Crisis on Infinite Earths: Difference between revisions
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The Crisis on Infinite Earths was a Multiversal catastrophe that resulted in the destruction of countless parallel universes, and the recreation of a single positive matter universe (and an anti-matter universe) at the dawn of time. |
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{{Original research|date=July 2010}} |
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{{Refimprove|date=January 2012}} |
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{{Cleanup-rewrite|date=January 2013}} |
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{{Overly detailed|date=January 2013}} |
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{{Fanpov|date=January 2013}} |
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{{Infobox comic book title |
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| title = Crisis on Infinite Earths |
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| image = Crisis1.jpg |
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| caption = Cover to ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #1.<br>Art by [[George Pérez]]. |
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| schedule = Monthly |
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| format = |
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| limited = y |
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| publisher = [[DC Comics]] |
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| date = April 1985 – March 1986 |
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| issues = 12 |
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| main_char_team = [[Monitor (comics)|Monitor]]<br />[[Harbinger (DC Comics)|Harbinger]]<br />[[Pariah (comics)|Pariah]]<br />[[Superman (Kal-L)]]<br />[[Superboy-Prime]]<br />[[Alexander Luthor|Alexander Luthor Jr.]]<br />[[Flash (Barry Allen)]]<br />[[Psycho-Pirate]]<br />[[Anti-Monitor]]<br />rest of [[DC Multiverse]] |
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| writers = [[Marv Wolfman]] |
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| artists = |
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| pencillers = [[George Pérez]] |
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| inkers = [[Dick Giordano]]<br>[[Jerry Ordway]]<br>[[Mike DeCarlo]] |
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| colorists = Anthony Tollin<br>Tom Ziuko<br>Carl Gafford |
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| letterers = [[John Costanza]] |
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| creative_team_month = |
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| creative_team_year = |
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| creators = Marv Wolfman<br>George Pérez |
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| editors = Marv Wolfman |
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| TPB = Crisis on Infinite Earths (hardcover) |
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| ISBN = 1-56389-434-3 |
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| TPB1 = Crisis on Infinite Earths (softcover) |
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| ISBN1 = 1-5638-9750-4 |
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| TPB2 = [[DC Comics Absolute Edition|Crisis on Infinite Earths: The Absolute Edition]] (hardcover) |
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| ISBN2 = 1-4012-0712-X |
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| subcat = DC Comics |
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| sort = Crisis on Infinite Earths |
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| italic title = no |
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| 2ndary_box = y |
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}} |
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'''"Crisis on Infinite Earths"''' is a 40 issue Pre-Crisis and a 59 issue Official/Unofficial Crisis [[Fictional crossover|crossover]] event and an eponymous 12-issue [[American comic book]] [[limited series]] (identified as a "12-part maxi-series"), produced by [[DC Comics]] in 1985 to simplify its then 50-year-old [[Continuity (fiction)|continuity]].<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.silverbulletcomicbooks.com/bobro/106668203954418.htm | title=It's Bob the Answer Man | accessdate=October 4, 2007 | last=Rozakis | first=Bob | date=October 20, 2003 | publisher=Silver Bullet Comics}}</ref> The series was written by [[Marv Wolfman]] and illustrated by [[George Pérez]] (pencils/layouts),<ref>{{cite book|last=Manning|first= Matthew K.|last2=Dolan|first2=Hannah, ed.|chapter= 1980s|title = DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle|publisher=[[Dorling Kindersley]] |year=2010 |isbn= 978-0-7566-6742-9 |page= 213 |quote = Comics didn't get any bigger than this. ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' was a landmark limited series that redefined a universe. It was a twelve-issue maxiseries starring nearly every character in DC Comics fifty-year history and written and drawn by two of the industry's biggest name creative talents - writer Marv Wolfman and artist George Pérez.}}</ref> along with [[Mike DeCarlo]], [[Dick Giordano]], and [[Jerry Ordway]] (who shared inking/embellishing chores). The series removed the concept of the [[Multiverse (DC Comics)|Multiverse]] in the fictional [[DC Universe]], and depicted the deaths of such long-standing [[superhero]]es as [[Supergirl (Kara Zor-El)|Supergirl]] and the [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Barry Allen]] incarnation of the [[Flash (comics)|Flash]]. As such, it is one of the most important events in the DC Universe, and continuity in the DCU is typically divided into pre-Crisis and post-Crisis periods. |
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The Summoning |
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The title of the series was inspired by earlier crossover stories involving the multiple parallel Earths of the Multiverse, such as "[[Crisis on Earth-Two]]" and "[[Crisis (DC Comics)#"Crisis on Earth-Three!"|Crisis on Earth-Three]]", but instead of lasting two to five issues and involving members from many superhero teams from many parallel worlds, it involved virtually every significant character from every [[Parallel universe (fiction)|parallel universe]] in DC's history. It in turn inspired the titles of four subsequent DC crossover series: ''[[Zero Hour: Crisis in Time]]!'' (1994), ''[[Identity Crisis (DC Comics)|Identity Crisis]]'' (2004), ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'' (2005–2006), and ''[[Final Crisis]]'' (2008). |
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At the beginning of time, the Big Bang occurred, forming the universe. However, where there should have been one universe, there were many, each one a replication of the first, with their own separate histories. |
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At the present time, a great white wall of pure anti-matter energy stretches out across the cosmos. It pervades the Multiverse, consuming entire galaxies. On an unknown parallel world, a being named Pariah arrives. He is forced to witness the death of multiple worlds in multiple dimensions He disappears as he is transported to the parallel world known as Earth-Three. On that world, the Crime Syndicate, in a rare demonstration of heroism, strives to save their beleaguered planet. However, even their combined might cannot prevent their deaths at the anti-matter wall. |
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==Overview== |
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The planet's sole hero, Alexander Luthor, retreats to his home where his wife, Lois, holds their infant son, Alexander Jr., in her arms. Luthor places his son into an experimental rocket capsule and launches him from the planet Earth. As Earth-Three dies, Alexander's capsule pierces the vibrational wall separating dimensions. It lands on the abandoned Justice League Satellite orbiting Earth-One. |
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===Continuity issues=== |
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Prior to ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'', DC publications were notorious for continuity problems.<ref>''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #1. "Crisis Beginnings" by Marv Wolfman.</ref> No character's back story within the comic books was entirely self-consistent and reliable. For example, DC's oldest superhero character, [[Superman]], the lone survivor of the destroyed planet [[Krypton]], originally could not fly, and his powers came from having evolved on a planet with stronger [[gravitation|gravity]] than Earth's. Soon, he was depicted as able to fly and his powers were explained as coming from our solar system's yellow sun. A more complex origin story was invented. In time, his career was altered to include early exploits as [[Superboy]]. More survivors of Krypton were introduced, including [[Supergirl (Kara Zor-El)|Supergirl]], a dog named [[Krypto]], the inhabitants of the bottled city of [[Kandor]], and others. This further watered down the original concept: that the character was the sole survivor of his planet's destruction. |
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On board another satellite, a being called the Monitor summons his assistant Lyla (also known as Harbinger). He instructs her to travel to various alternate Earths and bring together a select group of super-powered beings. Harbinger uses her power to create replicant versions of herself and sends them to the various Earths. The Monitor, meanwhile, prepares to gather Alexander Luthor, Jr.’s space capsule. |
