a medical examiner on television in the same second the examiner had just said that he could not yet determine cause of death. She turns to the camera and tells her viewers ''There you have it. A man's death due to the unchecked violence of an unsanctioned vigilante''.
345* ModestyBedsheet: Helena wraps herself in a bedsheet when she wakes up in Gary Minelli's bed and discovers he undressed her while she was unconscious.
346* MurderByCremation: The Gotham mob boss known as the Undertaker tries to murder Huntress by putting her in the crematorium at his funeral home, though she escapes. This is also his favorite way of getting rid of the bodies of his victims killed elsewhere.
347* OhCrap: While Helena is looking into some artwork that was apparently destroyed at the Gotham Museum and realizes the destroyed art was forgeries she returns to the museum to gather more evidence and try to figure out the motive. When she gets there she runs into [[Characters/GreenLantern1941 Solomon Grundy]] and has a moment of horror as she realizes she's way out of her weight class and given that Grundy is putting guards' heads through walls doesn't have time to call for more powerful backup.
348* PestController: The "Earthworm" is named for his lanky and wrinkled appearance, but the creatures he controls, like a more famous Gotham based villain who operates out of the sewers, are rats and, more dangerously, gators.
349* PinnedToTheWall: When ComicBook/{{Huntress}} faces off against the mob boss the Undertaker in his crematorium her first attack is to toss two throwing knives that strike the shoulders of his suit jacket and pin him to the door.
350* ProtectionRacket: Earth-Two Huntress and Blackwing fight a group called Boa that's been forcing small business owners all over Gotham to pay them protection money.
351* RhymesOnADime: The Arkham inmate turned receptionist under Dr. Tarr's instruction Lucinda tries to make everything she says rhyme. She struggles with it but never stops smiling, it just makes her talk and do other things agonizingly slowly.
352* SewerGator: The ComicBook/{{Huntress}} tracks down a baby trafficking villain called [[http://www.comicvine.com/earthworm/4005-57745/ Earthworm]] in the Gotham sewers. He uses his [[PestController control over the animals in the sewers]] to [[http://siskoid.blogspot.com.au/2013/03/whos-earthworm.html make some alligators attack her]].
353* ShamelessFanserviceGirl: During one of her storylines Helena is escaping Arkham Asylum and succumbs to the effects of being shot with a very potent hallucinogenic by Professor Fether. After her JourneyToTheCenterOfTheMind, Helena wakes up in the flat of her fellow inmate she escaped the Asylum with, Gary Minelli. She also finds herself naked in his bed, meaning [[UndressingTheUnconscious he undressed and unmasked her while she was out]], when she confronts him wearing only a ModestyBedsheet, she's more worried about her SecretIdentity being compromised than her modesty, despite his obvious flirting.
354* ShoutOutThemeNaming: The feature includes a character named Dr. Amos Tarr who it is eventually revealed has taken over Arkham by imprisoning the staff and various police officers and put the inmates in charge and is working with an unhinged scientist named Professer Fether. The whole thing being a reference to "The System of Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether" by Creator/EdgarAllanPoe.
355* SpeechImpediment: The Undertaker & Dr. Tarr's enforcer Milo has a very prominent lisp that presents itself as a lot of ssssh-es at the beginning of words.
356* StockSuperheroDayJobs: Helena Wayne, Richard M. Grayson ''and'' Charles Bullock are attorneys at Cranston, Grayson and Wayne while acting as ComicBook/{{Huntress}}, ComicBook/{{Robin}} and Blackwing.
357* SuperRegistrationAct: ComicBook/PowerGirl is furious when a Gotham DA starts pushing for more government oversight of superheroes, accusing him of [=McCarthyism=] and brining up how the last time the government tried to register and control superheroes it forced the ComicBook/{{JSA}} to disband in the 1950s and it and most Earth-Two heroes remained defunct for a couple of decades.
358* TentacleRope: Helena hallucinates her ankles are being wrapped in tentacles that are pulling her down after being drugged by Professor Fether.
359* TooManyBelts: The bank robber Pat Pending wears three belts around his waist and hips, a belt around each of his upper arms, and a thigh belt on each leg. All but one belt slung around his hips are covered with large pouches containing the tools he uses in his trade.
360* UndressingTheUnconscious: Gary Minelli, whom Helena escaped Arkham with, undressed and unmasked her while she was under the effects of a hallucinogenic before putting her to bed to sleep it off.
