![]() ![]() Labs’s meta-human prison on the CW’s The Flash. There’s no Arkham Asylum in Angel Grove, and nothing resembling the S.T.A.R. Except in 2001’s police-themed Power Rangers Time Force and 2005’s Power Ranger SPD, the Rangers do not have any formal judicial system or even a high-tech confinement facility to humanely jail their enemies. Armed to the teeth with weapons, blasters, and colossal robots called Zords - which can combine into an even bigger robot, the Megazord - it is debatable that the Power Rangers are less superheroes and more exterminators who act as judge, jury, and executioner for their arch-nemesis’s minions.Īnd it’s happened throughout nearly 25 years and 800 episodes of television. ![]() Saban’s Power Rangers franchise is engineered for children, but one of the oddest aspects to its mythos is that the heroic Power Rangers kill their enemies. There’s a possible snag, though: While the Justice League lives up to its name, the Power Rangers take a more permanent approach to vanquishing their enemies. Justice League/Mighty Morphin Power Rangers is written by Tom Taylor, and the sole cover art released thus far is as bright as Saturday morning TV. The dream crossover of ‘90s-obsessed millennials will take place next January, when the Justice League of DC meets the original Mighty Morphin Power Rangers in a limited series from DC Comics and BOOM! Studios. ![]()
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