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Issues also arose regarding the ages of characters. [[Batman]], an Earth-born human without superpowers, retained his youth and vitality well into the 1980s despite having been an active hero during [[World War II]]. His sidekick, [[Robin (comics)|Robin]], took over 30 years in real time to graduate from high school. |
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The first of Harbinger's replicants travels to Earth-One and gathers King Solivar from Gorilla City. Another travels to Earth of the 30th century and summons Dawnstar of the Legion of Super-Heroes to her cause. A third replicant journeys to Earth-Two of the year 1942 to enlist the aid of Firebrand. One version gathers the Blue Beetle from the Chicago of Earth-Four. Another version of Harbinger collects the Psycho-Pirate from Earth-Two's present timeline. She brings him to Earth-One, where they encounter Firestorm and Killer Frost. The Psycho-Pirate uses his Medusa Mask to make Killer Frost fall in love with Firestorm. Another replicant travels to Pre-Cataclysmic Atlantis to find Arion the Sorcerer. However, a Shadow Demon attacks her and takes possession of Harbinger. The possessed replicant finds Arion and brings him back to the Monitor's satellite. |
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Characters such as the [[Flash (comics)|Flash]], the [[Atom (comics)|Atom]], and [[Green Lantern]] often featured conflicting story lines. Origins and even powers differed between tales, depending on the writers. |
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When they arrive, they find a room full of heroes and villains from alternate realities. Before the assemblage has a chance to acclimate itself to their foreign environment, a horde of Shadow Demons attacks them. They fight them off until the Monitor arrives. He casts a brilliant burst of light, which dispels the shadows. Introducing himself, he tells the impatient gathering that the Multiverse may soon be destroyed. |
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===Multiverse fixes=== |
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Little attempt was made at first to offer in-universe explanations of the conflicts. Problems of this sort began to be addressed in the 1961 story "[[Flash of Two Worlds]]", which featured a meeting between Barry Allen, the then-currently published version of the Flash, and [[Jay Garrick]], the version originally published by the company. The meeting was made possible by the introduction of the idea of two parallel worlds: [[List of DC Multiverse worlds|Earth-One]], the contemporary DC Universe which had been depicted since the advent of the [[Silver Age of Comic Books|Silver Age]]; and [[Earth-Two]], the parallel world where the [[Golden Age of Comic Books|Golden Age]] events took place, and where the heroes who were active during that period had aged more or less realistically since that time. |
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Time and Time Again! |
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This idea was eventually expanded into the concept of a [[multiverse]], including such worlds as [[Earth-Three]], which was an "opposite" world where heroes were villains and historical events happened in reverse of how they occurred in real life (e.g., [[President of the United States|President]] [[John Wilkes Booth]] being assassinated by an actor named [[Abraham Lincoln]]), and [[Earth Prime]], which was ostensibly the "real world" and used to explain how real-life DC staffers (such as [[Julius Schwartz]]) could occasionally appear in comics stories, and so forth. If something happened outside current continuity (such as the so-called "Imaginary Stories" that were a staple of DC's Silver Age publications), it was explained away as happening on a parallel world, a premise not dissimilar to the company's current ''[[Elseworlds]]'' imprint.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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The Dawn of Man |
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Anthro the Cave-Boy leads a herd of mammoths away from the village of the Bear Clan tribe. After falling from atop one of the great beasts, he peers through the underbrush where he sees an image of a great futuristic city. He shakes his head and when he looks again, the image is gone. In addition, the herd of mammoths that he had corralled is likewise missing. |
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30th Century Earth |
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As the volume of published work within the [[DC Universe]] became larger and as the original stories of characters receded in time, the task of reconciling plot points grew. The burden of keeping track of differing versions of a variety of characters proved taxing for DC's writers.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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Members of the Legion of Super-Heroes discover the displaced mammoths stampeding through Plaza Square in Metropolis. Colossal Boy attempts to scoop them up into his giant arms, but they suddenly disappear. |
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Earth One – July 1985 |
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===''Crisis'' resolution=== |
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In Gotham City, the Joker murders film mogul, Harold J. Standish. Batman crashes through the window and attempts to disarm the villain, but the Joker keeps him at bay with an adhesive-shooting flower. Suddenly, a distraught image of the Flash appears before them, warning about the end of the world. Batman tries to talk to the Flash, but he disintegrates before his eyes. |
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''Crisis'' was originally conceived to be a celebration of DC's 50th anniversary; however, [[Marv Wolfman]] and [[Len Wein]] saw it as a chance to clean up DC's rather convoluted continuity (which was thought to have put many new readers off buying DC titles) that had built up over time. The term "Crisis" was a word used frequently in DC Comics of the time, as it denoted an inter-dimensional crossover, such as the yearly [[Justice League]]/[[Justice Society of America|Justice Society]] crossovers that began with "[[Crisis on Earth-One]]".{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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On board the Monitor’s satellite, the Monitor warns his assemblage that a wave of antimatter energy is sweeping through the Multiverse, consuming entire realities. He has established certain devices throughout the various realities designed to halt the anti-matter wall. He requires the heroes to travel to each reality and activate each of the devices. Nobody truly trusts the Monitor, but they realize that they have little choice but to heed his warnings. |
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Wolfman came up with an idea that would reach across the entirety of the DC Universe and its half-century of history. The groundwork for ''Crisis'' was laid over the year preceding its publication as one of the chief characters of the series, the [[Monitor (comics)|Monitor]], was introduced into various comics. In these original appearances, the Monitor was portrayed as a shadowy figure and a potential villain. His face was never shown, perhaps to imply that he might be an established DC villain, and his most common appearance was as a source of technology or information for various villains in the DC Universe.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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Superman of Earth-Two, King Solovar and Dawnstar travel to Earth-AD, the world of Kamandi. They find the adventurer, Kamandi, scaling the side of an immense golden tower. The heroes realize that this is of the devices that the Monitor spoke of. A horde of Shadow Demons arrives to sabotage the tower, but the heroes manage to drive them away. |
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According to writer [[Steve Gerber]], ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' "got virtually no promotion. I mean, it's hard to think about that now, because of the reaction to the book and the amount of coverage it's gotten in the fanzines - but if you try to think back, how many handouts did you see? How many posters did you see in people's windows? How much information was really distributed to the press and how much was gotten just by individual reporters going to Marv Wolfman and [''Crisis'' artist] [[George Pérez]]?"<ref>{{cite news | author = Zimmerman, Dwight Jon | date = September 1986 | title = Steve Gerber (part 2) | work = [[Comics Interview]] | issue = 38 | pages = 6–19 | publisher = [[Fictioneer Books]]}}</ref> Despite this, the series was highly successful from a marketing standpoint, generating renewed interest in the company's books, enticing readers with the [[tagline]] that "the DC Universe will never be the same." Along with [[Alan Moore]]'s ''[[Watchmen]]'' and [[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]'s ''[[Batman: The Dark Knight Returns]]'', it contributed to the commercial and creative revitalization of DC Comics after years of being dominated in the market by rival publisher [[Marvel Comics]].{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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Arion, Obsidian and the Psycho-Pirate arrive in ancient Atlantis. Suddenly, Pariah arrives, but quickly falls sway to the Psycho-Pirate’s emotion manipulation. Arion turns his power against the Psycho-Pirate and frees Pariah of his influence. Psycho-Pirate suddenly disappears and rematerializes in a darkened room. A deep voice bellows forth to him, commanding him to follow his every order. Psycho-Pirate, terrified by this mysterious individual, meekly complies. |