361* VisionQuest: After being drugged with a very potent hallucinogenic by Professor Fether while escaping Arkham Helena has to find herself within the center of her own mind before waking up.
362* WalkInChimeIn: In the ''ComicBook/{{Huntress}}'' feature "Dying to Take You Away" Helena interrupts a bank robber talking to himself as she swings down from the rafters, but is replying things he'd said while outside the building and in another room rather than anywhere where it would make sense for her to have heard him.
363* WrenchWhack: One of the mobsters in issue 301 attacks Huntress with an oversized monkey wrench which he evidently carries with him while playing pool.
364* XRayVision: Pat Pending uses a pair of x-ray goggles in his heists to aid in gettting into vaults.
365[[/folder]]
366
367[[folder:Roy Thomas & co.]]
368[-[[AC:Issues 287 - 300, from 1982 to 1983.]]-]
369MediaNotes/TheBronzeAgeOfComicBooks was in full swing here, and while Roy Thomas was the most consistent writer for this run Marv Wolfman wrote issue 287, Paul Kupperberg wrote issue 297, Dan Mishkin wrote issues 298 and 299, and Roy often shared a writing credit with another creator, usually Paul Levitz.
370----
371[[AC:In General]]
372* BlindWeaponmaster: Bellerophon was blinded by Zeus in antiquity for having the temerity to question whether the Olympians were gods and trying to fly to Olympus on Pegasus. He's still winning his fight with Wonder Woman until she brings her robot plane close enough to mess with his hearing.
373* DemotedToExtra: What befell Wonder Woman's long-running sidekicks Steve Trevor and Etta Candy
374* GorgeousGreek: Supervillain Silver Swan went from plain Greek ballet dancer Helena Alexandros to a woman in white [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/marvel_dc/images/4/4d/Helen_Alexandros_Earth-One_001.png/revision/latest?cb=20110421215546 blonde bombshell]]. She resented her HollywoodHomely appearance in spite of being descended from/named after the mythological Helen of Troy, and struck a deal with [[BigBad Mars]] in order [[IJustWantToBeBeautiful to become beautiful]].
375* HandcuffedBriefcase: Diana Prince is keeping a briefcase meant to be full of sensitive documents handcuffed to her wrist when the intel comes through that a bomb has been planted in it. Diana uses the opportunity to fake Diana "Prince"'s death via explosion.
376* HeelFaceTurn: Sofia Constantinas started out as a criminal, before her interactions with Wonder Woman led her to turning over a new leaf and taking up the oath of an Amazon.
377* MayflyDecemberRomance: Discussed in issue 300 when the Earth-One Diana visits the happy home of the married Earth-Two Diana and Steve and notes that even though "Mrs. Trevor" gave up her immortality to have and raise a daughter with Steve she's still aging at less than half the speed as he. Both Steve and Diana are at peace with this, saying that everyone dies eventually and it's simply a part of life.
378* RealMenCook: When the Earth-One Wonder Woman ends up at the Earth-Two Wondy's house for a meal she discovers that Steve Trevor cooks the meals at their happy home, this Steve Trevor being the WWII hero to whom the original is Wonder Woman married.
379* SuperpowersForADay: In #289 Steve took pills that turned him to the FlyingBrick superheroes the Patriot, and Wonder Man. Unfortunately the Patriot pills turned out to be part of a plot by Angle Man which drained powers from Wonder Woman and gave them to the pill taker so he did not take them again.
380* WesternTerrorists: Nikos Aegeus is a Greek national who is said to be the leader of a terrorist group but their ideology is never revealed and his own is stated to differ from it as the reason he joined was due to his love of the power rush he gets from being able to order people around, hurting people and having them fear him.
381
382[[AC:"Judgment In Infinity"]]
383* ArmorPiercingQuestion: Played with With the Adjudicator. When he's forced by Diana's question while wrapped in the lasso to think about who gave him his supposedly righteous task, and it's revealed his fellows essentially sent him off to play with planets they don't care about so long as he doesn't bother them by thinking about them, he's just furious with her because they're now going to recall him and he won't get to destroy a bunch of earths and all life on them as he doesn't care why he was "[[HangingJudge judging]]" planets, its what he wants to do.
