Generated by GPT-5-mini| Intergang | |
|---|---|
| Name | Intergang |
| Founded | 1950s (fictional) |
| Founder | Moxie "Boss" Mannheim (fictional) |
| Territory | Metropolis, Gotham City, Smallville (fictional) |
| Activities | Organized crime, arms trafficking, extortion, assassination |
| Allies | Apokoliptian forces (fictional), various crime families (fictional) |
| Rivals | Suicide Squad (fictional), Joker's gang (fictional), Police forces (fictional) |
Intergang Intergang is a fictional organized crime syndicate appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, notable for melding traditional criminal enterprise with science-fictional armaments supplied by Apokolips and its agents. Originating in mid-20th-century serialized comics, the organization has intersected with characters and settings across Metropolis, Gotham City, and other locales, engaging heroes including Superman, Batman, and The Flash. Intergang's portrayals bridge noir gangster tropes and cosmic supervillainy through alliances with figures such as Darkseid, Morgan Edge, and multiple incarnations of Boss Moxie Mannheim.
Intergang first emerged during the Silver Age of comics amid storylines involving organized crime families confronting Superman and Lois Lane. Early arcs positioned the syndicate as a powerful consortium of crime bosses operating in Metropolis with ties to media magnates like Morgan Edge and publishing conglomerates such as Galaxy Broadcasting Company. Throughout the Bronze Age and Modern Age, writers reimagined Intergang's history to incorporate extraterrestrial influences, linking arms shipments and technology to Apokolips envoys and the New Gods mythos created by Jack Kirby. Major revamps during Crisis on Infinite Earths and Infinite Crisis integrated Intergang into broader continuity shifts, placing it at the nexus of plots involving Lex Luthor, Darkseid, and the Justice League. In subsequent decades, Intergang has been depicted in story arcs tied to Superman: For Tomorrow, Final Crisis, and New 52 relaunches, reflecting evolving editorial directions and crossovers with teams such as the Suicide Squad.
Intergang's hierarchy blends archetypal mob structures with paramilitary command elements. Leadership figures include variations of Bosses like the Moxie Mannheim line and corporate fronts represented by executives such as Morgan Edge in some continuities. Command roles often mirror crime-family titles—capos, underbosses, enforcers—while also featuring Apokoliptian liaisons and scientifically trained operatives. Organizational cells have been established in Metropolis, Gotham City, Smallville, and international nodes touching Gotham City Police Department territories and black-market hubs like Gotham Port and fictionalized equivalents. Notable internal factions arise around loyalty to supernatural patrons (e.g., agents of Darkseid) versus pragmatic criminal entrepreneurs tied to publishing and media conglomerates like Galaxy Broadcasting Company.
Intergang's criminal portfolio encompasses extortion, narcotics trafficking, arms dealing, assassination, racketeering, and high-tech smuggling. Unlike traditional syndicates, Intergang frequently deploys advanced weaponry and devices sourced from Apokolips, including Boom Tube-related technologies, Paradooms, and energy weapons that challenge conventional law enforcement responses. Arms transactions have entangled characters such as LuthorCorp clients and black-market warlords, drawing intervention from heroes including Superman and The Flash when mass-casualty threats arise. Financial operations have exploited corporate shields like Galaxy Broadcasting Company and media influence via figures connected to Morgan Edge, facilitating money laundering through legitimate enterprises and manipulation of public institutions such as the Daily Planet and regional broadcasters.
Intergang's membership roster across continuities is extensive. Recurring figures include crime bosses associated with the Mannheim family, corporate collaborators like Morgan Edge, and scientific assets imported by Apokolips agents. Allied operatives have ranged from cartel-style lieutenants to superpowered mercenaries recruited from criminal underworlds depicted in titles featuring Catwoman, Green Arrow, and Black Canary. Affiliations also extend to extraterrestrial contacts linked to Darkseid and the New Gods, with intermediaries such as Mister Miracle antagonists and Apokoliptian lieutenants appearing in crossover arcs. In various narratives, Intergang has employed notable villains and silhouettes from broader DC villainy, forging temporary alliances with groups like the Secret Society of Super Villains and interacting with antihero teams like the Suicide Squad.
Intergang has been central to numerous major DC storylines. Early conflicts involved turf wars in Metropolis and confrontations with Superman investigators at the Daily Planet. The organization's Apokoliptian ties were pivotal in arcs that escalated to cosmic stakes during Final Crisis and post-Crisis sagas, where Intergang served as a terrestrial proxy for Darkseid's agenda. Storylines such as those in Superman: For Tomorrow and Action Comics explored Intergang's infiltration of corporate media and technology pipelines, prompting responses from teams like the Justice League of America and solo operatives including Batman and Supergirl. Crossovers with event series like Infinite Crisis and societal threats involving Lex Luthor have repeatedly depicted Intergang as both instigator and facilitator of broader conspiracies.
Intergang has appeared in animated and live-action adaptations, reflecting shifts in tone across franchises. The organization and its members have been featured in animated series associated with DC Animated Universe entries and later DC Universe Animated Original Movies, encountering iterations of Superman, Batman, and ensemble casts from Justice League. Live-action portrayals include appearances in series connected to the Arrowverse and streaming adaptations where Intergang operates within criminal-political landscapes depicted in shows featuring Supergirl, Batman (film series), and other DC adaptations. Video game adaptations and tie-in novels have also incorporated Intergang as antagonists in narratives alongside franchises linked to Rocksteady Studios-adjacent properties and licensed DC game releases.
Category:DC Comics criminal organizations