Richard Dragon
| Richard Dragon | |
|---|---|
Richard Dragon on the cover of Batgirl (vol. 6) #8 (2024). Art by
Reiko Murakami. | |
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | DC Comics |
| First appearance | Dragon's Fists novel (1974) |
| Created by | Dennis O'Neil (writer) Jim Berry (artist) |
| In-story information | |
| Alter ego | Richard Drakunovski |
| Species | Human |
| Place of origin | Detroit |
| Team affiliations | G.O.O.D. League of Assassins Federal Bureau of Investigation |
| Partnerships | Bronze Tiger Lady Shiva |
| Supporting character of | The Question |
| Notable aliases | Master of Kung-Fu The Dragon |
| Abilities | Master martial artist, skilled thief, accomplished philosopher, and proficiency in qi manipulation. |
| Altered in-story information for adaptations to other media | |
| Partnerships | Batman |
Richard Dragon (or simply Dragon) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by Dennis O'Neil and James R. Berry in the novel Kung Fu Master, Richard Dragon: Dragon's Fists (1974) under the shared pseudonym "Jim Dennis".[1] O'Neil later adapted the character for DC Comics.[2] Since the character's creation, he is credited as one of the most premier martial artists in the DC Universe.[3]
Having varied backgrounds, Richard Drakunovski was originally a foreigner thief in Kyoto raised and trained in martial arts by instructor O-Sensei and alongside long-time friend Bronze Tiger. As adults, the pair used their skills as vigilantes and special agents alongside Lady Shiva to fight for good and justice.[4] An alternate background depicts him as poor youth from Detroit whose encounter with Ben Turner allowed him to take him in as a student, becoming a master in his own right and a trainer to various heroes.[5] Recent stories takes aspects of histories, making him a hero, instructor, and having been affiliated with the League of Assassins as a benevolent figure until he is killed by one of his former students, who succeeds him and takes his name.[6][7]
Richard Dragon has been adapted in media, making his first animated appearance in Batman: Soul of the Dragon, voiced by Mark Dacascos and is visually inspired by Bruce Lee.[8][9] His successor, Richard Diaz Jr., appears in Arrow, portrayed by Kirk Acevedo.
Fictional character biography
[edit]Pre-Crisis on Infinite Earths
[edit]As a teenage sneak thief in Japan, young Richard Dragon broke into a dojo outside of Kyoto to steal a priceless jade Buddha. Before he could get away, Dragon was caught and beaten by the dojo's teenage student, Ben Turner.[2] O-Sensei, the dojo's master, saw something worth nurturing in Richard, and for the next seven years taught Ben and Richard, side by side, mastery of the martial arts. Richard came to find an inner peace, only using his skill when absolutely necessary. Once he felt there was nothing more he could teach them, the O-Sensei left the two. Turner and Dragon were recruited by Barney Ling, head of the law-keeping espionage agency known as G.O.O.D. (Global Organization of Organized Defense), to join the organization. Together Ben and Richard would defeat the corrupt businessman Guano Cravat, foiling his plans to instigate a war for his own benefit. Ben and Richard founded a martial arts dojo in Manhattan, and Richard would go on to battle international threats such as Telegram Sam, the Preying Mantis, the League of Assassins, and his former superior, Barney Ling.
Thirsty for revenge, Cravat would arrange for the murder of Carolyn Wu-San, one of O-Sensei's god-daughters. Aided by Barney Ling, Cravat tricked Carolyn's sister, Sandra Wu-San, into believing Dragon was the murderer. Consumed with a need for revenge, Sandra trained to the peak of human capability, mastering martial arts to defeat Dragon. When the two masters finally met in battle, however, Dragon was able to show Sandra that Cravat had deceived her. Without Dragon's death as a goal, Sandra no longer had a need for her martial arts mastery. Sensing she needed guidance, Dragon helped her to explore the spiritual side of martial arts. Ultimately deciding that she was Sandra no more she rechristened herself "Shiva". She fought crime with Dragon and Ben Turner until the three parted ways. Turner, brainwashed by the villainous Sensei of the League of Assassins, became the renegade Bronze Tiger. Dragon decided to retire, devoting himself to teaching others. Lady Shiva became one of the world's greatest assassins.