384* AttackOfThe50FootWhatever: The extra-dimensional world destroying SufficientlyAdvancedAlien Adjudicator is taller than the Washington Monument.
385* BusFullOfInnocents: When a cop opens fire and causes a panic at the National Mall a car goes careening towards a school bus, and is only stopped from hitting it by Diana lassoing the car and pulling it back.
386* DeadlyGaze: The Adjudicator can turn disintegrate people or cause them to fade right out of existence with his gaze if he so chooses.
387* DemBones: The henchmen the Adjudicator created as manifestations of his will modeled after the HorsemenOfTheApocalypse were each skeletal figures wearing cloaks.
388* TheEarthPrimeTheory: The storyline "Judgment In Infinity" establishes that the main universe Earth-One is the multiverse's keystone; and if it's destroyed, all alternate Earths will follow.
389* ElectiveMute: The Adjudicator lets his thoughts and subsequent actions do the talking for him, which infuriates Diana given he's decided to destroy every version of earth and all inhabitants.
390* ExoticEyeDesigns: The Adjudicator's eyes are split into a check pattern of many constantly changing swirling colors each square of which seem to reflect bits of shadow from different scenes.
391* EyeBeams: If the rays of multicolored light the Adjudicator can emit from its eyes hit a person they go through a quick transformation of turned crystalline solid and then disintegrated.
392* HeartLight: The Adjudicator is an extra-dimensional OmnicidalManiac who has a bright glowing light in the middle of his chest.
393* HellishHorse: The Adjudicator's four HorsemenOfTheApocalypse ride powerful steeds with flaming manes.
394* HorsemenOfTheApocalypse: When the Adjudicator decided to judge earth--which in his case meant he'd already decided to destroy every earth in the multiverse--he formed four deadly horsemen based on the Biblical ones as his agents through which to judge humanity via their reaction to them.
395* HumanoidAbomination: The Adjudicator appears as 600' tall blue man with something like a star for a heart. He's also a mad ancient thing that exists between realities and goes around "judging" and casually destroying planets and all their inhabitants, by which he means all versions of a planet and its inhabitants across the multiverse at once after "judging" five representative versions. He's only stopped because his keepers let him play with worlds as a way to keep him from annoying them by thinking of them and Diana's use of her lasso on him while questioning who gave him the authority to destroy earth makes him think of his keepers, who summon him for punishment in response.
396* JudgeJuryAndExecutioner: Ever since his SufficientlyAdvancedAlien people kicked him out for being nuts the Adjudicator has been traveling the multiverse "judging" the worthiness of planets, then wiping out every single version of said planet across the multiverse in one go when it inevitably fails.
397* ObliviouslyEvil: The Adjudicator does not see his actions, which are the destruction of populated worlds by destroying a planet across multiple dimensions, as anything but just even after it's learned that he was given the duty of "judging" worlds by his fellows who couldn't stand him and essentially gave him the "task" of playing with worlds they didn't care about so long as he didn't [[BlueAndOrangeMorality annoy them by thinking of them]].
398* OmnicidalManiac: The Adjudicator justifies his actions as judgement on the peoples of whatever world he's currently destroying across the multiverse, but he "judges" the planets on a skewed scale only sometimes sending minions to test the inhabitants of a handful of the representative versions of the planet and that judgement always calls for the destruction of the planet(s) and its/their inhabitants.
399* SaveBothWorlds: In the storyline "Judgment in Infinity", a group of heroines from five parallel Earths come together to save all parallel Earths from the [[EldritchAbomination Adjudicator]].
400* SomeNuttyPublicityStunt: A passerby wonders if the Adjudicator's appearance next to the Washington Monument in #291 is some kind of publicity thing for the new ''Franchise/StarWars'' movie, but he's not terribly convinced.
401* SoProudOfYou: After Diana leads a coalition of super-women from across multiple earths in preventing the Adjudicator from destroying all the linked earths across the multiverse [[ComicBook/WonderGirl Donna]] gives her big sister a big hug while telling her how proud she is of her.
402* SquareCubeLaw: In #291 when the Adjudicator appears standing beside the Washington Monument--which he's taller than--a woman who was visiting the monument wonders, "But--a man that ''huge''--It's supposed to be scientifically '''impossible''', isn't it?"
