The most important and impactful DC Comics events of all time

DC comic book event images in a collage
(Image credit: George Marston / DC)

This year, DC is😼 marking the 30th anniversary of one 𝔍of the publisher's biggest comic book events of all time, 1992's '' - and they're doing it by upping the ante much higher than it's ever been for the Man of Steel and his allies.

How are they gonna do that? Well, let's put it this way: May's J⭕ustice League #75 is titled 'Death ofꦅ the Justice League'. And you should take that title literally, as the publisher plans to kill off nine of the ten core Justice League members - Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman included - while subsequently letting the Justice League team name lay dormant for some time to come. In the meantime, the storyline will continue in DC's just announced major 2022 event 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Dark Crisis

But 'The Death of Superman' is just one of the decades of stories that have drastically altered the landscape of the DC Universe over the yeaꦇrs, and which are still offering up ways♍ for DC to change up its status quo to this day - and we've got a list of the most important and impactful DC comics events right here.

10. Dark Nights: Death Metal

Cover of Death Metal #7

(Image credit: DC)

While the returns are still early(ish), if DC's in-progress 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Infinite Frontier editorial era deliv𝐆ers on the promises of , it'll li🙈kely move up this list in the coming months and years.

澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:As detailed here, the January 2020 finale of the Scott Snyder-written ♏magnum opus event series was, in Newsarama's view, a pretty major reboot - one tha🅺t has seemingly redefined the DC Universe.

Now, whether this new architecture of DC canon and continuity pays real narrative dividends over time remains to be seen - and so far more than a year later it's a lot of questions without answers. But the potential is there for what Snyder called an "Anti-Crisis" to find its way to near 🅺the top of the list where (if you keep reading) the original Crisis resides.

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9. Green Lantern: Rebirth

Most impactful DC stories: Green Lantern Rebirth

(Image credit: DC Comics)

This 2004-2005 limited series resurrected a dying Green Lantern franchise and started writer Geoff Johns' journey toward becoming DC's go-to event architect — and one of the company's most successful retcon ♏writers.

Green Lantern: Rebirth brought a disgraced Hal Jordan back from the dead, restored the charter's former heroic reputation, resurrected a huge, universe-spanning Green Lantern Corps, and explained questionable areas of the Green Lantern mythos in fresh, new ways — all without dumping the co🍎ntinuity that had come before.

After its publication, the Green Lantern franchise became one of DC's strongest,𓂃 anchoring the DC Universe-wide just a few yeaꦦrs later.

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8. Zero Hour: Crisis in Time

Most impactful DC stories: Zero Hour: Crisis in Time

(Image credit: DC Comics)

You'll be seeing the word "crisis" a lot in this list, but this 1994 event is specifically linked to the grand-da✨ddy Crisis of them all — .

That earlier 1985 series completely rebooted the DCU and combined its multiple Earths ꦬinto a single timeline in an effort to make sense of a publishin🥀g history that existed for nearly half a century in real-time but only a fraction of that in story-time. 

We'll get to that in more detail later, but the retcons the first Crisis required and new conflicts it created showed DC readers that the passing of time was an inherent problem that was always going to require continued maintena൩nce, which is mostly what this list is all about.

Characters like Hawkman and the Legion of Super-Heroes owe much of their post-Crisis continuity clean-up to the Zero Hour, which pitted a character named Extant (the former Hawk of Hawk & Dove – it's complicated) against the DCU and played with the idea of time it𓆏self.

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7. DC Universe: Rebirth

Most impactful DC stories: DC Universe Rebirth

(Image credit: DC Comics)

, a May 2016 one-shot by Geoff Johns and several DC superstars, brought back many of the relationships and characters that readers were missing since DC's 2011 full reboot 'The New 52.' It resurrected the long-missing Wally West, set up the return of the classic Superman, and also surprisingly set up the Watchmen uᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚniverse crossover .

The newly re-numbered and re-branded series that followed restored some oompܫh to DC's publishing 💙line by — as DC explained it — concentrating on each character's "core." The 'Rebirth' era restored numerous aspects of DC continuity that were previously lost and opened the door to the current 'Infinite Frontier' concept.

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6. Final Crisis

Most impactful DC stories: Final Crisis

(Image credit: DC Comics)

This 2008 series , written by Grant Morrison, focused on efforts by DC heroes to defeat the villain Darkseid as he plots to take over re🌱ality itself.

Hailed by some critics as a masterpiece for its mind-bending concepts (a staple of Morrison's style), it was alternately called confusing by o❀thers for its fast-paced and sometimes content-crammed storyline.

By the end of the series and its many tie-ins, Martian Manhunter was dead (he got better), Batman was believed dead (he was really lost in time but found his way home), and the continuity of three different iterations ▨of Legion of Super-Heroes necessitated 🌠by all the previous DC Universe reboot was combined into one (and that's still frankly confusing).