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''Crisis'' also helped popularize the formula of the line-wide "[[Fictional crossover|crossover]]" comic book series, a concept deployed previously in Marvel's ''[[Contest of Champions]]'' (1983) and ''[[Secret Wars]]'' (1984). Since 1985, superhero publishers such as DC and Marvel have had frequent "summer crossover" series designed to tie many of their comic book titles together under a single storyline.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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Meanwhile, back on the Monitor's satellite, the Monitor asks Harbinger to retrieve Alexander Luthor from his nursery. Harbinger is shocked to discover that Alex, formerly an infant, is now the age of a young child. Suddenly, the dark influence of the Shadow Demon takes control of her, commanding her to betray the Monitor. |
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==Plot summary== |
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[[File:Antimonitorcoie.png|right|195px|thumb|The Anti-Monitor fights heroes from [[Multiverse (DC Comics)|eight Earths]]. Cover to ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #12. Art by [[George Pérez]].]] |
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The story introduces readers to two near-[[Omnipotence|omnipotent]] beings, the good [[Monitor (comics)|Monitor]] and the evil [[Anti-Monitor]], who had been created as a result of the same experiment that created the [[Multiverse (DC Comics)|Multiverse]]. The Monitor made cameo appearances in various DC comic book series for two years preceding the publication of the series. At first, he appears to be a new [[supervillain]], but with the onset of the Crisis, he is revealed to be working on a desperate plan to save the entire Multiverse from destruction at the hands of the Anti-Monitor. The ''Crisis'' series depicts the efforts of DC Comics' superheroes to stop the Anti-Monitor's plan to reign supreme as the ultimate ruler of all. Under the initial guidance of the Monitor, a select group of heroes is assigned to protect massive "tuning forks" designed to merge the surviving Earths into one that could be protected from the [[antimatter]] that has already annihilated untold numbers of alternate Earths. Eventually, the conflict grows and nearly every DC hero becomes involved in the battle. |
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Oblivion Upon Us |
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The Monitor is murdered by his own assistant, [[Harbinger (DC Comics)|Harbinger]], while one of her duplicates is temporarily possessed by one of the Anti-Monitor's "shadow demons." However, he expects the attack and allows it to happen so that his death will release enough energy to project the last five parallel Earths (the homes of the known [[DC Universe]]) into a temporary Limbo universe. In-between, the Anti-Monitor recruits Psycho-Pirate to his cause, (who at the time had not yet been entered into the Limbo universe following the absorption of Earths 1 and 2 into the Limbo universe), and even temporarily infuses part of his power into him to control the other three Earths (4, S, and X). This fails when all five Earths are now inside the Limbo universe. Harbinger then recruits a group of those five remaining Earths' heroes to lead an assault on the Anti-Monitor in the antimatter universe under her guidance, using Alex Luthor's antimatter powers to open a portal between the Limbo and Antimatter universes [[Alexander Luthor, Jr.]], and [[Pariah (comics)|Pariah]] acting as the guide to track down the Anti-Monitor at his fortress, where he was using a converter powered by stellar energy to force the last 5 earths together, thereby destroying them once and for all (given he learned what the Monitor had done to save those worlds and their respective universes). The heroes triumph by destroying the converter, and he's forced to retreat,after a pitched battle with Supergirl leaves him desperately wounded and [[Supergirl (Kara Zor-El)|Supergirl]] dying minutes later. |
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Harbinger walks into the Monitor's sanctum as he continues testing young Alexander Luthor. Luthor is aging at an accelerated rate, and is now the physical age of an adolescent boy. The Monitor discovers he is composed of both positive matter and anti-matter, and believes that this composite life form may hold the key towards stopping the Crisis. Harbinger, still under the influence of a dark, mysterious entity, leaves the Monitor's satellite and reports to her new master. |
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On Earth-One in the 30th century, the Flash races through the streets desperately attempting to halt a series of natural disasters. He sees a wave of pure antimatter spreading outwards in the distance. He vibrates his molecules at super-speed, sending himself backwards through time. |
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This lull in the war provides some breathing room for the heroes but the various supervillains join forces under [[Brainiac (comics)|Brainiac]] who murders Alexei Luthor of Earth-Two for trying to take leadership citing the villains don't need two Luthors to lead them since he had also recruited the Earth-One Lex Luthor to his cause as well as co-leader to conquer the Earths, the [[Flash (comics)|Flash]] ([[Flash (Barry Allen)|Barry Allen]]) in the interim dies stopping the Anti-Monitor's backup scheme of destruction by using an antimatter cannon to penetrate the Limbo universe and destroy the surviving five Earths now partially merged by using his speed powers to cause the energy to compact inside thereby destroying the cannon. Furious but damaged yet again the Anti-Monitor swears to stop the heroes at the dawn of time. The [[Spectre (comics)|Spectre]] then halts the hero/villain conflict warning that the Anti-Monitor is traveling to the beginning of time to prevent the Multiverse's creation, and the heroes and villains join forces in response with the heroes traveling to stop the Anti-Monitor and the villains traveling to the planet [[Oa]] in antiquity to prevent the renegade scientist [[Krona (comics)|Krona]] from performing a historic experiment that would allow the Anti-Monitor to succeed in his efforts. The premise is that the past may be changed only by going to the beginning of time. |
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In the 20th century, the antimatter wave has reached Earth-One and it slowly begins to dissolve everything in its path. The Teen Titans team up with the Outsiders to save as many citizens of New York as possible. Batman and Superman arrive as well to lend a hand. Suddenly, Batman sees the Flash appear before his eyes. However, before the Flash can respond, he screams in pain and terror as he is pulled into another dimension and disappears. |
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The villains fail, and Krona proceeds with his experiment, as the heroes are captured by the Anti-Monitor (lying in wait as Alex Luthor opens the portal between the Positive and Anti-Matter universes), with their energies used so that Krona would see his hand instead, thereby insuring victory for the Anti-Monitor (given he expended much of his energy to travel that far back in time), as his universe would reign supreme. However, the Spectre (supported by Earths' magically powered heroes in the Positive Universe), battles with the Anti-Monitor, thereby creating an energy overload that shatters space and time. A single universe is created and all the superheroes return to a present-day reality where the various elements of the five Earths were fused into one single Earth, with no one except the people present at the dawn of time remembering the original reality.It is never clear whether the multiverse was merged at the instant the heroes went back in time, or whether the multiverse never existed at all. |
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In outer space, Brainiac's brain-ship surveys the progress of the anti-matter wave. He logically deduces that in order to preserve his own life, he must help to save the Multiverse. Brainiac flies off to find his old partner, Lex Luthor. |
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The now gigantic Anti-Monitor attacks one last time, transporting Earth to the Anti-Matter universe, and summons a massive horde of shadow demons. However, he falls to a carefully planned counter-attack, culminating in a battle with [[Superman (Earth-Two)|Kal-L]] (the Earth-Two Superman), [[Alexander Luthor, Jr.|Alexander Luthor]] of Earth-Three, and [[Superboy-Prime|Superboy]] of Earth-prime, with some unexpected last-second help from the [[New Gods]]' adversary, [[Darkseid]]. The Anti-Monitor is increasingly damaged & mangled in this final battle, and is finally just a flaming head. As the Anti-Monitor crashes into a star and dies, Alex sends himself, Earth-Two Superman, Earth-Two [[Lois Lane]], and Earth-Prime Superboy into a paradise reality. |
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Meanwhile, Blue Beetle, Doctor Polaris and Geo-Force arrive in Markovia in the spring of 1944. Markovia is currently under Nazi occupation and the Nazis attempt to secure the Monitor’s energy tower. The American military forces known as Easy Company, the Losers and the Haunted Tank are present as well. While the heroes engage the Nazis, they must also contend with a horde of Shadow Demons. The Shadow Demons succeed in killing several war-time soldiers, including Easy Company's Flower and the Losers; Johnny Cloud, Captain Storm, Gunner, and Sarge. On Earth-AD, Superman-Two, Dawnstar, Solovar and Kamandi stand by helplessly as they watch the sky turn the color of blood and lightning storms erupt all around them. Solovar, finally succumbing to his recent injuries, dies in Kamandi's arms. |