403* SufficientlyAdvancedAlien: The Adjudicator is a multi-dimensional being who goes around destroying planets, across all dimensions at once. Right when the coalition of super-heroes from four different earths fail to stop him from destroying earth his more powerful overseers step in and save the planet, considering him to have overstepped his bounds.
404* UnusuallyUninterestingSight: When the Adjudicator appears in DC the passersby have an argument about whether or not he's real or just some kind of movie promotion, with one woman pointing out that a humanoid that tall is [[SquareCubeLaw scientifically impossible]]. None of them seem surprised to learn the threatening giant is not a staged event when told so by a guard.
405[[/folder]]
406
407[[folder:Dan Mishkin]]
408[-[[AC:Issues 301 - 325, from 1983 to 1985.]]-]
409While Dan Minshkin was given the writing credit for most of the issues in this run Kurt Busiek wrote #318.
410----
411* AbsurdlySharpBlade: After their first encounter Nikos Aegeus fled to Olympus and was gifted the knives of Vulcan, which can cut anything, by a benefactor there. He stabs Steve Trevor with one and manages to cut Diana's indestructible lasso, but is disarmed in short order.
412* AccidentalMurder: From their prior fights Diana knows that tossing Artemis' sword away will get the unrelenting undead Amazon to stop attacking her to retrieve it. In their final fight when Diana kicks the sword into a plane she is surprised and horrified to discover that being far enough away from the sword causes Artemis to crumble into ash and die a final death. By her people's reckoning Artemis was already dead, but Diana is still upset to have brought about her demise.
413* AllForNothing: It turns out that Diana and Etta's landlord Russell Abernathy is a former senator who was convinced by Russian agents that if he gave them intel on weapon development programs and military movements they could and would save his dying wife. They lied, and he lost everything that had ever mattered to him and spends the rest of his life with a target on his back.
414* DeliberateInjuryGambit: During her fight with Artemis' reanimated skeleton in issue 302 Diana purposefully lets Artemis get in a hit that knocks her down in order to kick the sword powering the reanimation out of Artemis' hands.
415* DemBones: Artemis' skeleton is reanimated by Circe.
416* FloorboardFailure: After getting body swapped and waking up to find herself prisoner ComicBook/BlackCanary takes advantage of the old floors in the room she is locked in to bash a hole to jump through.
417* FreakyFridayFlip: When Zenna Persik realizes she's been captured by her old foe the Nazi Karl Schlagel she swaps her mind out with that of an unsuspecting ComicBook/BlackCanary who had been following their chase trying to figure out what was going on and apprehend them.
418* GrandTheftPrototype: When the "gremlins" overthrew the Ytirflirks some of them made sure to steal the Ytirflirks' superweapon the Phlogiston Bomb, planning to detonate outside of an atmosphere where it would be mostly harmless. Unfortunatly they crashed on earth so they take to hiding it instead.
419* HeroicSacrifice: While Zenna Persik has an escape option during what turns out to be her last Nazi hunt it would leave either Wonder Woman or Black Canary dead, she chooses to sacrifice herself to kill the Nazi she's been chasing and destroy his new weapon instead of sacrificing one of the heroes to do so.
420* HollywoodHeartAttack: Diana and Etta's landlord Russell Abernathy, stands up and clutches his chest before falling over unresponsive when he has a heart attack.
421* InTheBack: Nikos Aegeus steps out from behind a pillar and stabs an unprepared and unaware Steve Trevor in the back when Steve turns back towards Diana as he is heading into work.
422* LostColony: Diana encounters a previously unknown and hidden colony of Amazons living in the Amazon Rainforest who split with the Amazons of Paradise Island long ago.
423* MagicalRomani: Zenna Persik is a "gypsy" woman whose family was almost entirely wiped out by the Nazis and who uses her magic to track and kill Nazis who escaped justice. She also uses it to attack superheroes for no apparent reason.
424* MonochromaticEyes: The Gremlins (which are extraterrestiral) have large solidly dark blue to black eyes.
425* TheMothership: The Ytirflirks were an alien race that enslaved the aliens known as gremlins for their mechanics and went about making war on other planets until the gremlins revolted and stole their mothership, crashing it on earth and killing/wreaking their enslaver's chain of command.
426* NaziHunter: Zenna Persik is a Roma woman whose family was murdered in Nazi concentration camps. She spends the rest of her life hunting down and killing Nazis, especially those that escaped any form of punishment after the war.
