Real Name: John Raymond
Rank: 3
Karma: 3
| Health: 60 | Damage Reduction:-2 |
| Focus: 90 | Damage Reduction:-0 |
Initiative: +3
Speed: 5 (run), 3 (climb), 3 (jump), 15 (flight)
Occupation: Adventurer
Origin: High Tech – Battle Suit
Teams: The Crusaders, Web Hosts
Traits: Tech Reliance, Fearless, Connections: Super Heroes, Audience (Twitterati streams), Gearhead, Glibness
Tags: Extreme Appearance (in Web suit), Black Market Access, Backup (Web Host), Headquarters (Web Lair), Lab Access, Rich, Secret Identity
| Ability | Ability Score | Defense Score | Non-Combat Checks | Damage Modifier |
| Melee | 3 | 13 | +4 | X4 |
| Agility | 3 | 13 | +4 | X4 |
| Resilience | 2 | 12 | +2 | X3 |
| Vigilance | 3 | 13 | +3 | X3 |
| Ego | 1 | 11 | +1 | X3 |
| Logic | 3 | 13 | +4 | X4 |
Powers
Basic: Brilliance 1, Disguise
| The Web’s Suit Powers: Accuracy 1 Dampen Powers (Web Host users) Flight 1 Elemental Burst – electricity Heightened Senses 1 Machine Telepathy Mighty 1 Shut Down Powers (Web Host Users) Sturdy 2 Telepathic Link (Web Host Users) Telepathic Network (Web Host Users) Restrictions: Flashy Worn Power Value: 10 |
Biography:
In DC’s Red Circle revival, John Raymond is a spoiled, slacker, womanizer, fancying himself a socialite. His brother David, a social worker, has distanced himself from his family, choosing to help the poorer as a social worker. Despite their differences, John always admired David. John was made the heir of the family fortune by his father, who reasoned that John’s cold, privileged mindset would make him a better businessman. John, who believed his brother to be the better man and rightful heir, decided to balance business needs with humanitarian goals. To those ends, John maintained his profile as a spoiled socialite while using part of his five-billion dollar fortune to set up a superpowered persona as the Web, a common-people superhero who derived his name from the World Wide Web. John also anonymously funded the development of an advanced supercomputer to select the most urgent or worthy of numerous requests for help submitted his website summontheweb.com.
John later discovers that David has fallen in debt to loan sharks, who later murder David. David explains with his last breath that he didn’t want to ask John for help because he was too proud. David’s death causes John to reevaluate his activities as the Web, and decides that he will no longer aid those who have the resources to help themselves, or who have friends and family they can turn to. Instead, the Web will assist only those who have no one else to turn to. The first beneficiary of his “new deal” is Lieutenant Joseph Higgins, stationed in Afghanistan and looking for his missing father. However, waiting for the Web reply, Higgins is grievously wounded while in a mission, and saved by an experimental warsuit: by the time the Web reviews the email, and gives him a positive reply, Higgins has become The Shield, a superhero on his own and a potential ally in John’s quest.
John eventually discovers that the man responsible for David’s murder is a renowned scientist named Dr. Archer, who is using his knowledge of chemistry to create addictive recreational drugs which he then distributes through violent street gangs. Unable to hold off Archer and fight him actively alone, the Web resorts, like the previous Impact Comics character, to turn the Web identity into an organization of equally empowered crime fighters, a small army of Web Hosts, receiving functional copies of his suit in exchange for enacting justice in his name. After a brief period of unrests and anarchy, Oracle and Batgirl offer an upgrade to the Web Hosts, in exchange for them pledging alliance to the Justice League of America rather than acting independently and thinning their number to expel the more rambunctious and rebellious members. The Web Hosts now receive their powers from a cloud computing server in the Web Lair, making the Web able to shut their suits down remotely.
Furthermore, every suit is fitted with an access to Twitterati (the DCU equivalent of Twitter featured in the Final Crisis: Dance miniseries), granting the Host a private social network to use for personal interactions and crimefighting as well, and John Raymond himself, as the current administrator, a permanent link to his Hosts and simple supporters (and a spyware implanted program to gain Oracle absolute control over the aptly named Interweb).
With the help of his new hosts and his supporters the Web finally tracks down Dr. Archer, finally handing him down to the police with enough proof to get him put on trial. However Alice, girlfriend of the late David, warns John of another hidden instigator behind Archer’s actions, the mysterious Deuces Wilde.
When a technological-savvy villain, Doctor Zadar, manages to mainline the remote link, effectively capturing and controlling the entire Web Hosts population, Raymond meets Kim Brand, the current incarnation of the Flygirl, in this continuity no longer empowered by a magic ring but a former Web Host wearing an enhanced, illegally modified and souped-up Web Host suit with greater proficiency. Raymond enlists her for the rescue mission, offering her the enhanced suit in exchange, this time as her personal property.
Raymond handles the crisis selflessly, deliberately risking his life to keep Fly Girl out of harm, but highlighting his lack of teamplay abilities: however, he manages to impress the U.S. Army to warrant for Kim and himself an induction into the newly formed Mighty Crusaders, along with The Comet, Inferno, The Shield, and War Eagle.
