Originally created by writer Gardner Fox and
artist Howard Sherman, Doctor Fate first appeared in More Fun Comics #55
(May 1940). As in most cases of established superheroes of such long tenure, various
incarnations have been published with several different individuals operating in
different decades within the DC Universe as Dr. Fate. The characters
mastery of magic grants him powers such spellcasting, flight, super-strength,
invulnerability, telekinesis, telepathy, pyrokinesis, and lightning
manipulation. However Fate is unable to counteract spells that have already
been cast and are in effect. Given that the original versions origin was tied
to ancient Egypt it may come as no surprise, that Fate's magic manifests in the
shape of Egyptian symbology (such as an ankh). Doctor Fate was a founding
member of the legendary Justice Society of America in 1940.
Beyond that basic information, the published history of
disparate versions of the character are little more than a hot mess and no real
sense can be made out of that whole in any fashion worthy of discussion. DC Comics
has made numerous efforts in the last twenty years to bond the character with
an ongoing audience without giving any single version sufficient time to truly
take root with overlapping generations of fans, who still seemingly cling to or
prefer something much closer to the classic version. The concept of Doctor Fate
may have had its best chance to permanently pass the torch from Kent Nelson to
a successor in the currently on hiatus New 52 series Earth 2, where an Egyptian man
named Khalid Ben-Hassin assumed the mantle. Strangely, after their Convergence event,
DC began heavy-handedly introducing more diversity into their titles and that
being the case, it made fuck all sense that they literally dropped Egyptian Khalid
Ben-Hassin like a hot potato and began another new Doctor Fate series
by writer Paul Levitz and artist Sonny Liew, which was headlined
by an Egyptian-American med student named Khalid Nassour (yeah, that sure
makes better fucking sense, doesn’t it)?As a golden age great, Doctor Fate has the longevity and name recognition necessary to continue making appearances in DC Comics, but their overtired efforts to move the character and concept away from the iconic representation seems futile at best. They wanted diversity and had it in the form of Earth 2’s Khalid Ben-Hassin (a decent updating in my opinion), but shifting the character’s name slightly and plastering the Fate concept onto a hoodie wearing youth was a shitty idea in my estimation.