DC Goes to War #[nn]
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "T.N.T. Spotlight!", Mlle. Marie becomes the unlikely key to a daring Allied raid when she’s called upon to create a diversion under fire. With Nazi commander Von Ekt hunting her every move, she uses cunning and improvisation—hiding in a rowboat, sabotaging supply lines, and turning the enemy’s own tactics against them—until a final, high-stakes challenge forces her to act.
In "Introducing -- the Haunted Tank," a lone American M3 Stuart tank known only as the Haunted Tank fights a desperate battle against a group of heavily armed German Tiger tanks in a ruined European town. Outgunned and outnumbered, the Haunted Tank’s survival hinges on more than just skill—it’s something deeper, something that makes the crew question what they’re really fighting.
In "Cold Steel for a Hot War," Captain Hunter, haunted by the disappearance of his brother, finds himself protecting a group of young refugee children after their parents are killed by Viet Cong soldiers. With no time to grieve and only his wits and resolve, he must lead them through the brutal realities of war.
In "Head-Count," Easy Company welcomes a new recruit named Johnny Doe, a fiercely driven soldier eager to prove himself by taking down Nazis—no matter the cost to the civilians caught in the crossfire. The story explores the tension between duty and morality in the heat of war, as one man’s relentless pursuit of vengeance begins to test the limits of the unit’s code.
In "Losers Die Twice!" from DC Goes to War #nn, the Losers—each haunted by personal tragedies—race to destroy a deadly rocket launcher that's pinned down Sgt. Rock and Easy Company. As they push through the chaos of war, their shared pasts surface, revealing how loss forged their bond. The story doesn’t shy from the cost of duty, delivering a poignant, relentless ride through sacrifice and brotherhood.
In "Hammer and Anvil," Sgt. Rock and Easy Company thought a brief respite was in sight—until they're thrust into the chaos of the Battle of the Bulge. As they regroup after repelling Nazi forces, new orders send them to stop a convoy of German Panzers, only to discover a deadly twist: enemies are hiding among them, disguised as American soldiers.
In "War in Heaven, Part 1," Von Hammer returns to the German Air Force not out of loyalty, but out of duty to a fallen comrade—only to find himself at odds with a fanatical subordinate. When a crash lands him behind enemy lines, the brutal reality of Nazi atrocities against Russian civilians forces him to confront the cost of his choices.
In "War in Heaven, Part 2," von Hammer, commanding a small squadron of jet fighters, faces annihilation as the war reaches its final days. After being shot down near Dachau, he witnesses the horrors of a concentration camp and insists on surrendering to the Allies—only to face resistance from his own men. When Engels attempts to stop him, Stalschmidt intervenes, arguing that even in defeat, German civilians still need protection. As the war ends, von Hammer makes the final choice to destroy his jets and surrender his unit to Easy Company.
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↩ Reprints Military Comics #1 (1941), Boy Commandos #1 (1942), All-American Comics #48 (1943), Our Army at War #67 (1958), Our Army at War #83 (1959), Our Fighting Forces #49 (1959), Star Spangled War Stories #87 (1959), G.I. Combat #87 (1961), Showcase #57 (1965), Our Fighting Forces #102 (1966), Our Army at War #233 (1971), Our Army at War #235 (1971), Weird War Tales #3 (1972), Star Spangled War Stories #183 (1974), The Losers Special #1 (1985), Sgt. Rock Special #2 (1994), Enemy Ace: War in Heaven #1 (2001), Enemy Ace: War in Heaven #2 (2001)
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