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The aftermath of the Crisis plays out a few pages later, including Wally West becoming the new Flash. The final page shows the [[Psycho-Pirate]], who was now imprisoned in [[Arkham Asylum]], talking to himself in a [[monologue]]: |
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Meanwhile, Cyborg, Green Lantern, Psimon and Firebrand materialize in the town of Coyote, Texas in the year 1879. They meet up with several Southwestern heroes including Nighthawk, Scalphunter, Bat Lash, Johnny Thunder and Jonah Hex. The two disparate groups join forces and locate another one of the Monitor’s towers. |
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{{Cquote|I'm the only one left who remembers the Infinite Earths. You see, I know the truth. I remember all that happened, and I'm not going to forget. Worlds lived, worlds died. Nothing will ever be the same. But those were great days for me... I had a good friend in the good old days, really. He was the Anti-Monitor. He was going to give me a world to rule. Now he's gone, too. But that's okay with me. You see, I like to remember the past because those were better times than now. I mean, I'd rather live in the past than today, wouldn't you? I mean, nothing's ever certain anymore. Nothing's ever predictable like it used to be. These days... y-you just never know who's going to die... and who's going to live.|||[[Psycho Pirate]]|''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #12. p. 42.}} |
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However, the destructive wave of antimatter that the Monitor warned of strikes the Earth at all time periods simultaneously. While the other heroes fight against more Shadow Demons, Nighthawk is consumed by the anti-matter wave. |
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===Possible alternative ending=== |
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According to George Pérez in a ''[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]]'' magazine interview in 1994, [[Chris Claremont]] suggested that Superman of Earth-One dies in the final battle with the Anti-Monitor in issue #12. After the Anti-Monitor was destroyed for good, Kal-L from Earth-Two realizes that he is now alone, without his Earth, without his Lois, and now the new single Earth is without a Superman. Then he remarks, "Don't need this anymore," and brushes the white dye off his hair and other make-up that he apparently used to make himself look aged. The other heroes are surprised by this and Kal-L simply explains that he had stopped aging when he reached the peak of his powers. He returns with the other heroes to the new post-Crisis Earth, taking the place of the Earth-One Superman. |
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Across time in the 30th century, the Legion of Super-Heroes shares a similar tragedy. While saving innocent civilians in England, Kid Psycho falls prey to the white energy wall. |
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If this idea had been used, then ''[[The Man of Steel (comics)|The Man of Steel]]'' would have marked the return of the "Original Super-Hero", as Kal-L (now switched to Kal-El) begins his life on the post-Crisis Earth, which is similar to his old life, but with distinct differences. Despite this "culture shock," Kal-L endures and is given a new lease on life by being deposited back to the early days of the modern heroic age of the post-Crisis Earth.<ref>{{Cite web | first=Alan | last=Kistler | url=http://www.monitorduty.com/2006/07/kistler-presents-alternate-crisis-ending/ | title=Kistler Presents: Alternate ''Crisis'' ending? | work=Monitor Duty | date=July 20, 2006 | accessdate=June 17, 2010}}</ref> However, this was discarded when the [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]] version of ''The Man of Steel'' was planned. |
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Back on the Monitor's satellite, Harbinger returns. Consumed by the influence of her new master, she releases a blast of energy at the Monitor. |
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===Animal Man (of Grant Morrison)=== |
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Roger Hayden ([[Psycho-Pirate]]) shows up again in [[Grant Morrison]]'s run on ''[[Animal Man]]'', imprisoned in Arkham Asylum. He ends up releasing characters destroyed during the Crisis back into the world. Many of these characters come to realize that they are just characters in a comic book. After an intervention by Animal Man, Hayden, seemingly happy, fades away into nothingness due to the strain from releasing all the forgotten characters, removing him from reality and heading into [[Limbo (DC Comics)|Limbo]], where DC characters go when not being written about. James Highwater, a [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] physicist, is left to wear the Medusa Mask and keep the forgotten worlds contained. The other staff members come to accept Highwater as a patient, stymied by the fact that the mask had bonded to his face and required Highwater to be fed introvenously. |
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And Thus Shall the World Die |
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Later writers (most notably John Ostrander in Suicide Squad-themed crossover "The Janus Directive") would reveal that Highwater would soon lose the Medusa Mask under mysterious circumstances. Psycho Pirate would not be seen again until after the events of Zero Hour, with his memories of the Crisis apparently erased by the timeline changes made during Zero Hour. However, his memories of the multiple earths would be restored in Joker's Last Laugh and would be a main plot point in Infinity Crisis. |
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As Supergirl joins a despondent Batgirl on top of a city building on Earth-One, trying to encourage her before she is called to rescue a plane that falls apart approaching the anti-matter wave, Pariah arrives on Earth-Six where he confronts the royal superhero family of Lord Volt, Lady Quark, and Princess Fern as the antimatter wave destroys their world as well. Lady Quark watches helplessly as both her husband and daughter are consumed in the wave while Pariah transports her safely out of the universe. |
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Meanwhile, the Monitor prepares to create a new hero to help him in his quest. By firing an ion-based energy ray into an unstable star in the Vegan system in the Earth-One universe, he causes a powerful flare of solar energy to travel to Earth. It reaches the observatory of Dr. Kimiyo Hoshi, who berates her staff as she uses the telescope to observe the destructive phenomenon present. She screams as the flare strikes her and then mysteriously transports her out of the lab, leaving her fellow workers and her father wondering what happened to her. |
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===Official and Unofficial Tie-in issues: Pre-Crisis=== |
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* ''[[Action Comics]]'' #560 & #564 |
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* ''[[All-Star Squadron]]'' #40 |
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* ''[[Amethyst, Princess of Gem World|Amethyst]]'' (vol. 2) #2 |
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* ''[[Batman (comic book)|Batman]]'' #384 |
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* ''[[Outsiders (comics)|Batman and the Outsiders]]'' (vol. 1) #14-15 |
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* ''[[Blue Devil]]'' #5 |
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* ''[[DC Comics Presents]]'' #76 & #78 |
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* ''[[Detective Comics]]'' #551 |
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* ''[[The Flash (comic book)|The Flash]]'' #338-339 |
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* ''[[Firestorm (comics)|The Fury of Firestorm]]'' #28 |
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* ''[[GI Combat]]'' #274-275 |
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* ''[[Green Lantern (comic book)|Green Lantern]]'' (vol. 2) #173, #176 & #178 |
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* ''[[Infinity, Inc.]]'' #8 |
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* ''[[Jonah Hex]]'' #90 |
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* ''[[Justice League|Justice League of America]]'' #232 & #234 |
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* ''[[The New Teen Titans]]'' #21 & Annual #2<br>Issue #21 (July 1982) is the first appearance of the Monitor. |
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* ''[[Swamp Thing (comic book)|Swamp Thing]]'' #30-31 |
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* ''[[Superman (comic book)|Superman]]'' #402-403 |
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* [[List of Legion of Super-Heroes publications|Tales of The Legion of Super-Heroes]]'' #317, #319-320 |
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* ''[[Tales of The Teen Titans]]'' #47 & #58 |
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* ''[[Vigilante (comics)|Vigilante]]'' #14 |
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* ''[[Warlord (comics)|Warlord]]'' #91 |
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* ''[[Publication history of Wonder Woman|Wonder Woman]]'' #321 & #323 |
