Supergirl’s Zoo-per Heroes: Krypto’s Big Break


By Rob Justus with Wes Abbott (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-79950-601-0 (HB) 978-1-79950-602-7 (Digital edition)

Somehow, despite her longevity, comics popularity and screen star status, Superman’s cousin Kara Zor-El has always struggled to maintain the career impetus and position she deserves. Even after a multi-season hit TV show and the (second) big screen movie currently offending incels and insecure basement dwellers everywhere, the Girl of Steel has devotees but not a perceptible global presence like her cousin Kal, Wonder Woman, Batman, The Hulk or Spider-Man.

To be scrupulously fair, the same argument applies to Harley Quinn, Black Canary, Batgirl, She-Hulk, Scarlet Witch and even The Black Widow. I think I sense a pattern…

However, one arena where girls loudly and proudly dominate is the Young Adult graphic novel marketplace. DC alone has multiple marvellous titles starring Amazon Princesses Diana & Nubia, Catwoman, Batgirl/Oracle, Lois Lane, Harley Quinn, Zatanna, Poison Ivy, Green Lantern Jessica Cruz, Raven, Mera, and even new original characters like Primer, Starfire’s daughter Mandy (in I Am Not Starfire!), and TV Supergirl spin-off Dreamer

A far more attractive and apparently accessible option over decades has been the Kryptonian Good Boi who debuted in a Superboy yarn way back in Adventure Comics #210 (cover-dated March 1955 and on sale from January 25th), where Otto Binder, Curt Swan & Sy Barry introduced ‘The Super-Dog from Krypton!’ Although unruly, boisterous, waywardly mischievous and dangerously playful, Krypto heralded a wave of survivors from the dead world and made the (male) Kid From Krypton feel less lonely and unique. Every boy needs a dog and Krypto hung around for ever, before eventually valiantly dying as part of the Crisis on Infinite Earths event. He has returned many times in many moods ever since. The current movie franchise incarnation is – much like the debut dog – a rowdy rascal, and can be seen on screen and in this standalone tale targeting that burgeoning YA GN market that was released in February 2026…

Crafted by multi award winning – aren’t they all? – Canadian author/artist Rob Justus (Death and Sparkles, Brave Enough, Superman’s Good Guy Gang) and lettered by Wes Abbott, this first in a proposed series of shaggy doggish tales is also greatly-informed by animated TV shows like Justice League Unlimited and opens with teen hero Supergirl popping aboard the JLA’s satellite “The Watchtower” prior to a fun time with Krypto. Sadly, the Dog of Tomorrow – already in the dog house with the senior superstars for past misdemeanours – is in one of his more playful moods…

The Girl of Steel allowed him aboard on their way to the Cosmic Dog Park and he promised to be good, but it’s sooooo hard as the big wheel in the sky is packed with such intriguing smells and toys…

After another of his joyous unsupervised romps, Kara is on frantic clean up duty. That means doing the adult heroes’ laundry – again – but the problem is extremely bad this time, as first she has to find it all. Not only has Krypto snuffled, ruffled and barfed on costumes (and super sweaty super socks and …underwear!), but he then ejected the clothes out into space where they have been hyper-charged by weird space energies (cosmic rays, solar winds, atmospheric radiation, lightning and Eclipso’s magic!) genetically infusing hero DNA into the individual fabrics…

Desperately seeking to gather the gruesome grubby garments, Supergirl – with Krypto joining in the chase by following his nose – track some costumes to shabby, old-fashioned Metropolis Zoo. Here, weary, downhearted animals are being mistreated by neglectful greedy Zookeeper Cass, until, at the height of a thunderstorm, four power-packed outfits land on them and duplicate in them very specific superpower sets….

At exactly the wrong moment the boosted beasts – the fastest sloth alive, Wonder seal, Super lion and the Bat rhino – bust out, just as Krypto arrives demanding the cosmic clothing back. He is happy to fight everyone to retrieve them, but, after bonding over garbage they all team up instead, which is good as Supergirl is much less understanding – even though she thinks she can speak “animal”…

The situation utterly escalates when one last costume – Zatanna’s hat – empowers Cass with eldritch abilities and she sees her now superpowered tatty cash-cows as the way to get really rich really fast…

Then all that’s left is a full-combat trial by fire and the birth of a new team. After all, there are many more lost costumes still to find…

To Be Continued…

Not merely another child-friendly iteration of Super-Pets, Supergirl’s Zoo-per Heroes are a wild and woolly bunch of wonders you can’t afford to deny yourself and, if you have animals or kids (frequently a tricky distinction, I admit), you can even share the fun with them… but only if they’re good too…
Text and Illustrations © 2026 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved..

Today in 1958 artist Shawn McManus (Omega Men, Doctor Fate, The Sandman, Fables) was born, sharing the natal date with writer/editor Christopher Priest – née Jim Owsley – (The Falcon, Black Panther, The Ray, Conan the Barbarian, Quantum & Woody) in 1961 and True Brits Mike McKone (Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, Justice League International) in 1969 and Tony Lee (Superboy, Star Trek, Doctor Who) in 1970.

This date in 1940 Dale Messick’s landmark strip Brenda Starr, Reporter began, but also saw the loss of cartoonist Abner Dean (What Am I Doing Here?, Cave Drawings for the Future) in 1982; French creator Jacques Lob (Ténébrax, Submerman, Blanche Épiphanie, Superdupont, Le Transperceneige) in 1990 and Spanish artist Jaime Brocal Remohí (The Saint, Creepy, Eerie, Kami no Ude, El otro Necronomicón ) in 2002.

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