Post-Crisis on Infinite Earths
[edit]
After the character's title was canceled, Dragon became a supporting character in the 1980s series, The Question. The title character of that book, Vic Sage, was a masked crime-fighter based in Hub City, who came into conflict with Lady Shiva. After all but killing The Question, Shiva sent him to see Richard Dragon for training.[2] Sage's stubborn streak made him near impossible for most people to teach. However, when he met Dragon he found himself reluctant to challenge his new sensei because Dragon was in a wheelchair. Richard trained The Question both in martial arts and eastern philosophy, forcing him to question his world view and let go of much of his anger. Of note, he loosely quoted Zhuangzi's story "The Butterfly Dream". Later Richard would start referring to his student as "Butterfly" because of this. Richard said that Shiva had saved Sage because she saw a passion for combat in him while Richard, on the other hand, thought that Sage's passion was for curiosity. Regardless, Richard realized that for Sage to have a spiritual awakening he had to first let go of the self-destructive behaviors that Hub City brought out in him. Thus Richard sent Sage back home. As he left, Sage met Shiva again, and the two briefly sparred. She explained that this fight had been for her to test her own perceptions. She thought she had seen a "warrior's passion" in him that was lacking skills, and felt that she had been proved correct since he faced her a second time knowing she had destroyed him the first. Shiva concluded that she had been right about him and Richard wrong, but Sage proposed that maybe he had just been curious what would happen if they fought again, which would make Richard right. Sage adopted the identity of The Question again, futilely trying to save the city.
Just as Sage's doomed efforts to save Hub City threatened to destroy him, Dragon arrived to advise his student. Dragon finally convinced Sage that his crusade to save Hub City was no longer doing anything but destroying him. When Sage collapsed from exhaustion and his injuries, Richard revealed that he was capable of using his legs perfectly, and put Sage in the wheelchair. Dragon had realized he would need the chair to make Sage let down his defenses - Sage was so "full of macho" that he would never have listened to him otherwise.[10]
The chair had not been just a charade, however. Richard revealed that he had allowed himself to be handicapped as part of his own learning process, going on to state "I was a teacher then. I am about to become something else. So I discard that option". The city had truly degenerated by this point with all pretense of law and order long lost. Richard, who had thought his studies had put him beyond such things, found himself shocked and horrified by the actions of people in Hub City. For example, a man was using a dead baby to try and beg for 'milk money'. When Richard and the others uncovered this, he tossed the body into a nearby trash can.[11]
Dragon wordlessly met Lady Shiva, who had arrived on the outskirts of Hub City in the helicopter that was to take Sage and Dragon away - she wished to go toward and enjoy the chaos that Sage and Richard were rejecting. Shiva uses force and threats to ensure the pilot would do what she wishes.[12]

Richard would next appear as sensei to Oracle, helping her to see past her own wheelchair-related limitations.[2] Dragon spends months training her in escrima, the Philippine art of stick fighting, a martial art she could use despite her wheelchair.

Not long after that, the masked heroine Huntress became the main suspect in a series of murders. Realizing that her headstrong nature would likely mean her death this time, The Question saved her from her many pursuers (including the police and Batman), and took her to Richard Dragon. Seeing many similarities between her and The Question, Dragon helped teach the adventuress to control her anger and "slow down".
After Huntress joined the Birds of Prey, Richard Dragon aided her in fighting the Twelve Brothers in Silk, an Asian martial arts squad that protected a major heroin distributor.
In 2004, the title was revived and the character revamped by Chuck Dixon and Scott McDaniel, only to be canceled after twelve issues. In this short series, Richard Dragon is a bullied school kid who enrolls in a karate dojo to better himself. The dojo's instructor was a "mail-order" black belt, who is later defeated by the Bronze Tiger. The Bronze Tiger then agrees to train young Dragon. He eventually meets and falls in love with Lady Shiva. Although he wins the martial arts tournament she is watching, she chides him for not being able to live up to the powerful name of "Dragon". Shiva becomes Dragon's lover and instructor, and the series touches on their now strained relationship.
The series begins with the Tiger locating Dragon, who is seeking death by fighting in death matches. He agrees to help Dragon resolve his problems with Shiva if he agrees to stop killing. In tracking Shiva they are confronted by Nightwing and Connor Hawke. Nightwing alludes to Dragon training him, as Dragon trained Bruce Wayne, who passed that training on to Nightwing.
At the end of the series, Dragon and Shiva are pitted in combat. Dragon gains the upper hand in the fight, and as he begins to deliver his death blow, Shiva's devout followers rush to save her, knocking Dragon away. Unhappy at this disturbance, Shiva attacks and possibly kills her followers before returning to kill Dragon with her signature move, the Leopard Claw. Dragon is, however, resurrected by the demonic Neron who wants Dragon to kill Shiva. Dragon refuses and walks away from Neron, saying that both had held up their parts of the agreement.
