Hugo Strange is a supervillain appearing in comic books published by DC Comics, commonly as an adversary of the superhero Batman. The character is one of Batman's first recurring villains and is also one of the first to discover his secret identity.
Doctor Fate, in short, is DC's sorcerer supreme, debuting twenty years prior to Marvel's Dr. Strange.
Viking Prince is DC's version of Thor. Both are rooted in Norse mythology, and both have ties to Odin. Both Thor and the Viking Prince are warriors of high integrity and courage and both are invulnerable; however, the Prince is a mortal and can be killed.
Despite this inversion, Black Adam serves a similar role in the DCEU that Loki served in the MCU.
Elvis Ethan Avery, known by his superhero name Damage, is the DC Comics counterpart of the Hulk. He was created as part of the aftermath of the Dark Nights: Metal crossover event in 2018, which was written by Scott Snyder and illustrated by Greg Capullo.
The canon version of Black Adam appeared only once during Fawcett's initial publication run of Captain Marvel comics. In The Marvel Family #1, Black Adam is an ancient Egyptian named Teth-Adam (i.e., "Mighty Human"), who is chosen by the wizard Shazam to be his successor due to his presumed moral purity.
Dr. Maya Chamara is Doctor Multiverse, a hero from Earth 8 who possesses the powers of the Multiverse. No alternate versions of her exist in any other reality.
Doctor Strange's third eye (the Eye of Agamotto) in the comics, according to Bustle, represents wisdom of the sorcerer Agamotto and his Vishanti. The Eye allows him to see the true intentions of his enemies and break down all magical illusions.
Dormammu. Despite being defeated by Doctor Strange in the past, Dormammu still remains the more powerful of the two.
Perpetua destroys much of the Multiverse while the Batman Who Laughs reshapes Earth-0 according to his whims, creating the Metalverse.
Infinite Possibility
It's changed a bit since it was introduced, but the current DC Multiverse states that there are 52 different Earths in existence all occupying the same space but vibrating at different frequencies.
Gorgon is a fictional character, a DC Comics supervillain, part of the evil gang called the Extremists. He is based on the Marvel Comics supervillain Doctor Octopus, and like him has several super-strong tentacles, though they are organic rather than mechanical.
Green Goblin is marvel's version of joker for many reasons. one because they both love to smile and laugh a lot. two because they both like to wear green and purple. three they carry sneaky ,tricky ,and dangerous gadgets and weapons.
In short, Black Adam should be Shazam's equal, but some of his powers are beyond Billy Batson's abilities. Black Adam also has allies that help him overcome entire squads of superheroes. Then, Black Adam has a lot of combat experience, while Shazam is, in fact, a child.
Taking all of these things into account, checking the numbers, ticking the boxes, and pure old gut instinct, it's obvious that the winner in a fight between Superman and Black Adam is... Superman.
While the two company's heroes are pretty evenly matched in some places, DC's are just too much for Marvel. Beyond the fact that DC's heroes are overall more powerful, they have numerous advantages. From magic-users to Kryptonians to the Flash Family, Marvel can't match DC's power.
DC Comics has their own version of the Black Panther, named Red Lion, who is a mirror image of T'Challa, albeit one that is broken and distorted.
Yes, as a shock to many, Superman has briefly lifted the mighty hammer in a phenomenal crossover with Marvel and DC Comics.
DC Comics introduced the first costumed superhero, Superman, in Action Comics #1 (June 1938).
Earth-9 was one of fifty-one divergent realities that branched from the core New Earth reality during the recreation of the Multiverse shortly following the events of Infinite Crisis. It is home to the heroes of Tangent Comics.
DC Comics. In the DC Multiverse Earth-Prime is the true Earth from which all the other worlds within the Multiverse originate, the "actual" reality where the readers of DC Comics live (and where DC Comics operates as a publisher), and is an Earth where all superheroes are fictional.