
Donna Troy
Donna Hinckley Stacey Troy
First Appearance
Wonder Woman #155 (1965)
Powers & Abilities
Teams
Also Known As
Donna Hinckley Stacey Troy, Wonder Girl, Troia, Princess of the Amazons, Princess Donna, Wonder Woman, Donna Drake, Darkstar, Donna, Drusilla, Donna Wonder, Goddess of the Moon, Moon Goddess, Fate, Deathbringer, Donald Troy
About Donna Troy
Donna Troy is one of DC Comics' most layered and enduring characters, a hero whose complex mythology has made her a cornerstone of the DC Universe for decades. She first appeared in Wonder Woman #155 in 1965, initially presented as a younger counterpart to Diana — the original Wonder Girl — before decades of storytelling gradually carved out her own rich and distinct identity. That debut issue is a key silver age collectible, representing the earliest roots of a character who would go on to define what it means to be a legacy hero in comics.
Few characters in comics have undergone as many identity evolutions as Donna Troy. From her early days as Wonder Girl with the Teen Titans to her reinvention as Troia, her time as a Darkstar, and her harrowing transformation into the Deathbringer, Donna's journey has been one of the most emotionally charged in DC history. The landmark story Who Is Donna Troy? from New Teen Titans remains one of the most celebrated single issues of the Bronze Age, a deeply personal mystery that cemented her as far more than a sidekick. Collectors prize that issue as a defining character study and a high point of writer Marv Wolfman and artist George Pérez's legendary run.
Donna's ties to cosmic and divine mythology deepened significantly through her connection to the Titans of Myth, the resurrection saga that ran through the Titans books, and her pivotal role in Countdown to Final Crisis and the Monitors' conflict. She has served on the Teen Titans, the Justice League of America, and the Justice Society, and her appearances span some of the most consequential crossover events in DC's publishing history. Her brief but powerful tenure within both the Black Lantern and White Lantern storylines during the Blackest Night era added yet another unforgettable chapter to her legacy.
For collectors, Donna Troy's books represent a remarkable intersection of silver age history, bronze age artistry, and modern cosmic drama. Her key issues are consistently in demand — from that 1965 debut to the Wolfman-Pérez Titans era to her modern reinventions — and her story arcs are essential reading for anyone serious about DC's legacy characters. Whether you're hunting her first appearance, the iconic New Teen Titans run, or her solo explorations of identity and power, Donna Troy's catalog rewards collectors with depth, rarity, and genuine emotional significance.