Richard Dragon appears starting in Week 26 of the comic book 52, in the mystic city of Nanda Parbat, where he starts to train former Gotham Detective Renee Montoya.[2] His appearance matches that of the Richard Dragon seen before the Dixon reboot (albeit with a full head of long hair, as when training Question and Oracle, rather than balding when training Huntress). In this story Dragon makes references to a conversation he had with The Question in the Question series, contradicting at least some of Chuck Dixon's Richard Dragon series. The 52 series is also where Richard's former student, Vic Sage, dies from cancer.[13]
New 52 onwards
[edit]In 2011, The New 52 rebooted the DC universe. Richard Dragon was visited by Ricardo Diaz Jr. and trained him in martial arts. When Richard Dragon tried to teach him about peace, patience, and compassion, he was killed by Ricardo who saw weakness in him. To honor Richard, Ricardo adopted the "Richard Dragon" moniker for his own use.[14]
Characterization
[edit]Beginning as a martial artist whose abilities were used for good, he is described as a peaceful individual whom uses his abilities as a last resort.[4][15] The character later develops into an instructor whom trained various other non-powered vigilantes including: Renee Montoya, Barbara Gordon,[2] Dick Grayson,[16] Batman,[16] and Huntress.[17] The character's reputation often presents him as among the most skilled martial artists in the world and on par with Bronze Tiger,[2] although he has both bested and defeated Lady Shiva.[18][5] In the original series, Dragon's love interest was Carolyn Woosan until her untimely demise but In the 2004 series,[4] Lady Shiva (Carolyn's sister) is alternatively presented as his love interest.[16]
Powers and abilities
[edit]Dragon is considered a virtual master of all unarmed martial arts styles and weaponry in martial arts,[2][15] including: Kung-Fu, Karate, Akido, Jujutsu Karate, Ninjutsu, and Dim Mak.[4] He is also able to manipulate his own qi and is a skilled thief. While possessing no inherent powers, Dragon's martial prowess creates the illusion of having metahuman abilities.[4][15] He is also aided by a totem known as the Dragon's Claw, a claw carved out of jade believed to possess mystical properties although it has been speculated to alternatively as a focal point for his concentration and has no abilities on its own. During moments of intense adversity, the Dragon's Claw enables Dragon to mystically collect and direct his own qi.[15]
Other versions
[edit]
- Richard Diaz Jr., the successor of Richard Drakunovski, first appears in Green Arrow (vol. 5) #23 (2013).[19] The son of a drug kingpin killed John Diggle (posing as Green Arrow), he trains in martial arts for revenge and is trained by the League of Assaassin's Richard Dragon. Despite his attempt at teaching him compassion and patience, he instead kills him and takes his moniker. Diaz later places a 30-million-dollar bounty on Green Arrow, which three members of the Longbow Hunters (Brick, Killer Moth, and Red Dart) intend to split. Green Arrow is able to defeat all of them with the help of his young half-sister, Emiko. Green Arrow is then reunited with his old partner, John Diggle, after Dragon attempts to kill Diggle by defenestration. In a fight against both Arrow and Diggle, Dragon is able to significantly injure both of them, but is ultimately defeated.[20] A superb martial artist with a strategic mind and tactical abilities, Diaz is capable of assessing an individual (attributes such as height, weight, and other characteristics), allowing him to predict others and has reflexes capable of catching arrows.[21][7]
- Richard Dragon Jr. debuted in Robin (vol. 3) #1 (2021). Created by Joshua Williamson and Gleb Melnikov, the character is implied to be the son of the original Richard Dragon. He participates in the League of Lazarus before Talia al Ghul offers him membership in the League of Shadows.[22]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]Ricardo "Dragon" Diaz appears in media set in the Arrowverse, portrayed by Kirk Acevedo as an adult and Max Archibald as a young man.[23]
- Primarily appearing in Arrow, this version is an arsonist, crime lord, and drug dealer with dragon tattoos on his neck and left shoulder. In the sixth season, he manipulates Cayden James into helping him take control of Star City before Oliver Queen exposes and captures everyone on Diaz's payroll, forcing him to go into hiding. In the seventh season, Diaz seeks revenge by targeting Queen and his family, hiring the Longbow Hunters to assist him and taking a drug that grants super-strength, but is captured by Emiko Queen and Team Arrow. Incarcerated at Slabside Maximum Security Prison, Diaz is recruited into A.R.G.U.S.'s Ghost Initiative to help them locate Ninth Circle financier Dante, through whom Diaz hired the Longbow Hunters, though Diaz betrays them to help Dante escape. He is subsequently returned to Slabside, where Emiko kills him to prevent him from revealing information on the Ninth Circle.[24]
- An alternate version of Diaz who became a police officer after John Deegan rewrote reality makes a cameo appearance in the crossover "Elseworlds".[25]
Film
[edit]Richard Dragon appears in Batman: Soul of the Dragon, voiced by Mark Dacascos.[8] This version is visually inspired by Bruce Lee's character, Lee, from Enter the Dragon.[9]
Video games
[edit]Dragon appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.[26]
Miscellaneous
[edit]A poster of Richard Dragon appears in Young Justice #0.