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* ''[[World's Finest Comics]]'' #311 & #314<br>Issue #314 (April 1985) The last Pre-Crisis and first Crisis story arc. |
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In the dark place where the Psycho-Pirate is taken prisoner, the shadowy figure watches on the screen the Red Tornado in action and uses his power to teleport him to the same place. |
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===Official and Unofficial Tie-in issues: Crisis=== |
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* ''[[All-Star Squadron]]'' #50-56 |
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* ''[[Amethyst, Princess of Gem World|Amethyst]]'' (vol. 2) #13 |
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* ''[[Batman (comic book)|Batman]]'' #389-391<br>Issues #389-391 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Blue Devil]]'' #17-19<br>Issue #19 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[DC Comics Presents]]'' #78, #86-88, #94-95<br>Issues #78, #94-95 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Detective Comics]]'' #556-558<br>Issues #556-558 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Firestorm (comics)|The Fury of Firestorm]]'' #41-42 |
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* ''[[Green Lantern (comic book)|Green Lantern]]'' (vol. 2) #194-198<br>Issues #196-197 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Infinity, Inc.]]'' #18-25, Annual #1<br>Issue #25 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Justice League|Justice League of America]]'' #244-245, Annual #3 |
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* ''[[List of Legion of Super-Heroes publications|Legion of Super-Heroes]]'' (vol. 3) #16, #18 & Annual #1<br>Issue #16 and Annual #1 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Losers (comics)|Losers]] Special'' #1 (note:first official post-Crisis story) |
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* ''[[Teen Titans|The New Teen Titans]]'' (vol. 2) #13-14 |
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* ''[[Omega Men|The Omega Men]]'' #31, #33<br>Issue #33 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Superman (comic book)|Superman]]'' #413-415<br>Issue #413 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Swamp Thing (comic book)|Swamp Thing]]'' (vol. 2) #44, #46<br>Issue #44 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Vigilante (comics)|Vigilante]]'' #22<br>Issue #22 Not bannered as a Crisis Crossover. |
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* ''[[Publication history of Wonder Woman|Wonder Woman]]'' #327-329 |
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On Earth-Two in the time of Camelot, Firestorm and Killer Frost (still under the love thrall of Psycho-Pirate) get help from the Shining Knight to protect the cosmic tuning fork planted there in that time period, as Vandal Savage watches from a window. The three heroes engage the Shadow Demons in battle, but it is all for naught as they merge and form a giant Shadow Demon. This also happens in the other time periods that the cosmic tuning forks and the Shadow Demons appear. |
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===Tie-in issues: Post-Crisis=== |
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* ''[[All-Star Squadron]]'' #58-60 |
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* ''[[Green Lantern (comic book)|Green Lantern]]'' (vol. 2) #199-200 |
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* ''[[Infinity, Inc.]]'' #27, #30 |
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* ''[[Justice League|Justice League of America]]'' #246 |
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* ''[[Last Days of The Justice Society]] Special'' #1 |
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* ''[[The Legend of Wonder Woman]]'' #1-4 |
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In the present time of Earth-One in Metropolis, the superheroes see yet another cosmic tuning fork appear, though this time with a female in a costume similar to that of Dr. Light. She tries to warn the heroes approaching her to stay away from the tower, and blasts them away with a burst of light. Katana, who understands Japanese, realizes that this Dr. Light is not their enemy, but an ally. Superman, who is able to converse in Japanese, tells Dr. Light that he knows the situation they are in and they only want to help. |
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==Post-''Crisis''== |
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Because of the extensive and substantial changes that ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' implemented on many titles published by DC Comics, the series became a defining and critical moment in [[DC Comics]]' long-standing continuity. Characters and other elements established before the series, especially those eliminated by it, were referred to as pre-''Crisis'', while revised ones were considered post-''Crisis''. As a result, the series and its events eventually became known simply as "The Crisis", an informal title that would persist among fans, readers, and even the DC editorial staff, for almost 20 years. |
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While on board the satellite, the Monitor watches the heroes valiantly but vainly try to protect the cosmic tuning forks, as Pariah emerges to find that the Monitor was expecting him. He reveals to Pariah that he was responsible for his survival when he should have died for his deeds, but before he could say anything more, Harbinger appears, obviously not in control of herself. She strikes the Monitor with a powerful blast that sends him hurtling down platforms until he finally lands dead. Pariah mourns as he realizes that with the death of the Monitor came the death of all hope. |
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However, with the advent of the 2005–2006 mini-series ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', another continuity-altering storyline, pre- or post-''Crisis'' alone is no longer a definitive identifier; it is now necessary to make clear which Crisis one is referring to. Recent terms have been adopted by both fans and [[DC Comics]] when referring to anything after ''Infinite Crisis'', such as "post-''Infinite Crisis''", "[[One Year Later]]", or simply "New Earth". The terms "post-''CIE''," referring to ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'', and "post-''IC''," referring to ''Infinite Crisis'', have also been used to avoid confusion between the two storylines. |
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At that moment, the heroes of both Earths One and Two can only watch as their worlds, consumed by anti-matter, fade into nothingness. |
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''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' was used by DC as an opportunity to wipe much of its slate clean and make major changes to many of their major revenue-generating comic book series. [[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]'s revamp of Batman with ''[[Batman: Year One]]'', [[George Pérez]]'s relaunching of [[Wonder Woman]] in ''[[Gods and Mortals]]'', and [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]]'s [[reboot (fiction)|reboot]] of Superman in ''[[The Man of Steel (comics)|The Man of Steel]]'' all took place shortly following ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'', and changed substantial elements of the characters' backstories. The ''[[Green Lantern]]'' title was also changed to ''[[Green Lantern Corps]]'', chronicling the adventures of a group of Green Lanterns led by Hal Jordan and stationed on Earth. |
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Worlds in Limbo |
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Several other titles which were not significantly [[retcon]]ned were taken in very different directions following ''Crisis on Infinite Earths''. However, to give readers breathing room, these revamps were delayed for a year so that they could be tied into DC's next "big event" storyline, "[[Legends (comics)|Legends]]". ''[[Flash (comics)|The Flash]]'' was relaunched starring a younger main character, the previous Flash's sidekick, Kid Flash ([[Wally West]]). The ''[[Justice League|Justice League of America]]'' title was canceled, to be replaced by a new series entitled simply ''[[Justice League International|Justice League]]'', featuring a new cast drawn from what had been different universes in DC's pre-Crisis multiverse. A new [[Suicide Squad]] title was launched, and [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|Captain Marvel]] was given his own new mini-series to establish his new post-Crisis origin. |
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In the Antimatter Universe, a dark, malevolent force addresses his new playthings, Psycho-Pirate, the Flash and Red Tornado. He has Psycho-Pirate use his emotion-controlling abilities to keep the Flash in line, while also promising that he will soon have his own worlds to rule. |
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On the Monitor's satellite, Harbinger regains control of her mind, and realizes what she has just done - she has just killed the Monitor. Pariah is present, and tries to get answers from her, but Harbinger has no memory of the attack. Suddenly, a view screen activates and a pre-recorded image of the Monitor addresses both of them. He tells them that he knew of his eventual demise at Harbinger's hands, and bears her no ill will. To safeguard the remaining universes, he turned his body into an energy conduit. Upon his death, the Monitor's life essence shunted Earth-One and Earth-Two into a Netherworld, keeping them safe from his adversary's attack - at least for now. However, in his haste to save them, all time has become one. Alexander Luthor enters the chamber and hears the last of the Monitor's speech. |