Besides its immediate ramifications, the story and its aftermath greatly inꦍfluenced the aforementioned recent Dark Nights: Metal series that rocked the DCU.

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5. Death of Superman

Most impactful DC stories: Death of Superman

(Image credit: DC Comics)

Among all its accomplishments, perhaps the most penetrating aspect of 1992's '' event was that it pr🅠oved that even Superman could die ...🍎 for a little while.

Crossing into multiple series and tie-ins, it told the story of how Doomsday defeated Superman, how the world reacted, and who showed up to take his place – the latter part featuring the introduction of several new characters who stuck aro🍒und🧔 to help form the later DCU.

The event made mainstream news, sold like crazy, and not only influenced later comic book stories but it was incorporated into DC's cinematic depiction of Superman as well, with part of the tale being adapted into 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Zack Snyder's and .

DC will pay homage to this landmark story on its 30th anniversary this year, with May's 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:'Death of the Justice League' and subsequent 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Dark Crisis.

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4. Flash of Two Worlds

Most impactful DC stories: Flash of Two Worlds

(Image credit: DC Comics)

It's difficult to explain how important the '' story was in 1961's🀅 The Flash #123. It not only introduced the idea of DC having an 'Earth-Two,' but it essentially debuted the idea of the Multiverse that is featured in DC comic books, TV shows, and soon-to-be movies today.

Hell, even 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Marvel Studios has embraced the concept of a multiverse.

Written by Gardner Fox with pencils by Carmine Infantino, the story featured the then-current Flash, Barry Allen, being transported to another Earth where the original Flash, Jay Garrick (who Barry knew as a comic book character), existed.

The story explained how al🎐l the DC Earths vibrate at specific frequencies, borrowing from theoretical science of the time. The meta-textual elements are being embraced by DC more and more every passing year.

The idea of traveling between worlds has essentially become DC's defining and distinguishin𒈔g editorial element and as mentioned has greatly influenced other publishers as ♎well. 

What started in The Flash #123 is the central theme of DC's recent Infinite Frontier limited series, with its events 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:specifically mentioned in an issue

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3. Infinite Crisis/52

Most impactful DC stories: Infinite Earths/52

(Image credit: DC Comics)

It's tough to separate these two events because by Geoff Johns ⛎and Phil Jimenez led right into DC's ground-breaking, team-written-and-drawn weekly series .

The ramifications were numerous, but perhaps the biggest was the return of the DC Multiverse that h🎐ad beꦅen eliminated in 1985's Crisis on Infinite Earths.

It all started in Infinite Crisis with the deatℱh of multiple characters and the hint that maybe the Multiverse could return. Then in 52, DC actually made the new Multiverse a reality, alt🍒hough limiting it to just 52 worlds.

As an added bonus, the publisher proved that it could deliver a weekly series for one year without a la♛te issue, something of a significant publishing accomplishment in its own right.ꩵ 

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2. Flashpoint/The New 52

Most impactful DC stories: Flashpoint/The New 52

(Image credit: DC Comics)

Whether 💜readers loved or hated DC's 2011 reboot and total renumbering of its line — titled 'The New 52' — the fact remains that this event had major ramifications.

After the Flash traveled back in time in the limited series and chan꧒ged history, the continuity of the DCU changed. Some heroes became younger, others were eliminated altogether, and the event allowed DC to completely retool the origins of just about♕ every single character and concept to which it owned the rights.

The timeline that had once stretched back to before Wo🍰rld War II was now ✱shortened to a five-year history and scores of characters were re-introduced as new, inexperienced superheroes — or weren't re-introduced at all.

The word "Flashpoint" has been used fo⛎r similar DC stories in other media and this year's Flash film seems based on the premise. 

Plus Flashpoint Batman will return in a new follow-up series called 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Flashpoint Beyond

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1. Crisis on Infinite Earths

Most impactful DC stories: Crisis on Infinite Earths

(Image credit: DC Comics)

What can be said about the landmark 1985 series by Marv Wolfman and George Pé💜;r⭕ez that hasn't already been said?

changed the whole l🐭andscape of the DCU and served as the first time a comic book company would reꦍboot its entire continuity to freshen its product — something that's much more frequent these days.

Crisis killed boatloads of characters (back when character deaths actually meant something), including the high-profile death of Supergirꦉl and a sacrifice by the beloved Barry Allen version of The Flash, one that took him away from comic books for more than 20 years. 

Mostly, it cleaned u꧋p DC's continuity after 50 years of publication (although🍨 arguably over 35 years later unsuccessfully) and allowed a new batch of writers and artists to re-invent them or give them new life.

Every DC event since owes its 𒈔existence, really, to the original Crisis.

The st𝓀ory was adapted in♋ 2019 and 2020 - surprisingly faithfully - for CW's Arrowverse.

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Vaneta has been a freelance writer for Newsarama for over 17 years, covering Marvel and DC, and everything in between. She also works in marketing.&🌞nbsp;