Enigma (DC Comics) - Second Enigma

Second Enigma

In issue one of the Trinity series, a mysterious man, whose face is half-obscured by a metal mask, and wielding a powerful staff, joins forces with Morgaine Le Fey. His true name is unknown, but he takes the moniker "Enigma", from what Le Fey initially called him. Along with Morgaine, he plans to conquer the Keystone Universe, a.k.a. New Earth, the current mainstream DC Universe, by forcibly integrating the personality of the Trinity, the group formed by Superman, Wonder Woman and Batman, and collecting artifacts related to their personal origins.

The costume and theme are suggestive of The Riddler, who often goes by the alias Edward Nigma/Edward Nygma (although the half mask is also suggestive of another Batman villain--Two-Face as it appears Enigma's face is scarred in the same way as he is) but Enigma's true identity is deliberately kept a secret until later in the series.

Approaching to the revelation, several clues are scattered throughout the miniseries: the Riddler claims to recognize the modus operandi of Enigma as his own, therefore asking Dick Grayson more time to disculp himself. Morgaine, feeling Edward Nygma life-force while he was at Madame Zodiac's mansion, claims that Riddler and Enigma share the same life-force, or a similar one. Enigma seems to have a personal connection to the antimatter earth, as evidenced by an emotional outburst when Despero suggests conquering it. This is confirmed when Enigma teleports himself to a base orbiting the Anti-Matter Earth.

Eventually, Enigma is unmasked when he attempts to sap Superman's powers via red sunlight radiation, but reversed in wavelength, which is ineffective over a being of New Earth; this spurs Superman into scanning Enigma's body with his X-ray vision, confirming that he's the Antimatter Riddler. His backstory is later recounted: As the Quizmaster, Edward Nashton had formed the Justice Underground to challenge the Crime Syndicate's superiority. Eventually, Nashton's face was burned by Ultraman's heat vision, with his wife and infant son killed, and his daughter's body nearly destroyed. In retaliation, Nashton set out to change the anti-matter universe, using the power of the Trinity to do so. Enigma and his allies successfully steal the Trinity's power, only for them to return as godlike beings. Enigma realizes that what they got was not the totality of the power they could have accrued, and devises a plan to complete this power, bickering with Morgaine over her usage of power (she had thoughtlessly destroyed most of Europe in her lashing out against the world). Ultimately, their second attempt fails when the godlike Trinity returns, and Morgaine strikes a deal with Krona, hoping to gain his power by giving him to living soul of Earth, in return for the human soul within Enigma's robotic aide, S.P.H.E.R.E., the soul of Enigma's daughter, to replace it, with Morgaine holding her power over her. Enigma refuses, and attacks Morgaine and Krona, only for S.P.H.E.R.E. to send him to the safety of the anti-matter universe. Enigma later returns, having gained the aid of the Crime Syndicate, to help defeat Krona. When the Earth's worldsoul is released, it rejects Krona, and restores Enigma's daughter to life, fusing her soul with that of Krona's Void Hound. When the conflict is over, two return to the anti-matter universe, hoping to give its inhabitants hope.

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