Victor Fries
Few characters carry a name as loaded with icy menace as Victor Fries — a Silver Age creation who first stepped onto the page in Detective Comics #373 in 1968, brought to life by the legendary Gardner Fox and Chic Stone. Over nearly six decades of continuous publication, this DC figure has built up 170 catalog appearances across the Bat-universe's most prestigious titles — Detective Comics, Batman, and Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight — sharing pages with the likes of Bruce Wayne, Dick Grayson, Robin, and the chilling Mr. Freeze himself. With two key issues to his name and a publishing history stretching all the way to 2026, Victor Fries is a deep-cut piece of Batman lore that rewards the curious collector willing to dig into the Silver Age foundations of one of comics' richest mythologies.
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Trivia
- Victor Fries didn't start out as Mr. Freeze — Detective Comics #373 is where the comics formally renamed him from Mr. Zero to Mr. Freeze, making that iconic identity an explicit retcon rather than anything baked into his original debut concept.batman.fandom.com
- For decades the comics gave Freeze virtually no meaningful backstory, and the tragic Victor Fries/Nora origin that casual fans treat as gospel was first popularized on Batman: The Animated Series before being folded back into DC continuity after Crisis on Infinite Earths.batman.fandom.com
- That modern sympathetic rewrite proved so compelling that DC adopted it as his official post-Crisis origin — a rare instance where an animated adaptation permanently reshaped the comics character rather than the other way around.batman.fandom.com
- Freeze's childhood habit of freezing animals, often cited in later character profiles, came from later character history rather than the original gimmick-villain version, which means his ice obsession carries a far darker and more psychologically loaded weight than many readers ever realize.batman.fandom.com