When the Justice League reformed four Graduates moved up from the Titans. So far we’ve examined the recent history of Dick Grayson, Donna Troy, and Starfire. That last of the four Graduates is Cyborg.
Cyborg
Victor Stone was created by Marv Wolfman and George Perez for The New Teen Titans. He first previewed in DC Comics Present #25 (Oct 1980), before making his first real appearance in The New Teen Titans #1 (Nov 1980). Many times Cyborg’s team-mates have called him “the tin man with a heart” for it is his essential humanity and decency that have defined him and not the cybernetics and metal that cover much of his body. He takes after his scientist parents with an IQ of 170, but he rebelled against their home schooling and sought companionship at a normal high-school student. He became a medal winning athlete and may even have turned professional if it hadn’t been for an accident at his father’s laboratory. Vic lost his arms, legs, half his head, and a significant fraction of his internal organs to the accident.
Vic’s father was a cyberneticist and he used his own prototype technology to save his son by replacing Vic’s damaged organs, limbs, and skin with gleaming metal implants. His new body was faster, stronger, and tougher than his original, but Vic only saw himself as a half-man/half-machine monster. The empath Raven sensed Vic’s despair and recruited him into the reformed Teen Titans. It took Vic years to come to terms with his machine nature, but at least the Titans gave him a place in the world. It was with the Titans that Vic met his best-friend, Garfield Logan (Beast Boy/Changeling), a young man who like Vic had been transformed into a superhuman/freak by scientist-parents who were just trying to save his life (New Teen Titans 1#, Nov 1980, DC Special Cyborg #1, July 2008).
Victor Stone’s life has been a struggle to retain that part of his humanity which still remains intact. He almost totally lost himself to the technology when he bonded with an alien race called the Technis and unwittingly became a threat to the Earth. The Justice League thought that the Technis/Cyborg union was an enemy and the Titans had to fight their mentors to save their friend (JLA/Titans #1-3, Dec-Feb 1998-99). Nightwing and his friends were able to move Victor’s conciousness into a new hybrid biological/living-metal body. This new body allowed his to appear human again, but a fight with the Thinker’s digital intelligence caused the alien metal to spontaneously downgrade into a configuration that exactly matched his original cybernetic body.

The Justice League had insisted Cyborg stay with the Titans as a condition of his freedom after the Technis affair, but he came into conflict with them again after the death of Donna Troy. A new Teen Titans were formed with Cyborg, Starfire, and Beast Boy as mentors to the former-Young Justice. Some of the Leaguers were initially distrustful of their pupils joining the Titans, but Stone managed to allay their fears (Teen Titans #6, Feb 2004). He appeared to find a new purpose as their leader and the heart of the new group. He also seemed to find a peace with his own cybernetic nature. Few saw his workshop beneath Titans Tower where he allowed himself to be completely disassembled each night by machines that preformed a constant cycle of maintenance and upgrades. Vic had inherited his father’s gift for cybernetics and had made himself completely responsible for his own body so that he was not reliant on STAR Labs or other facilities for his routine “health” (Teen Titans #9, May 2004).
During the Infinite Crisis Cyborg accompanied the recently resurrected Donna Troy in her investigation of the spatial rift that had opened in deep space. However, there was an accident when the survivors tried to teleport away from the collapsing rift. Unlike Starfire, Cyborg actually made it to Earth, but his body somehow became fused with Firestorm’s body on a molecular level. Doctor Mid-Nite of the JSA was able to keep them both stable until they could be separated (52 Week #5, 7 June 2006). Firestorm survived their merging relatively unscathed (52 Week #24 18 Oct 2006), but Cyborg wasn’t so lucky. He was heavily damaged and appeared inoperable. Deshaun, the fiancée of Vic’s old girlfriend Sarah Charles, studied Vic’s condition, but he was unable to reassemble him (DC Special Cyborg #1-6, July-Dec 2008).
Without a senior Titan to lead them the Teen Titans floundered amid an ever-expanding roster of neophyte or untested teen heroes. After Deshaun’s failure to repair Cyborg, Beast Boy had recruited the twin geniuses Marvin and Wendy Harris. It took them six months to repair his cybernetics sufficiently for his core systems to reboot. Many of the Titans found it comforting to talk or bound idea off of the unconscious Cyborg in much in the same way that people talk to coma patients. Cyborg wasn’t conscious of this, but enough of his circuitry was online for it to record everything they said to him. When he finally awoke Vic was saddened and shocked at the state of the Teen Titans and he immediately re-recruited former members Wonder Girl and Beast Boy (Teen Titans #34-37, May-Aug 2006).
With the Teen Titans becoming more self-reliant on the West Coast, Vic decided he should try recreating their success with an East Coast team. None of the other senior Titans were available, so he put together his own group including the latest Hawk and Dove, Anima, Little Barda, Son of Vulcan, Lagoon Boy, and Power Boy. The new group appeared to have potential, but they were ambushed during an early training session by three Trigon Seeds (Raven’s siblings) who were looking to kill as many former Titans as possible. Power Boy was killed and Cyborg was left as an immobile torso (Titans East Special #1, Jan 2008). Nevertheless, the attacks did prompt a reformation of the original Titans as a group (Titans #1-4, June-Sept 2008).
An individual matching Cyborg’s description was reported to have attacked several STAR Labs facilities. Upon investigating Vic discovered that a former friend had been turned into a military-grade duplicate of himself. Vic, the Titans, and Teen Titans stopped his rampage, but they discovered a conspiracy coordinated by the intelligence broker “Mr Orr” to turn injured soldiers into cybernetic super -oldiers using technology stolen by Deshaun. Vic wasn’t against helping injured soldiers to walk again, but he was horrified to see his father’s technology perverted into a lethal weapon. Even Orr’s Cyborg Revenge Squad couldn’t stop Cyborg reasserting control of his family’s intellectual property (DC Special Cyborg #1-6, July-Dec 2008).

