Saturn Girl: the lost telepathy of the Legion

Published on 2026-07-02 | Translated from Spanish

Saturn Girl, whose real name is Imra Ardeen, was one of the founders of the Legion of Super-Heroes in the 31st century. Created by Otto Binder and illustrated by Al Plastino, her telepathic power made her a pillar of the team. However, following the recent reboots of the DC Universe, her presence has diminished almost into oblivion, leaving fans wondering about the whereabouts of this heroine from Titan.

Saturn Girl levitating in a ruined Legion headquarters, blue telepathic energy waves radiating from her temples, holographic data fragments of erased timelines dissolving around her, cracked titanium walls reflecting her fading silhouette, cinematic sci-fi visualization, deep space lighting with Titan moon glow, dust particles suspended in zero-g, her red costume torn but glowing, photorealistic technical render, dramatic shadows, energy arcs connecting her mind to broken communication arrays, showing the loss of her telepathic legacy

The technical development of a limited mental power 🧠

Saturn Girl's telepathy has a range of several planets, but requires constant focus. In the comics, her ability is described as a psionic neural network that connects minds, allowing her to read thoughts or project illusions. However, its effectiveness is limited against enemies with mental barriers or anti-psychic technology. Writers have used this trait to balance her power, preventing her from being a universal solution. In practice, Imra is more of a strategist than a direct combatant, which makes her vulnerable in physical confrontations.

Saturn Girl and her ability to not be found 🕵️‍♀️

With telepathic powers, one would think Saturn Girl would be easy to locate in the multiverse. But no: DC editors have hidden her better than a sock in a dryer. Maybe she's taking a break on Titan, reading other people's minds to find out who left the toilet seat up. Or perhaps she joined a club of anonymous telepaths to prevent writers from using her as a deus ex machina. Meanwhile, fans keep waiting for someone to send her a mental message asking: where did you go, Imra?