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Larfleeze — first appearance cover
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Larfleeze

Larfleeze

First Appearance

Green Lantern #25 (2008)

Powers & Abilities

FlightSuper StrengthSuper SpeedAgilityStaminaInvulnerabilityForce FieldBlast PowerFire ControlFeralInsanely RichUnarmed CombatGadgetsDivine PowersImmortalElectricity ControlAdaptiveEnergy-Enhanced StrikeLight ProjectionOmni-lingualEnergy ShieldPower ItemClawsEnergy AbsorptionEnergy ManipulationWillpower-Based ConstructsEnergy Based ConstructsStealth

Teams

New GuardiansOrange Lantern CorpsSh'pilkuzzians

Also Known As

Agent Orange, Agent Blue, Larfleeze of Ogatoo, Orange Lantern, Gonzo, Larf, Glutton, The One-Man Corps, The Beast of Okaara

About Larfleeze

Larfleeze, also known as Agent Orange, is one of the most gloriously unhinged characters in the DC Universe — an ancient alien creature whose all-consuming greed made him the sole wielder of the Orange Light of Avarice. Unlike every other Lantern Corps in existence, Larfleeze does not share his power ring or his light with anyone. He IS the Orange Lantern Corps, commanding an army of constructs formed from the identities of beings he has personally destroyed. His first appearance in Green Lantern #25 (2008), as part of the landmark "Secret Origin" era leading into the Blackest Night event, is a key modern age collectible — a debut that immediately signaled this character was something truly different in Geoff Johns' expanding Lantern mythology.

Larfleeze's backstory stretches back billions of years to a deal struck with the Guardians of the Universe, one that kept him hidden away in the Vega system in exchange for burying a powerful weapon. That uneasy truce gets shattered during the "Agent Orange" arc in Green Lantern #39-42 (2009), widely considered his true breakout showcase. Watching Larfleeze dismantle an entire Green Lantern strike force while screaming about what belongs to him is equal parts horrifying and hilarious — and those issues remain highly sought after. His role escalated further during Blackest Night and Brightest Day, where he tangled with the Guardians, Hal Jordan, and eventually even the Entity itself.

What makes Larfleeze such a collector magnet beyond his raw power is the tragicomic dimension Johns layered into him. Beneath the feral hunger and galaxy-sized ego is a creature who has been utterly alone for millennia, hoarding possessions because genuine connection was stolen from him long ago. That duality carried into his own solo series, Larfleeze (2013-2014), written by Keith Giffen and J.M. DeMatteis, which leaned into absurdist comedy while still honoring the character's surprisingly dark origins. He also featured prominently in Green Lantern: New Guardians, where his reluctant membership in a ragtag Lantern team produced some of the run's most entertaining moments.

For collectors, Larfleeze represents a genuinely rare achievement in modern comics — a brand new character introduced in the late 2000s who immediately achieved iconic status and sustained a solo title. Green Lantern #25 and the Agent Orange arc issues are smart pickups in high grade, and his appearances throughout the Blackest Night event books add essential context to any serious Green Lantern collection. As DC continues revisiting the emotional spectrum mythology, Larfleeze's back catalog only becomes more relevant — and more desirable.

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