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==Acknowledgment of the Crisis== |
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Since ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' created a new, singular universe with a new back-history, the Crisis event itself (as told in the limited series) is still part of it, with various "revised" DC Universe characters often referencing a past event called "Crisis". In this history, the heroes opposed the Anti-Monitor, who sought to destroy the (single) positive-matter universe in favor of his anti-matter universe. Supergirl did not die as she did not exist in this new universe, but [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Barry Allen]] indeed sacrificed his life to save the universe. What is not known by the heroes is that there once existed a multiverse, and that's what they saved, instead believing they saved their single universe from destruction, given their memories from the dawn of time battle in Crisis #10 had been subsequently erased over time.<ref name="soa2">{{cite book | title=Secret Origins Annual #2 | author=Fleming, Robert Loren; Infantino, Carmine | url=http://www.comics.org/issue/43837/#244599 | chapter=Mystery of the Human Thunderbolt | year=1988}}</ref> |
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On Earth-One, varying timelines begins to intermingle with one another. Dinosaurs and World War I era bi-planes exist side by side with modern day Metropolis skyscrapers, and strange vessels from the far-flung future. Amazingly, Earth's populace remains relatively calm - another side-effect of the Monitor's influence. |
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Although the characters who were present at the epic battle at the dawn of time (''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #10, "Death at the Dawn of Time") — [[Psycho-Pirate]], [[Lady Quark]], [[Harbinger (DC Comics)|Harbinger]], and [[Pariah (comics)|Pariah]] — were initially treated as exceptions, this idea did not stick, given both Lady Quark and Pariah's worlds actually existed in the single universe, albeit differently, and both were destroyed during the single universe "Crisis". There have been occasional references to the event. A 2002 storyline in the ''[[Supergirl]]'' comic book saw the original pre-Crisis Supergirl landing on post-Crisis Earth, for example, and established that the [[Spectre (comics)|Spectre]], being able to see across dimensions and timelines, is aware that the Crisis occurred. In addition, [[Grant Morrison]]'s run on ''[[Animal Man]]'', heralded for its deconstruction of the concept of the comic book, initiated a "[[Crisis (DC Comics)#"A second Crisis"|Second Crisis]]" in which characters such as the original [[Crime Syndicate of America]] from Earth-Three came back to life thanks to the Medusa Mask owned by the Psycho-Pirate, who remembered the original Crisis. [[Per Degaton]] is aware of the pre-Crisis timeline, as he told the JSAs of the present and of 1951 that he would retcon them out of existence the same way the [[Huntress (comics)|Huntress]] of Earth-Two was. With the [[Fourth World (comics)|Fourth World]] existing outside the Multiverse proper, Darkseid has also acknowledged the events of the Crisis. Members of the [[Green Lantern Corps]] were also aware of the Crisis, even though none participated in the battle at the beginning of time. Corps member [[Ch'p]], the only [[Earth-One]] character to have his timeline completely erased by the Crisis, was nonetheless recognized by his fellow Green Lanterns.<ref>''The Green Lantern Corps'' #201</ref> [[John Constantine]] is also aware of the Crisis, as seen in ''[[Swamp Thing]]'' (vol. 2) #70. In the ''[[Planetary (comics)|Planetary]]'' special ''Planetary/Batman: Night on Earth'', it was implied that [[Elijah Snow]] had somehow temporarily left the [[Wildstorm]] universe to witness the Crisis. Finally, during the ''[[Joker: Last Laugh]]'' crossover, the Joker refers to the lack of "anti-matter auroras" and "blood-red skies" during his rampage, declaring that "Every other crisis gets funky mood lighting!" |
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Back on the Monitor's satellite, Alex, Pariah and Harbinger summon together a massive congregation of heroes from Earth-One and Earth-Two. They explain the present situation, but also explain that in order for things to correct themselves, the Multiverse must be folded back upon itself and become a single universe once again, or else all worlds will be destroyed. |
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===Deaths during ''Crisis''=== |
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[[File:crisis7.jpg|thumb|The death of [[Supergirl]]. Art by [[George Pérez]].]] |
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The following DC characters were explicitly shown to have died during ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'': |
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* [[Alternative versions of Lex Luthor|Alexander Luthor, Sr.]] of Earth-3 and wife [[Lois Lane|Lois Lane Luthor]] |
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* [[Alternative versions of Lex Luthor|Alexei Luthor]] of Earth-2 |
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* [[Angle Man]] |
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* [[Anti-Monitor]] |
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* [[Aquagirl#Tula|Aquagirl]] (Tula) |
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* [[Bug-Eyed Bandit]] |
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* [[Clayface#Matt Hagen|Clayface (Matt Hagen)]] |
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* [[Crime Syndicate of America]] |
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* [[Hawk and Dove|Dove]] (Don Hall) |
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* Farmer Boy (identified as "Flower") of [[Sgt. Rock (comics)|Sgt. Rock]]'s [[Easy Company (comics)|Easy Company]] |
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* [[Flash (Barry Allen)]] |
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* [[Green Arrow]] of Earth-2 |
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* [[Huntress (Helena Wayne)|Huntress]] of Earth-2 |
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* [[Icicle (comics)#Joar Mahkent|Icicle]] (Joar Mahkent) |
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* [[Immortal Man]] |
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* The Justice Alliance of Earth-D (in ''Legends of the DC Universe: Crisis on Infinite Earths'' [1999]) |
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* [[Kid Psycho]] of the [[Legion of Super-Heroes]] |
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* [[Kole]] |
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* [[Lori Lemaris]] |
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* Lord Volt of Earth-6 |
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* [[The Losers (comics)|The Losers]] (Johnny Cloud, Gunner, Sarge, Captain Storm) (Note: in ''Losers Special'' #1, their post-Crisis deaths are attributed instead to a last stand of sorts vs. a Nazi regiment, their spirits taken away by Johnny Cloud's spiritual Native American spirits, instead of being attacked by the Anti-Monitor's Shadow Demons) |
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* [[Maaldor the Darklord]] |
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* [[Mirror Master#Sam Scudder|Mirror Master]] (Samuel Joseph Scudder) |
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* [[Monitor (comics)|Monitor]] |
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* [[Nighthawk (DC Comics)|Nighthawk]] |
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* [[Prince Ra-Man]] |
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* Princess Fern of Earth-6 |
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* [[Psimon]] |
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* [[Robin (Earth-Two)|Robin]] of Earth-2 |
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* The JLA-created [[Shaggy Man (comics)|Shaggy Man]] |
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* [[Starman (comics)|Starman]] (Prince Gavyn) |
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* [[Sunburst (comics)|Sunburst]] |
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* [[Supergirl (Kara Zor-El)|Supergirl]] of Earth-1 |
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* The [[Ten-Eyed Man]] |
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* [[Wonder Woman]] of Earth-1 (of note:her body was devolved by the Anti-Monitor's energy in his weakened state in ''Crisis'' #12, thereby reversing her to clay and her Amazon sisters' history as well to send them back to the isle of Themyscira (''Legend of Wonder Woman'' #1-4) (this laid the groundwork for George Perez' reintroduction of Wonder Woman in the post-''Crisis'' continuity). |
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On Earth-One, other heroes continue to help out amidst the confusion. Batman invites a group of heroes and villains into the Batcave for consultation. Starfire and the Legionnaire Sun Boy fly to Russia to help Red Star tackle a dinosaur. Members of the Green Lantern Corps fly to Oa to seek aid from the Guardians of the Universe, but the Guardians are swept up in an unforeseen attack. Rip Hunter and the Time Masters try to solve the mystery of the inter-connecting timelines. Wildcat saves a little girl from crumbling debris, but his legs are crushed in the process. |
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Some of the deceased characters have since reappeared: |