427* OverTheShoulderCarry: After one too many monsters have attacked Di in her Diana Prince identity talking about absconding with her to their "mistress" Diana decides to play along and pretend the latest, a minotaur, has knocked her out to see who said "mistress" is. He marches off with her slung over his shoulder, but he turns out to be a man Crice transformed against his will and the transformation is unmade by the lasso.
428* PerpetualMotionMonster: Circe raises Artemis, Diana's long dead predecessor in the role of the Amazon Champion, as a skeletal figure who needs no sustenance and cannot seem to be harmed nor reasoned with as she attacks the Amazons seeking "revenge" for her abandonment and lonely death in the outside world.
429* ReducedToDust: When Diana removes Artemis' sword from her the reanimated skeleton of the Amazon who once held the title Wonder Woman turns to dust and is blown away by the wind.
430* RingOfFire: When ComicBook/BlackCanary tried to apprehend Zenna Persik, unaware that the elderly man Persik was chasing was a Nazi, Persik responded by creating a wall of fire around her and her foe to prevent Canary from advancing.
431* ScaryScarecrows: The gremlins take inspiration from humans to create their own scarecrow, meant to scare off humans while the gremlins steal parts to try to repair their stolen spacship, by [[TaxidermyIsCreepy stuffing the body of one of the giant Ytirflirk aliens that had enslaved them and putting it on wheels]].
432* ShoutOut:
433** Diana gives a little nod to the song "Oh! That Moonlight Glide" as she glides home at night by moonlight after a long day.
434** When Keith Griggs is attacked by one of Circe's beast men who has been transformed into a bear-like monster he responds
435--->Oh no you don't, Yogi! This is one camper who's not becoming part of your picnic basket!
436* SoulJar: Circe ties the dead Amazon hero Artemis to her own reanimated skeleton through Artemis' sword. If she gets far enough from it, she'll lose her connection to the world of the living and die a final death.
437* WarriorUndead: Issues #298 has the discovery of an ancient Amazon's skeleton who wears a tiara similar to Wonder Woman (and for some reason still has hair). In issue #302, we learn that this Amazon is Artemis (not to be confused with Artemis of the Bana-Mighdall). Artemis was once Hippolyta's friend and a chosen champion of Athena. However, she [[FallenHero became corrupted]] and was slain by Athena herself. Using a mystical sword, Circe revives Artemis's skeletal remains to fight Diana and the other Amazons. She proves to be a formidable enemy before Diana knocks the sword out of her hands, causing her to crumble to dust.
438[[/folder]]
439
440[[folder:Mindy Newell]]
441[-[[AC:Issues 326 - 329, from 1985 to 1985.]]-]
442Mindy Newell became the second woman to write the woman of wonder and the first to actaully be credited, but she only had three issues before Gerry Conway was given the writing duties for the penultimate issue before ''ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' permanently altered the universe in which Diana lived and operated.
443----
444* BattleCouple: Diana and Steve of course.
445* TheBigDamnKiss: The final panel of the entire series is Diana and Steve sharing a passionate kiss after a brief talk about their daughter Lyta.
446* DefiantToTheEnd: Persephone is unrelenting and unyielding in her battle even after the fall of Tartarus
447* DisintegratorRay: While it is certainly not what the purple ray is meant for Diana figures out that it pretty well disintigrates the implacable foes attacking Paradise Island from Tartarus.
448* EternalLove: Hades and Persephone have an everlasting love, and when Hades' mind is poisoned by the Anti-Monitor and Ares it is through the PowerOfLove that Persephone brings her husband back.
449* EvilIsNotAToy: Montez tries summoning Tezcatlipoca to get rid of the heroes, and the trickster drains his life in return.
450* GenderEqualEnsemble: The Air Force/Government employee group that Di is part of and which supports Wonder Woman consists of Diana, Etta and Lauren Haley and Steve, Darnell and Howard Huckaby.
451* HappilyMarried: Diana and Steve finally get married, and are quite blissful about it.
452* IHaveManyNames: Tezcatlipoca says this word for word during his first meeting with Wonder Woman.
453* TheLegionsOfHell: After his fall Hades warps the denizens of Tartarus into an army of undead monsters and leads them against Paradise Island. As they are not living killing them doesn't break the Amazons' oath of never taking a life, but they prove nearly impossible to dispatch until Diana has a moment of inspiration and tries turning the Purple Healing Ray on them and discovers ReviveKillsZombie.
