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Miss Martian — first appearance cover
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Miss Martian

M'gann M'orzz

First Appearance

Teen Titans #37 (2006)

Powers & Abilities

FlightSuper StrengthSuper SpeedAgilityStaminaInvulnerabilityTelepathyTelekinesisPsychicForce FieldBlast PowerHealingSuper SightSuper HearingInvisibilityPhasing / GhostChameleonShape ShifterPsionicElasticityUnarmed CombatSize ManipulationAstral ProjectionPossessionLevitationEmpathyIllusion CastingHeat VisionDensity ControlMarksmanshipClawsHypnosis

Teams

Justice League of AmericaJustice League UnlimitedLittle Tiny TitansTeen TitansThe TitansTiny TitansTitans ArmyTitans of TomorrowWhite MartiansYoung Justice

Also Known As

M'gann M'orzz, Megan Morse, Martian Manhunter, Star-Spangled Kid

About Miss Martian

Miss Martian, whose true name is M'gann M'orzz, made her landmark debut in Teen Titans #37 (2006), a first appearance that collectors have steadily recognized as one of the more significant Bronze-to-Modern era introductions in DC's teen hero lineup. Created during a period when the Teen Titans title was firing on all cylinders, M'gann arrived with a deceptively cheerful exterior — a young Martian girl presenting herself as the niece of the legendary Martian Manhunter — but writers quickly layered her with a far darker secret. Beneath her bright, optimistic persona lurked a White Martian heritage she desperately tried to conceal, setting the stage for years of compelling internal conflict that elevated her above the typical sidekick archetype.

M'gann's power set is nothing short of staggering, rivaling some of DC's heaviest hitters. She commands telepathy, shape-shifting, flight, super strength, invisibility, phasing, telekinesis, and density control, among dozens of other abilities. What makes her truly dangerous — and fascinating to readers — is her telepathic potential, which has occasionally been shown to reach catastrophic levels. Story arcs within the Teen Titans and later the relaunched Young Justice title explored what happens when a telepath with identity issues and immense raw power stops holding back, and the results were some of the most emotionally charged superhero storytelling DC published in the era.

Her role in the Young Justice animated series introduced M'gann to an enormous new generation of fans, which in turn drove renewed collector interest back to her print origins. Issues surrounding her first appearance, early Teen Titans appearances, and her prominent role in the New 52 and Rebirth-era Titans books all saw noticeable bumps in demand as her cultural footprint expanded beyond the comics page. The character's ongoing appearances in team books like the Justice League of America and the Titans further cemented her staying power across multiple corners of the DC universe.

For collectors, Teen Titans #37 remains the key book — a first appearance with a print run modest enough to make high-grade copies genuinely competitive. Beyond that cornerstone issue, runs of the original Teen Titans series from issues #34–#50 represent a foundational reading and collecting block, while Young Justice volumes and JLA tie-ins fill out a rewarding collection. Miss Martian is the kind of character whose back issues tend to be undervalued relative to her narrative importance, making now an excellent time to track down key issues before the market catches up.

Comics Featuring Miss Martian

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