How Doctor Fate’s Strange Half-Helmet Was Explained Decades After the Fact

“Provide Some Answers,” is a feature spotlighting when long unresolved plot points are eventually resolved. Today, we look at how Doctor Fate’s strange half-helmet was explained away decades later. Generally speaking, you all know what this feature is about. They are stories that were left unresolved for a long time, and then eventually a later writer, well, you know, resolved them. However, there are also occasionally examples of stories that weren’t necessarily unresolved, per se, but rather unexplained. You know, just a weird plot point that wasn’t explained for years (a good example would be how Wolverine changed his mask in Giant-Size X-Men #1 due to Gil Kane deciding to add a cowl to his mask. It was purely an artistic decision, but decades later, Roy Thomas explained away the mask change in an issue of X-Men: Legends).In March 1940, Gardner Fox and Howard Sherman introduced Doctor Fate in the pages of More Fun Comics #55. This was very early in the Golden Age of superheroes, and superheroes very often were introduced to features just sort of in media res, as Doctor Fate is already an established superhero with a love interest who needs saving and everything. However, one thing that is clear about Doctor Fate is that he DID have magical powers…

“Provide Some Answers,” is a feature spotlighting when long unresolved plot points are eventually resolved. Today, we look at how Doctor Fate’s strange half-helmet was explained away decades later.

Generally speaking, you all know what this feature is about. They are stories that were left unresolved for a long time, and then eventually a later writer, well, you know, resolved them. However, there are also occasionally examples of stories that weren’t necessarily unresolved, per se, but rather unexplained. You know, just a weird plot point that wasn’t explained for years (a good example would be how Wolverine changed his mask in Giant-Size X-Men #1 due to Gil Kane deciding to add a cowl to his mask. It was purely an artistic decision, but decades later, Roy Thomas explained away the mask change in an issue of X-Men: Legends).

In March 1940, Gardner Fox and Howard Sherman introduced Doctor Fate in the pages of More Fun Comics #55. This was very early in the Golden Age of superheroes, and superheroes very often were introduced to features just sort of in media res, as Doctor Fate is already an established superhero with a love interest who needs saving and everything. However, one thing that is clear about Doctor Fate is that he DID have magical powers…

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