
Trigon
Trigon
First Appearance
The New Teen Titans #2 (1980)
Powers & Abilities
Teams
Also Known As
Trigon, Trigon the Terrible, Trigon the Ravager, Skath, Ddrez, Lucifer, Satan, The Devil, Lord Trigon, Master Trigon, King Trigon, Conqueror of Worlds, Ruler of the Five Under Realms
About Trigon
Trigon stands as one of DC Comics' most terrifying cosmic villains — an interdimensional conqueror of near-limitless power whose very existence reshapes the universe around him. Born from the concentrated evil of an entire corrupt dimension, Trigon grew from an infant harbinger of destruction into a god-like entity capable of enslaving entire galaxies. His arsenal of abilities is staggering, encompassing reality manipulation, soul absorption, dimensional control, and hellfire mastery, making him a legitimate threat not just to Earth but to existence itself. His first appearance in The New Teen Titans #2 (December 1980), written by Marv Wolfman with art by George Pérez, is a landmark collector issue — the introduction of a villain who would define the Teen Titans mythos for decades and push Raven, his own daughter, to the very center of one of comics' most emotionally charged ongoing conflicts.
Trigon's most celebrated story arc remains "The Terror of Trigon," which unfolded across The New Teen Titans (Volume 2) #1–5 in 1984. This landmark storyline saw Trigon finally claim Earth as his own, transforming the planet into a hellscape and turning the Titans themselves against each other. The arc cemented Trigon's status as more than just a powerful villain — he became a symbol of inherited evil, a force that Raven must perpetually resist within herself. Wolfman and Pérez delivered some of their most visually stunning and emotionally devastating work across those issues, and copies in high grade remain prized by serious Teen Titans collectors. His connections to the Church of Blood, the Triumvirate of Hell, and the Council of Eternity also weave him into broader DC cosmic mythology in ways that reward deep-dive collecting.
Beyond his classic appearances, Trigon has resurfaced across multiple eras of DC storytelling — haunting the pages of Teen Titans titles in the 2000s and 2010s, menacing new generations of heroes, and spawning a line of demonic sons who carry on his campaign of conquest. His aliases across cultures and dimensions — Lucifer, Satan, Skath, Ddrez — speak to a character designed to embody absolute, universal evil, a conceptual heaviness that writers continue to mine for high-stakes drama. His presence in animated adaptations, particularly the beloved Teen Titans animated series, has also introduced him to a generation of fans who then discover the original source material, consistently driving renewed interest in back issues.
For collectors, Trigon-related keys are a compelling target. The New Teen Titans #2 is a must-have for any Bronze Age DC collection, and the early Pérez-era issues represent some of the finest craftsmanship of that generation of comics. "The Terror of Trigon" arc in Volume 2 offers gorgeous prestige-format storytelling at an accessible price point compared to its cultural significance. Whether you are building a complete Teen Titans run, chasing high-grade Bronze Age keys, or hunting down one of DC's most visually iconic villains, Trigon's bibliography offers deep, rewarding collecting territory that spans four decades of comics history.