Joey Wilson, the body hoping son of Slade Wilson (the Terminator), had once been a Titan, but the strain of jumping through so many people’s minds had sent him insane. He had tried to assassinate several presidential candidates and to kill his team-mates, before the JLA and Titans defeated him. However, Joey had hidden himself deep in Vic mind. He used Cyborg’s electronic interfaces with Titans Tower to spy on the new Teen Titans team and then attempted to kill them before he was again defeated (Titans #11, Teen Titans #69, Teen Titans Annual #1). The Titans knew that a psychopathic killer called Vigilante was after Joey, whom they still hoped to save, so they staged a battle with Cyborg making it look like he was still possessed. Vigilante show up and blew the machine part of Vic’s head off. Cyborg remained unconscious while the Titans and Vigilante clashed with Joey’s latest attempt to kill them (“Deathtrap”).
Afterwards Vic undertook an intensive routine of upgrade and maintenance on all the Titans and Teen Titans systems until Beast Boy pulled him away to spend some time in the daylight. He’d been punishing himself for the death of Power Boy and was afraid that the Titans, his family as he saw them, was drifting apart again. Beast Boy and Saran Simms pushed Vic to start dating again and recommended an online dating service. After several anti-technology encounters with a couple of friends and former friends, he finally decided to leave the technology side behind and accepted a blind date with a scientist called Dr Tamara Belson (Titans #14, Aug 09).

Vic had been the one who has pressed for the Titans reformation – something the others resisted until the attack on Vic’s Teen Titans East. However, they had all slowly begun drifting into other lives or roles leaving Vic and Starfire to hold the fort at the Titans Compound in New York. An attack by Phobia forced Vic and Kory to re-evaluate their own insecurities, for Vic it was the fear of loosing his team-mates (Titans #21-22, Mar-April 2010).
Why does Cyborg deserve to be in the Justice League? Because Vic would already be in the Justice League if Superman and co. were in charge. His name was first put forward by the trinity in the “Tornado’s Path” story arc and he was universally agreed upon as a good candidate. Batman noted that Dick Grayson had told him Cyborg was ready to join the League and would definitely say yes if asked. As fate would have it Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman didn’t get to determine the roster of the new League so Cyborg wasn’t asked at that stage.
Cyborg is the standard bearer of the Wolfman/Perez New Titans as an independent group. He was the leader of Geoff Johns’ Teen Titans and was responsible for bringing the New Titans back together. If he is joining the Justice League is a definite signal that the New Titans do not exist as a group any more.



















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