454* TakeMyHand: When Ares nabs the robot plane Diana urges Steve to take her hand lest he fall to his death.
455* TheTrickster: Tezcatlipoca can manipulate and lie and twist the meaning of words and play dangerous pranks with the best of them.
456* RedemptionEqualsDeath: After betraying Hippolyta the power hungry Antiope redeems herself by sacrificing her own life in battle to save Hippolyta's.
457* ReviveKillsZombie: The things attacking Paradise Island embody the opposite of life, so Diana tries turning the Purple Ray on them. It proves far more devastating to the things than conventional weapons.
458* TheScottishTrope: As is traditional Persephone dread Queen of Hades is not called by name but by Kore.
459* SealedWithAKiss: The final chapter closes on a kiss between the newlywed Diana and Steve Trevor.
460* WartimeWedding: After winning the fight against Ares, and hearing Zeus say that with the battle won the war is still in question, Steve and Diana decide they're getting married straight away as they've put it off too long.
461* WeddingFinale: Diana and Steve Trevor get married in the final issue, which took place right before ''ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' permanently altered the multiverse.
462* WreckedWeapon: Diana breaks Ares' axe.
463Themyscira
464[[/folder]]
465
466[[folder:Wonder Woman 600]]
467[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ww600.png]]
468 [[caption-width-right:300:Adam Hughes cover]]
469[-[[AC:Issue 600, 2010]]-]
470
471The 600th total issue of (regularly numbered) ''Wonder Woman'' volumes, this issue was treated as a special celebration of the character and her history, and a lead in to the retool of ''ComicBook/WonderWomanOdyssey''. The 226 issues of ''[[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 Wonder Woman Volume 2]],'' (not counting the Zero issue, ''ComicBook/DCOneMillion'' issue, eight annuals and two specials) are counted as issues 330 through 555, while the 44 issues of ''[[ComicBook/WonderWoman2006 Wonder Woman Volume 3]]'' are counted as issues 556 through 599. \
472\
473Due to its celebratory and semi-continuity detached nature the issue had numerous creative teams including writer Creator/GailSimone with art by Creator/GeorgePerez for "Valedictorian", Amanda Conner as writer and artist on "Fuzzy Logic", author Louise Simonson with artist Eduardo Pansica for "Firepower", Creator/DanDidio as writer with Scott Kolins as artist on "The Sensational Wonder Woman" and Creator/JMichaelStraczynski with Don Kramer on "Odyssey Prologue: Counter Shock". The issue contained five seperate Wonder Woman stories, a throwback to the Golden Age when her comic usually contained at least four stories rather than a single tale taking up the entire issue and continuing into the next.
474----
475* AnimalEyes: The Ivan Reis, Oclair Albert and Rod Reis collaboration depicts Medusa with yellow-green snake-like eyes.
476* BlindfoldedVision: In the Ivan Reis, Oclair Albert and Rod Reis collaboration Diana fights Medusa with her eyes closed.
477* ContrappostoPose: Phill Jimez's two page spread depicts Etta with all her weight on her right leg with her left leg slightly forward and to the side.
478* DynamicAkimbo: In Phill Jimez's two page spread [[ComicBook/WonderGirl Donna Troy]] is depicted standing confidently with her hands on her hips.
479* FangsAreEvil: The Ivan Reis, Oclair Albert and Rod Reis collaboration depicts Medusa with long fangs, which she's still barring and snapping after her head is cut off.
480* FlagDrop: Shane Davis' spread has Diana flying in front of a very large American flag which takes up the entire background.
481* GreenAndMean: The Ivan Reis, Oclair Albert and Rod Reis collaboration depicts villainous Medusa with dark green skin and long sharp fangs even on her human face.
482* InternalHomage: Adam Hughes's variant cover is a recreation of the cover of ''ComicBook/SensationComics'' [[ComicBook/SensationComicsNumber1 #1]], the first cover in which Diana was front, center and the focus of the comic itself.
483* LosingYourHead: In the Ivan Reis, Oclair Albert and Rod Reis collaboration Diana defeats Medusa by cutting off her head, and while this seems to do in the snake woman's body her head and hair is still snarling and furious.
484* {{Medusa}}: The Ivan Reis, Oclair Albert and Rod Reis collaboration depicts Diana standing above Medusa's decapitated head, her eyes closed and the snakes still snapping at her.
