Earlier this week, Bruce Timm's re-imagined DC Universe arrived in the form of Machinima's animated shorts. In the debut "Justice League: Gods and Monsters Chronicles" webisode, Batman tackled his arch-nemesis, the serial killer known as Harley Quinn. Then it was Superman's turn to shine, as the son of Zod faced a new version of one of Clark Kent's classic foes.

WATCH: Batman Battles Harley Quinn in First "Justice League: Gods and Monsters Chronicles" Short

Now, Wonder Woman has arrived. And while this version travels by Boom Tube rather than invisible jet and uses a Mother Box/sword rather than bracelets to deflect bullets, she appears to be no less heroic than her Greek pantheon-powered counterpart -- though she's a lot more likely to throw a quip as quickly as a punch in the heat of battle.

WATCH: Superman Vs. Brainiac in Latest "Justice League: Gods and Monsters Chronicles" Short

"Her design came first," Timm recently told CBR of how the New Gods-based take on the classic character came to be. "Initially, we were sticking a little bit closer to the DC version of her. We were actually sticking with the whole Greek mythology background, but I had always done that drawing of her just as a way of loosening myself up. I didn't want to do the stars and the stripes and the eagle and all of that stuff. I wanted to do something really different. I've always been a Jack Kirby fan. In the back of my head, I was thinking, "If we're going to do Greek mythology, it doesn't have to look like 2,000 years ago Greek style. It can be like a Jack Kirby version of that." It's like what he did with Thor. It was Norse mythology, but with all this weird pseudo-science on top of it. I was thinking along those lines, I came up with this Kirby-ish version of her costume and then we soon realize the whole Greek mythology thing wasn't really working for us. It was not different enough."

The animated "Justice League: Gods and Monsters" feature film directed by Sam Liu, produced by Timm and Alan Burnett, and starring Benjamin Bratt, Michael C. Hall, and Tamara Taylor, arrives July 28.