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* Gunner showed up alive and well in the comic ''Creature Commandos'' (albeit with cybernetic enhancements). |
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* A ''[[Hawkman]]'' issue revealed that Nighthawk is believed to have died under different circumstances, and was instead a reincarnation of the Golden Age Hawkman, post-Prince Khufu. |
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* The subsequent reboot of Superman's titles erased Lori Lemaris' death from continuity. She was reintroduced as not being wheelchair-bound, but with a more rational "leg-changing" ability, according to situations. |
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* The Crime Syndicate was brought back three times: first as [[Qward]]ians the Justice League fought years ago,<ref>''Justice League Quarterly'' #8 (Autumn 1992)</ref> then post-''Zero Hour'' as people from the Earth of the Antimatter Universe,<ref>''[[JLA: Earth 2]]''</ref> and finally as the Crime Society of America in ''52'' and ''Countdown'' (of note: the Crime Society was created more as a foe to the recreated Earth-2's JSI, and not directly related to the Crime Syndikate of the Antimatter universe)<ref> |
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{{Comic book reference|title=[[52 (comics)|52]]|issue=52|date=(May 2, 2007)|publisher=DC Comics|page=11|panel=3-4}}</ref><ref>''Countdown Presents The Search for Ray Palmer: Crime Society'' #1</ref><ref>{{cite web|url = http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=111900|title = The 52 Exit Interviews: Grant Morrison|accessdate = 2007-05-12|last = Brady|first = Matt|date = 2007-05-08|publisher = Newsarama}} the</ref><ref>[http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=11396 A QUICK CHECK-IN WITH JAMAL IGLE - NEWSARAMA]</ref><ref>[http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=124897 CCI: DC New World Order - Comic Book Resources.]</ref> |
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* James Robinson's ''Starman'' comics revealed that Prince Gavyn's spirit actually survived and bonded with [[Will Payton]], thereby creating this new Starman. |
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* [[Psimon]] was resurrected. |
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* Mark Merlin, human host of Prince Ra-Man, did not die along with him, being instead "freed" from his possession. |
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* After the events of ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'' and ''[[52 (comics)|52]]'', Earth-Two (albeit a different version) was resurrected with many of the characters that had died in ''Crisis'' alive and well on the new Earth-Two. |
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* Twenty-three years after his landmark death in the original ''Crisis'', [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Barry Allen]] returned to the DC Universe on the last page of [[Grant Morrison]]'s ''[[Final Crisis]]'' #2. |
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Meanwhile in the Anti-Matter Universe, the unseen enemy takes control of the Red Tornado and reconstructs him to do his bidding. He turns him into a force of primal energy and sets him upon the Earth. As the Red Tornado storms across the country, Earth-One and Earth-Two begin to slowly merge together. People see ghost-like astral images of people from the parallel worlds. |
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===New characters and changes=== |
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Several new characters were introduced in ''Crisis''. The Monitor's assistant, Harbinger, and scientist [[Pariah (comics)|Pariah]] played major roles in the story. Lady Quark was introduced as a survivor of one of the destroyed worlds. A new [[Doctor Light (Kimiyo Hoshi)|Doctor Light]], this time heroic and female, was introduced. The former [[Charlton Comics]] characters — notably [[Blue Beetle]] II — were introduced to the DC Universe. |
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The Flash overcomes Psycho-Pirate's control and demands to see the face of the being who abducted him. The enemy steps forward and introduces himself as the Monitor. This Monitor however, is not the same as the one who just died. Unlike the more human-looking Monitor, this one is a gruesome mechanical-looking alien with blazing red eyes and jaundiced yellow skin. |
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After the ''Crisis'', former [[Kid Flash]] [[Wally West]] took over the mantle of his predecessor, the [[Flash (comics)|Flash]]. [[Jonah Hex]] was transported to a [[Apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction|post-apocalyptic]] future, but this did not prove popular and subsequent stories brought him back to the [[American Old West|Wild West]]. The [[Justice Society of America|JSA]] member [[Wildcat (comics)|Wildcat]] was replaced by his god-daughter, [[Wildcat (Yolanda Montez)|Yolanda Montez]], and became a member of Infinity, Inc., alongside Rick Tyler [[Hourman II]] and Dr. Beth Chapel [[Dr. Midnight]]. The [[Guardians of the Universe]] departed for an unknown dimension, and the [[Green Lantern Corps]] was reorganized, with [[Hal Jordan]] leading a team of Green Lanterns based on Earth. The surviving Justice Society members departed for Limbo (alongside Wildcat Ted Grant) to stop Ragnarok from happening due to Hitler's using of the Spear of Destiny to open a link between our world and Asgard during Ragnarok. |
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3 Earths! 3 Deaths! |
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==Continuing continuity issues== |
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The new Monitor gloats that the other Monitor is dead, and now he has only his enemy's remaining energies to absorb as well as those of three remaining positive-matter universes, and the heroes on board his satellite headquarters to destroy, before ultimate power can be his. As the Flash slowly recovers, the new Monitor grants Psycho-Pirate his wish for a world to control. He makes the Psycho-Pirate see three Earths, each of them belonging to the three positive-matter universes, and causes the villain's emotion-controlling powers to increase to an incredible scale, affecting all three Earths. |
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The changes made in the wake of ''Crisis'' were not implemented consistently. The series was published over the course of a year, with ongoing series continuing simultaneously. In addition, several stories set in the previous continuity were published following the series' final issue. Initially, characters who were present at the final battle at the dawn of time remembered their original histories until their post-''Crisis'' histories were fully established, a process that sometimes required years to completely play out. Furthermore, revamped or relaunched versions of titles debuted at different times, with DC continuing to feature old versions of characters until new versions were launched, sometimes a year or more later. As a consequence, a series intended to streamline DC continuity introduced additional complexities.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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On board the earlier Monitor's satellite, the heroes try to rescue each other as it is now being ripped apart. Pariah screams as he finds himself being transported elsewhere. Alexander Luthor Jr. tries to use his powers to save the heroes on board, but Harbinger stops him from doing so and instead flies into the energy chamber where their main non-powered self is located. Just as Harbinger merges back into her original form, the satellite explodes. |
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Several characters such as [[Hawkman]], [[Donna Troy]], and [[Power Girl]] saw their origins complicated by the changes implemented by the Crisis and the various reboots of characters. The Superman line saw particular continuity issues regarding its supporting cast. In an effort to return Superman to his special status as the "last son of Krypton" DC had used the Crisis and the ''[[The Man of Steel (comics)|Man of Steel]]'' limited series to eliminate most of the Kryptonian supporting characters. For Supergirl this was not a major problem initially since the character had died in the Crisis. However, later writers would bring the character back using various explanations ranging from her being a shapeshifting alien to her being an angel. Power Girl, originally introduced as a cousin of Superman still existed however. With the mandate to reduce the number of Kryptonians in the DCU, her origin was changed to being a descendant of ancient Atlanteans who mistakenly believed herself to be Superman's cousin. Donna Troy's origin was similarly complicated by Crisis. Originally she had been an orphan who Wonder Woman raised on Paradise Island. However, Crisis had eliminated Wonder Woman from history; the character would not debut in the new DC Universe until the next year. Her origin was therefore rewritten to involve the Greek Titans. |
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Back on Earth-Two, Al Pratt takes the injured Ted Grant to his apartment to rest, trying to comfort his friend as he now feels useless in the battle. Outside his apartment, Yolanda Montez watches from a window, silently promising that Wildcat will still carry on. On Earth-One, Lex Luthor is transported from being in a cyclone via a teleportation beam to Brainiac's skull skip, where he sees his old partner in his new form, ready to conquer the universe. |
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Other inconsistencies include: |