References
[edit]- ^ McAvennie, Michael (2010). "1970s". In Dolan, Hannah (ed.). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.
Richard Dragon, Kung-Fu Fighter was based on the 1974 novel Dragon's Fists by 'Jim Dennis' (the shared pseudonym of comic book writer Dennis O'Neil and artist Jim Berry).
- ^ a b c d e f g h Beatty, Scott (2008), "Dragon, Richard", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 110, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1, OCLC 213309017
- ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 97. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
- ^ a b c d e O'Neil, Dennis (2021-02-16). Richard Dragon, Kung-Fu Fighter: Coming of the Dragon!. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-77951-240-6.
- ^ a b Beatty, Scott; Wallace, Daniel (2008). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-1-4053-2891-3.
- ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 172. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
- ^ a b Matthew K. Manning; Stephen Wiacek; Melanie Scott; Nick Jones; Landry Q. Walker; Alan Cowsill (2021). The DC comics encyclopedia: the definitive guide to the characters of the DC universe (New ed.). New York, New York. ISBN 978-0-7440-2056-4. OCLC 1253363543.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (Print book) - ^ a b Couch, Aaron (August 12, 2020). "1970s-Set Batman Animated Movie Reveals Cast (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.
- ^ a b Ching, Gene (11 January 2021). "How Batman: Soul of the Dragon Pays Homage to 70s Kung Fu and Bruce Lee". Den of Geek.
- ^ The Question #34 (1990). DC Comics.
- ^ The Question #35 (1990). DC Comics.
- ^ The Question #36 (1990). DC Comics.
- ^ 52 Week Thirty-Eight (2006). DC Comics.
- ^ Green Arrow (vol. 5) #32. DC Comics.
- ^ a b c d Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #19. DC Comics. 1986.
- ^ a b c Dixon, Chuck (2004–2005). Richard Dragon #1-12. DC Comics.
- ^ Rucka, Greg (2025-08-26). Batman: Huntress - Cry for Blood (2025 ed.). DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-7995-1254-7.
- ^ Various (2021-04-13). Who's Who Omnibus Vol. 1. National Geographic Books. ISBN 978-1-77950-599-6.
- ^ Green Arrow (vol. 5) #23. DC Comics.
- ^ Green Arrow (vol. 5) #36. DC Comics.
- ^ Lemire, Jeff (2015). Green Arrow. Volume 6, Broken. Andrea Sorrentino, Denys Cowan, Bill Sienkiewicz, Marcelo Maiolo, Dezi Sienty, Rob Leigh. New York. ISBN 978-1-4012-5474-2. OCLC 900159195.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Robin (vol. 3) #1
- ^ "'Arrow': Kirk Acevedo Cast as Ricardo Diaz (Richard Dragon) in Season 6". 15 August 2017.
- ^ "Arrow Season 7, Episode 14: "Brothers & Sisters" Review - IGN". 5 March 2019.
- ^ Anderson, Jenna (December 6, 2018). "John Barrowman Returns to the Arrowverse in "Elseworlds" Crossover Photo". comicbook.com. Retrieved August 1, 2024.
- ^ Eisen, Andrew (October 2, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - Scribblenauts Unmasked Guide". IGN. Retrieved August 1, 2024.
- Characters created by Dennis O'Neil
- Comics characters introduced in 1975
- Comics characters introduced in 2013
- DC Comics male superheroes
- DC Comics male supervillains
- DC Comics superheroes
- DC Comics supervillains
- DC Comics martial artists
- DC Comics titles
- Fictional aikidoka
- Fictional arsonists
- Fictional eskrimadors
- Fictional gangsters
- Fictional Jeet Kune Do practitioners
- Fictional judoka
- Fictional jujutsuka
- Fictional karateka
- Fictional martial arts trainers
- Fictional Muay Thai practitioners
- Fictional Pencak Silat practitioners
- Fictional schoolteachers
- Fictional taekwondo practitioners
- Fictional Wing Chun practitioners
- Suicide Squad members