Rocksteady Studios, the team behind the seminal Batman: Arkham series, is currently in the process of developing a new action-adventure game in Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League. It was announced at DC Fandome 2020, but got pushed from the initial 2022 release window to spring 2023, which means fans are likely feeling the long wait since Rocksteady's last title, Batman: Arkham VR from 2016. In the meantime, DC Comics fans can expect WB Games Montreal's Gotham Knights this October.
Still, the upcoming Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League is garnering all kinds of attention for its Sunset Overdrive-esque trailers, attention to detail, and characters matching their comic counterparts. Many are excited to get the chance to play as villains and anti-heroes alike as they take on the Brainiac-controlled Justice League members with Harley Quinn, Deadshot, Captain Boomerang, and King Shark. Hopefully, King Shark's raw power will be embraced by Rocksteady.
Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League’s Movement Fixes One of Marvel’s Avengers' Biggest Problem
King Shark, also known as Nanaue, is an aquatic demigod who first appeared in 1994's Superboy (Volume 4) as a villain. In most storylines, he's the son of Kano, a Hawaiian shark deity, although in the Arrowverse canon he was a meta-human born from government experimentation. Before joining Task Force X, King Shark acted as a serial killer off the coast of Honolulu, where he devoured humans.
Large parts of King Shark's personality seem to change across different comics and mediums, as he can be extremely ferocious, a pacifist computer lover in the Harley Quinn TV series, or a simple meathead as seen in James Gunn's The Suicide Squad.
Regardless of his personality or origins, King
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