What's your favorite comic from DC'S Rebirth?

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Bob_McMillan

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Aug 28, 2014
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King Billi said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Kenbo Slice said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Kenbo Slice said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Kolby Jack said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Eh I am gonna miss the New 52 in that I felt it was a fresh start. I mean the comics line prior to Flashpoint/New 52 had Batman somehow immortal and lived from the dawn of time right to the beginning of when he first started became batman.
It's still that timeline, just restoring some parts of the old timeline that were SORELY missed. Namely Wally West.

I've subscribed to a few series, and I'm really enjoying Batman and Detective Comics as well as Superman and Action Comics. I'm also enjoying the Flash and Titans. I'm still looking forward to the new series that have yet to come like Super Sons and Teen Titans. Justice League has barely gotten off the ground but it's intriguing so far. I'll pick up other series if I hear good word of mouth, but I'm about to be unemployed in a couple of weeks so I'm trying to limit the number of subscriptions I have. I really want to support this new direction though because so far it's doing pretty much everything right in my eyes.
Anything else that was sorely missed?
Nightwing having his blue and black outfit back instead of his shitty red one. bringing back classic Superman (new 52 Superman sucked), bringing back Atrocitus, and making Green Arrow and Black Canary a couple again.
Wasn't New 52 Superman written by both Grant Morrison and George Perez? (Both did Action Comics and Superman respectively)
They wrote for them for a while, but both comics switched creative teams so many times. Scott Lobdell even wrote for Superman in New 52.
I just realized all the issues relevent to the new 52 (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Flash, Justice League, etc. etc. etc.)

All ended at issue 52. Coincidence or did DC planned this from the beginning?

What is DC's obssession with the number 52?

52 the comic, Countdown, now this.
Just that there are 52 worlds in the DC multiverse. Don't think there is any reason for that specific number, just the one they chose.
Is it not that there are 52 weeks in a year and they release one every week? At least, that's what I always thought.
 

King Billi

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Jul 11, 2012
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Bob_McMillan said:
King Billi said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Kenbo Slice said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Kenbo Slice said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Kolby Jack said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Eh I am gonna miss the New 52 in that I felt it was a fresh start. I mean the comics line prior to Flashpoint/New 52 had Batman somehow immortal and lived from the dawn of time right to the beginning of when he first started became batman.
It's still that timeline, just restoring some parts of the old timeline that were SORELY missed. Namely Wally West.

I've subscribed to a few series, and I'm really enjoying Batman and Detective Comics as well as Superman and Action Comics. I'm also enjoying the Flash and Titans. I'm still looking forward to the new series that have yet to come like Super Sons and Teen Titans. Justice League has barely gotten off the ground but it's intriguing so far. I'll pick up other series if I hear good word of mouth, but I'm about to be unemployed in a couple of weeks so I'm trying to limit the number of subscriptions I have. I really want to support this new direction though because so far it's doing pretty much everything right in my eyes.
Anything else that was sorely missed?
Nightwing having his blue and black outfit back instead of his shitty red one. bringing back classic Superman (new 52 Superman sucked), bringing back Atrocitus, and making Green Arrow and Black Canary a couple again.
Wasn't New 52 Superman written by both Grant Morrison and George Perez? (Both did Action Comics and Superman respectively)
They wrote for them for a while, but both comics switched creative teams so many times. Scott Lobdell even wrote for Superman in New 52.
I just realized all the issues relevent to the new 52 (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Flash, Justice League, etc. etc. etc.)

All ended at issue 52. Coincidence or did DC planned this from the beginning?

What is DC's obssession with the number 52?

52 the comic, Countdown, now this.
Just that there are 52 worlds in the DC multiverse. Don't think there is any reason for that specific number, just the one they chose.
Is it not that there are 52 weeks in a year and they release one every week? At least, that's what I always thought.
Yeah, that was the case for the 52 series itself where there were 52 issues each one covering one week and all adding up to tell the story of one year in the life of the DC universe. Its just there was also an internal story significance behind the number as well.
 

Kolby Jack

Come at me scrublord, I'm ripped
Apr 29, 2011
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Samtemdo8 said:
Kolby Jack said:
Samtemdo8 said:
Eh I am gonna miss the New 52 in that I felt it was a fresh start. I mean the comics line prior to Flashpoint/New 52 had Batman somehow immortal and lived from the dawn of time right to the beginning of when he first started became batman.
It's still that timeline, just restoring some parts of the old timeline that were SORELY missed. Namely Wally West.

I've subscribed to a few series, and I'm really enjoying Batman and Detective Comics as well as Superman and Action Comics. I'm also enjoying the Flash and Titans. I'm still looking forward to the new series that have yet to come like Super Sons and Teen Titans. Justice League has barely gotten off the ground but it's intriguing so far. I'll pick up other series if I hear good word of mouth, but I'm about to be unemployed in a couple of weeks so I'm trying to limit the number of subscriptions I have. I really want to support this new direction though because so far it's doing pretty much everything right in my eyes.
Anything else that was sorely missed?
Kenbo covered most of the rest; Wally West was just a major sticking point for me personally because he's my favorite superhero and they literally erased him from existence. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad they kept the "new" Wally West around. He's not a bad character or anything, he just had NOTHING in common with the Wally West I'm a fan of beyond the name. I think it was a smart move to have both, with the younger Wally being the new Kid Flash (at least he will be soon, he hasn't gotten there yet but they're building up to it) and the original Wally being The Flash, alongside Barry Allen.