485* VariantCover: There was an Adam Hughes cover, a Creator/GeorgePerez cover and a reissue cover with art by Don Kramer and Michael Babinski.
486[[AC:Valedictorian]]
487* ActionPrologue: The tale opens on Wonder Woman leading a coalition of female superheroes including ComicBook/{{Batwoman}}, ComicBook/{{Batgirl|2009}}, ComicBook/{{Stargirl|DCComics}}, ComicBook/{{Supergirl}}, [[ComicBook/SevenSoldiers Bulleteer]] and others in defending Washington DC from an attack by Ivo's Cyber-Sirens. The actual story is about Vanessa Kapatelis getting her life back together.
488* CompellingVoice: Ivo's Cyber-Sirens can get men to blindly follow their orders.
489* EarnYourHappyEnding: After being tortured, brainwashed and turned into the Silver Swan against her wishes Vanessa Kapatelis has been able to return to and finish school and made class Valedictorian.
490* EverythingsBetterWithSparkles: Di's spinning transformation has added pink sparkles.
491* OurSirensAreDifferent: Diana leads a coalition of female heroes to take down a group of android sirens created by Professor Ivo that are attacking the capitol. They only effect men, necessitating the quick gathering of a bunch of super-ladies.
492* SpectacularSpinning: This version of Diana has the spinning transformation sequence to change out of her Wonder Woman duds, complete with added pink sparkles.
493* TearsOfJoy: Vanessa and Diana have tears in their eyes as they hug and talk about their past, their friendship and what Vanessa has been able to achieve.
494* TransformationSequence: Diana spins in the air as she's meeting Etta and creates a swriling bunch of sparkling pink inside which she changes from Wonder Woman to an outfit appropriate for a graduation.
495
496[[AC:Fuzzy Logic]]
497* AllAnimeIsNaughtyTentacles: ComicBook/PowerGirl makes an offhand comment about annoying guys with their "manga tentacles" after defeating Egg Fu, which ComicBook/{{Batgirl|2000}} understands (her best friends are the nerdy Steph and Tim after all) but Diana doesn't.
498* PrehensileHair: Egg Fu has a prehensile mustache, though it's made of a pair of mechanical tentacles rather than actual hair.
499* PropertyOfLove: Parodied. Diana and ComicBook/PowerGirl have a seemingly ''very'' uncharacteristic conversation about how Karen needs to understand and accept that "you belong to him", before TheReveal that [[spoiler:they're talking about her cat.]]
500* TentacleRope: Egg Fu wraps Wonder Woman and ComicBook/PowerGirl in its tentacles.
501
502[[AC:Firepower]]
503* AbsurdlySharpBlade: Aegeus has stolen the "Knife of Vulcan", which he claims can cut through anything even Diana's indestructible lasso.
504* NamedWeapons: Aegeus has stolen the "Knife of Vulcan", which he claims can cut through anything.
505* {{Trainstopping}}: ComicBook/{{Superman}} stops a train after Aegeus wrecks a bridge, unfortunately the distance it takes to slow it down safely brings him back within range of Aegeus' magical attacks.
506
507[[AC:The Sensational Wonder Woman]]
508* InternalHomage: The opening monologue has such questions as "is she stronger than Hercules", to which the answer is of course yes as the line says Wonder Woman is "beautiful as Aphrodite, wise as Athena, stronger than Hercules, and swifter than Mercury".
509[[/folder]]
510
511[[folder:Odyssey]]
512[-[[AC:Issues 601 - 614, from 2010 to 2011]]-]
513A retool by Creator/JMichaelStraczynski, designed to be detached from previous versions of Wonder Woman and pave the way for the ComicBook/New52's drastic [[ComicBook/WonderWoman2011 reimagining of her]] it remained hobbled by character deaths in the previous series and Crisis Crossovers despite Straczynski bringing in nods to as many bits of Wonder Woman lore he could fit in his short and very different run.
514----
515* See the relevant page ''ComicBook/WonderWomanOdyssey''.
516[[/folder]]
517
518[[folder:Return to Legacy Numbering]]
519See the relevant pages at:
520* ''ComicBook/WonderWomanRebirth''
521** ''ComicBook/WonderWomanInfiniteFrontier''
522[[/folder]]

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