Young Justice Wiki

Fury is a member of Infinity, Inc.

Physical appearance[]

History[]

Early life[]

At some point, Rosa transitioned gender.[4][5][6]

2019[]

Fury became a member of Infinity, Inc.[2] A control chip was used on her.[7]

 
Los Angeles
January 22, 02:24 PST

Fury stood next to her teammates as Trajectory answered Courtney Whitmore's questions.[2]

 
Manhattan
January 26, 09:57 EST

In an effort to boost Infinity Inc.'s popularity, Lex Luthor arranged for a fight against a mind-controlled Killer Frost. After a quick victory, Fury and her teammates met with Lex inside his limo for a debrief.[3]

 
Markovburg
February 27, 15:09 EET

Infinity, Inc. was brought to Markovia to act as agents of the new King, Brion Markov.[8]

Under the rebranded Infinitors, a control chip was no longer used.[7]

2020[]

 
Markovburg
September 09, 21:21 EEST

Fury and the Infinitors defended Lizard Johnny after he came under attack by anti-meta thugs. Though Johnny was saved, Brion was angry that the mob's leader, Wilhelm Vittings, escaped, unaware it was in fact a disguised Everyman. Zviad Baazovi arrived and calmed Brion, which Fury watched with concern.[7]

 
Markovburg
September 10, 02:48 EEST

The Infinitors returned to the Royal Palace with Johnny. Fury watched silently as Zviad ushered Johnny away, seemingly stoking the boy's anger, and then intervened in a discussion between Brion and Minister Josef Mueller, quickly changing both men's minds on concerns about the new meta-human visa policy.

Later, Brion and Fury went to the Markov Family Meta-Human Youth Center, where they found Johnny. Johnny told Brion he wanted to become an Infinitor, leaving Brion confused given Johnny earlier told him he didn't want to fight. Zviad arrived, eager to discuss matters with Brion. He sent Fury away to join a mission with Trajectory, but Fury checked with Brion first, who agreed with Zviad.

Fury joined Trajectory and Everyman at Minister Mueller's house. Fury was horrified as Trajectory and Everyman made veiled threats against Mueller's family to intimidate him into leaving Markovia, as he and his family were not metas. Her teammates interpreted Fury's objection as her making the ploy look good.

Later, Fury found Brion alone in the palace garden. She said he looked like he could use a friend, and admitted she could too. She told Brion she was disturbed by some of what was going on with the Infinitors and Baazovi. Brion asked to hear more.[7]

 
Markovburg
November 10, post-04:08 EET

At the Royal Palace, Geo-Force and the Infinitors prepared to act on Fury's intel on Count Vertigo's whereabouts, hoping to capture the escaped Count and rescue the kidnapped Perdita Vladek.

They went to some woodland cabins where the armored attackers that freed Vertigo and took Perdita were spotted, but it was a trap, and they all came under attack. During the battle, Trajectory "found" what appeared to be Perdita, and Brion took her back to the Palace. After Trajectory left to help Everyman, the attackers fled, to Fury and Kobold's confusion.[9]

 
Markovburg
November 10, post-07:56 EET

Geo-Force debriefed the rest of the Infinitors after they returned without capturing any of Perdita's abductors. Fury lamented the lack of Infinitors with the ability to fly. They checked in on "Perdita" to find she had disappeared. Brion ordered a search.[10]

Powers and abilities[]

Equipment[]

  • Gauntlet: Fury wears a golden gauntlet on her left arm.[7]
  • Motorcycle: Fury has a custom motorcycle, painted yellow to match her first costume.[7]

Appearances[]

Background information[]

  • Fury is one of the members of Lex Luthor's Infinity, Inc. Erik Storn was given razor sharp claws. After the team disbanded, the Everyman Project experimentation caused a secondary mutation: Erik could change between man and woman, though he had little control over it and it brought no additional powers. When Natasha Irons continued the team, he operated as Amazing Man/Woman, and took the name Erika when in female form.
    • Fury was originally created by Roy Thomas, Dann Thomas, and Ross Andru in 1983, but was dramatically reinvented after the Crisis on Infinite Earths (again by the Thomases) into the continuity described above. Both versions of Fury had connections to the Amazons, and the name "Fury" has been used by other Amazon heroes in the DCU.
  • This is Fury's first animated appearance.

References[]

  1. Weisman, Greg (2021-11-10). Question #25273. Ask Greg. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Fogel, Rich (writer) & Berkeley, Christopher (director) (August 13, 2019). "Antisocial Pathologies". Young Justice. Season 3. Episode 22. DC Universe.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Callan, Jonathan (writer) & Heuck, Vinton (director) (August 27, 2019). "Into the Breach". Young Justice. Season 3. Episode 24. DC Universe.
  4. Weisman, Greg (2022-06-15). Tweet. Twitter. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  5. Coffin, Chip (2022-06-15). Tweet. Twitter. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  6. Coffin, Chip (2022-06-15). Tweet. Twitter. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 Vogel, Michael (writer) & Heuck, Vinton (director) (May 19, 2022). "Ego and Superego". Young Justice. Season 4. Episode 23. HBO Max.
  8. Krieg, Jim, Adams, Jeremy (writers) & Zwyer, Mel (director) (August 27, 2019). "Nevermore". Young Justice. Season 3. Episode 26. DC Universe.
  9. Weisman, Greg (w). Jones, Christopher (a). Wright, Jason (col). Abbott, Wes (let). Meares, Ben, Kubert, Katie (ed). "Ominous Tidings" Young Justice: Targets (July 12, 2022), DC Universe Infinite: DC Comics
  10. Weisman, Greg (w). Jones, Christopher (a). Wright, Jason (col). Abbott, Wes (let). Meares, Ben, Kubert, Katie (ed). "Evocative Intel" Young Justice: Targets (August 9, 2022), DC Universe Infinite: DC Comics