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Pathfinder — first appearance cover
DynamiteMaleGod/Eternal

Pathfinder

First Appearance

Suicide Squad #64 (1992)

Powers & Abilities

Phasing / GhostUnarmed CombatTrackingMarksmanship

Teams

Suicide Squad

About Pathfinder

Pathfinder is one of the more enigmatic figures to emerge from the gritty, morally complex world of Dynamite's Suicide Squad mythos. A being of divine or eternal origin, Pathfinder operates with a sense of purpose that sets him apart from the career criminals and enhanced soldiers who typically fill the Squad's ranks. His exact background and true name remain shrouded in mystery, a deliberate creative choice that adds to his unsettling presence on the team. What is known is that he possesses abilities that blur the line between the physical and the spiritual, making him a uniquely dangerous operative in the field.

Pathfinder's power set is a striking combination of the supernatural and the tactical. His phasing ability — the capacity to move through solid matter like a ghost — gives him unparalleled infiltration capabilities, while his skills in unarmed combat, tracking, and marksmanship make him a formidable threat once a target is located. This blend of otherworldly power and disciplined martial training suggests a history far longer and stranger than any ordinary soldier's, hinting at the kind of eternal, god-touched backstory that makes characters like him so compelling in team books built around expendable assets.

Pathfinder made his first appearance in Suicide Squad #64, published in 1992. Debuting in the final stretch of the original celebrated run of the series, his introduction came during a period when the book was pushing its creative boundaries and expanding its roster with unconventional characters. For collectors, Suicide Squad #64 represents a late-run key issue from one of DC and Dynamite's most critically respected team titles, a book that has seen renewed collector interest thanks to media adaptations and ongoing appreciation for its dark, boundary-pushing storytelling.

For collectors with an eye for undervalued keys, Pathfinder's first appearance is precisely the kind of issue worth tracking down. Late-run keys from landmark series are frequently overlooked in favor of earlier issues, but as character rosters get explored more deeply by fans and media, these appearances become increasingly significant. A mysterious god-tier powerhouse with phasing abilities and a blank-slate origin is exactly the type of character ripe for rediscovery, and Suicide Squad #64 is the place to start building a Pathfinder collection before the broader hobby catches on.

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