comicbooks.com Join Free
Home › Dick Grayson
Dick Grayson
Dick GraysonDick Grayson

Dick Grayson

1,811 appearances · Golden Age · 1940–2026 · 71 key issues
Who is Dick Grayson?

Orphaned when his circus-acrobat parents were murdered by gangster Boss Zucco, young Dick Grayson was taken in by Bruce Wayne and trained to become Batman's partner Robin — channeling his grief, natural athleticism, and acrobatic brilliance into a crimefighting career.

Few characters in comics history carry the weight of legacy quite like Dick Grayson — a Golden Age original who first swung onto the page in Batman #1 back in 1940, brought to life by George Shute and Raymond Perry at the very dawn of DC's heroic mythology. Over an extraordinary 86-year publishing span, he has accumulated 1,803 catalogued appearances and an impressive 71 key issues, a testament to just how central he remains to the DC universe across every era. His name graces the title of Nightwing while also anchoring landmark runs in Detective Comics and Batman, and the company he keeps — sharing pages with Batman, Bruce Wayne, Superman, and other titans of the DC pantheon — tells you everything about his place at the heart of the line. If you're building a serious DC collection, Dick Grayson isn't a footnote; he's a cornerstone.

Identity

Real name. Richard "Dick" Grayson

Powers. No metahuman powers; peak-human acrobat/gymnast, expert hand-to-hand combatant and martial artist, detective skills, trained by Batman

Affiliations. Batman Family, Teen Titans (founder), Justice League, Outsiders, Spyral (as Agent 37)

★ First appearance
Detective Comics #38
Apr 1940

Part of the Robin legacy

Dick Grayson is one of 5 heroes to carry the Robin mantle. See the whole Robin family ▸

Trivia

  • Dick Grayson's tenure as Robin was the foundation that transformed the identity into a legacy mantle, proving the role could be passed down to multiple characters rather than belonging permanently to a single sidekick.en.wikipedia.org
  • Marv Wolfman has written more of Dick Grayson's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 97 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years — 1940–2020

Superman #7 1940
Superman #7
Star Spangled Comics #69 1947
Star Spangled Comics #69
Batman #81 1954
Batman #81
The Flash #123 1961
The Flash #123
Detective Comics #338 1965
Detective Comics #338
Batman #232 1971
Batman #232
Showcase #94 1977
Showcase #94
The New Teen Titans #33 1983
The New Teen Titans #33
Hawkworld Annual #1 1990
Hawkworld Annual #1
The Spectre #62 1998
The Spectre #62
Teen Titans #21 2005
Teen Titans #21
Nightwing #2 2011
Nightwing #2
Batman #17 2017
Batman #17
Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Teen Titans: The Judas Contract #1 2020
Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Teen Titans: The Judas Contract #1

Appearances (301–450 of 1,811, oldest first)

Detective Comics (1937)
Teen Titans (1966)
Creepy (1964)
#18
Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane (1958)
Smash! (1966)
The Brave and the Bold (1955)
Superman Supacomic (1959)
World's Finest Comics (1941)
Leave It to Binky (1948)
Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen (1954)
Blackhawk (1957)
Archie's Madhouse (1959)
#64
Life with Archie (1958)
#78
Laugh Comics / Laugh (1946)
Date with Debbi (1969)
#1
Binky's Buddies (1969)
The Phantom Stranger (1969)
#2
The Steranko History of Comics (1970)
#1
Batman Bumper Book (1979)
Binky (1970)
#72
DC 100-Page Super Spectacular (1971)
#6
Wanted. The World's Most Dangerous Villains (1972)
Giant Batman Album (1962)
Justice League of America (1960)
The Shadow (1973)
Weird Mystery Tales (1972)
#12
Secret Origins (1973)
#7
Giant Superman Album (1975)
Richard Dragon, Kung-Fu Fighter (1975)
#1
The Sandman (1974)
#2