Because there cannot be more than one joker in his own narcissistic mind. And he realized he would not be the greatest joker because of you know who, that's why he killed himself, I thought it was blatantly obvious. +1. He found the best Joker replacement, , so the rest substitutes are no longer needed. #6.
Created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane, the character first appeared in Detective Comics #33 (November 1939). [1] In Batman's origin story, Joe Chill is the mugger who murders young Bruce Wayne's parents, Dr. Thomas Wayne and Martha Wayne. The murder traumatizes Bruce, inspiring his vow to avenge their deaths by fighting crime in Gotham City as
As of current canon, yes. Some time after his parents murder. Generally not overt attempts, but you can certainly read his obsessive vigilante crusade against crime, insisting on taking on all the crime in Gotham by himself, etc, as in part reflecting at least a subconscious death wish.
There would be no point. They would only do it to get to him. A lot of villains would be trying to go to people bruce loved to make him feel pain, but if he's not alive there's no point in doing that anymore, it's not really revenge because you're not taking anyone away from bruce you're just killing an innocent person bruce knew for no reason
12 Mikhail. The death of Mikhail was a swift one as Batman kicked him and broke his neck while swinging past the window he was from. The confrontation in Detective Comics #30 looks like it could have taken place in the Batman television show. Instead of the villain being unconscious, he is killed by the injuries he sustains.
This shows a rather dark path in Batman's logic; he won't harm genocidal maniacs like Joker but is perfectly fine with "killing himself." While Batman has expressed self-destructive tendencies before (such as when he gave up the entire idea of Bruce Wayne during the Bruce Wayne: Fugitive arc by Ed Brubaker and Scott McDaniel), none of those tendencies are quite as dark as threatening to kill
Ra's sought to kill most of the world's population in order to prevent ecological catastrophes. He eventually made his way to Gotham because he saw the extreme levels of crime as hazardous but also because of the area's resources for Lazarus Pits. But when he saw the origins of Batman's career, Ra's considered him as a potential ally in his
"Though Crane had no-one to blame but himself for being careless enough to venture into Killer Croc's Lair, he blamed Batman for his injury, even though Batman's intervention is what kept him from being killed.
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did batman kill himself in arkham knight