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* ''[[Action Comics]]'' #590: The narrator recounts exactly how [[Chemo (comics)|Chemo]] is destroyed on Earth-4 by the [[Valentina Vostok|Negative Woman]] in ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #9, stating, "Weeks ago on a parallel earth that no longer exists," and goes on to specify how he survived when all the Earths merged into one single Earth at the end of the Crisis. |
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* ''Superman'' #8: Superman was referred to mistakenly as [[Superboy#The Legion's Superboy|Superboy]] (the young [[Clark Kent]] from the [[Time Trapper]]'s pocket universe) by the Legion of Super-Heroes. He recalls meeting a Superboy (Earth-Prime) during the Crisis and that he was not around long enough to make any enemies. The problem is that the Earth-Prime Superboy should not be remembered. |
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* ''Legion of Super-Heroes'' #38: During the mourning of Superboy, a statue of Supergirl is seen. The statue, like the others in the background, is made in dedication to fallen Legionnaires. The Supergirl statue would be removed by issue #51 when DC enforced her nonexistent status. |
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Some of the heroes on board the satellite find themselves on Earth-X, which they see is now being devoured by the anti-matter wave, but they also see within the wave the appearance of Harbinger, attempting to do something. They soon spot people heading toward the anti-matter wave like lemmings. Northwind flies down to stop them, but he is attacked by Uncle Sam's Freedom Fighters. The new Dr. Light uses her light powers to create a blinding barrier to keep the people from reaching the wave, but the Ray attacks her, causing her to fall into the arms of the Earth-Two Hawkman. |
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The Crisis had also been intended to eliminate the multi-verse. All stories were now supposed to be set on a unified new Earth. However, as time went on many creators found the idea of alternate universes and timelines to be too interesting to abandon. |
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Some other heroes were transported to Earth-Four, where they see the anti-matter wave devouring the Earth in the middle of a rainstorm. Azrael spots the Blue Beetle's Bug hovering overhead and tries to investigate it, but is blasted away by Captain Atom. Nightshade and Peacekeeper join the fray on the ground, along with Judo Master who assaults Katana, mistaking her for "Nazi filth". Jay Garrick prevents Thunderbolt from speeding his way into a death run with the anti-matter wave. The Question is with Blue Beetle in his Bug, wondering why they are compelled to head toward the wave. |
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==Relationship to other crises and possible nullification== |
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At the [[2008 in comics|2008]] [[New York Comic Con]], [[Dan DiDio]] described how ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' was the first of a trilogy of "Crisis" limited series that showed different stages in the development of the [[Multiverse (DC Comics)|DC Multiverse]].<ref name=nycc>{{Cite web | url=http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=154379 | title=NYCC '08: DC's (final) Final Crisis Panel | last=Ching | first=Albert | work=[[Newsarama]] | date=April 20, 2008}}</ref> ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' represented the "death of the multiverse"; ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', the "rebuilding of the multiverse"; and ''[[Final Crisis]]'', the "final saga of the multiverse". |
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Back on Earth-One, Aquaman along with Aqualad and Aquagirl discover that the underwater cities of Tritonis and Poseidonis have mysteriously disappeared. As they swim off, Black Manta and the Ocean Master watch until they also disappear. Dolphin notices this as she swims behind them. |
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However, on October 2, 2011 in his Facebook page Dan DiDio seemed to imply that Crisis On Infinite Earths, Infinite Crisis, and Final Crisis did ''not'' occur in DC's New 52 universe.<ref>[http://www.facebook.com/dan.didio/posts/2477877106857 Dan DiDio, October 2, 2011 facebook]</ref> According to John Lichman's October 4, 2011 UGO "DC New 52 Timeline So Far" this was to clarify the early statement by Dan DiDio of "Brace yourself, but after further review, there have been no Crisis events in the New DCU." <ref>Lichman, John (October 4, 2011) [http://www.ugo.com/the-goods/dc-new-52-timeline-so-far "DC New 52 Timeline So Far"] ''UGO Team''</ref> |
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The final group of heroes from the Monitor's satellite appear on Earth-S, where Changeling as an elephant is hurled through a brick building by Captain Marvel. Supergirl tries to reason with him as she fights him, but Captain Marvel only answers her with his fists. Kole erects a crystal barrier to prevent people from entering the anti-matter wave, while Wonder Woman vainly struggles with Mary Marvel wrapped in her magic lasso, resisting the Amazon's efforts. Black Canary stuns both Mary Marvel and Captain Marvel Jr. with her sonic "canary cry". Wonder Woman is left looking at the image of Harbinger in the anti-matter wave, wondering what she's doing. |
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==Spin-offs== |
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There have been a number of [[Spin-off (media)|spin-offs]] and [[tie-in]]s. |
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Soon, the cosmos shudders as the three remaining positive-matter universes are now transported into the Netherverse through Harbinger's power, and Psycho-Pirate realizes that he is losing control over the people's emotions. Now drained of her power, Harbinger reverts back to being Lyla and joins Alexander Luthor Jr. on an asteroid overlooking the five universes slowly merging with each other, and now in danger of annihilating each other. |
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===''Legends of the DC Universe: Crisis on Infinite Earths''=== |
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An untold story from ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' was published in February 1999 as a special in ''Legends of the DC Universe: Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #1, written by ''Crisis'' writer [[Marv Wolfman]], with art by [[Paul Ryan (comics)|Paul Ryan]] and [[Bob McLeod (comics)|Bob McLeod]]. It took place during and after ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #4. It featured the only appearance of [[Multiverse (DC Comics)#Earth-D|Earth-D]]. |
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Back on Earth-Two, Alan Scott, Power Girl, and Johnny Quick chase after Star Sapphire, Per Degaton, and Deathbolt when the three villains suddenly vanish, leaving the heroes wondering where they went. Back at the apartment building of Ted Grant, as he is resting in his bed, Yolanda Montez now makes her debut in costume as the new Wildcat. |
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The Flash of Earth-D, Tanaka Rei, was a Japanese man who idolized Barry Allen, whose stories only existed in comic books. Rei was inspired by Allen to become the Flash, much like Allen was inspired to become the Flash by his idol, Jay Garrick. Allen and Rei met during the ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' when Barry was coming back from the 30th century and arrived in the wrong universe. As that earth was under attack by the shadow demons, Barry called on the Justice League and Rei called on the Justice Alliance, his world's version of the Justice League. They built a [[cosmic treadmill]] and made an evacuation. The Justice League left, but 39 seconds later, Earth-D perished. |
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Beyond the Silent Night |
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===''DC Retroactive: Superman - The {{'}}80s''=== |
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With a group of heroes selected from the five surviving universes and transported there with the help of Pariah, Lyla reveals to them the origin of the universes they're trying to protect: Krona, a scientist on the world of Oa, performed a forbidden experiment of looking in time to the creation of the universe, which had dangerous repercussions. It created not only an evil anti-matter duplicate of the known universe, it also created endless positive-matter duplicates of the universe, with Oa being the only planet not duplicated except in the anti-matter universe, where it was called Qward, the home of the Thunderers. Krona was banished from his world, and since then the Oans attempted to atone for his misdeed through the creation of both the Manhunters and the Green Lantern Corps. |
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Another untold ''Crisis''-related story by Wolfman was published in August 2011 as part of the ''[[DC Retroactive]]'' series. Illustrated by [[Sergio Cariello]] and [[Curt Swan]] and set in 1984, ''Superman - The {{'}}80s'' #1 tells of [[Destiny (DC Comics)|Destiny]] showing the pre-Crisis Superman images of future disasters, such as [[No Man's Land (comics)|No Man's Land]], [[Identity Crisis (DC Comics)|Identity Crisis]], [[The Death of Superman|his own death]], and the death of Supergirl during the forthcoming ''Crisis''.<ref name="mcelhatton20110810">{{cite web | url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=user_review&id=3793 | title=DC RETROACTIVE: SUPERMAN – THE '80S #1 | work=Comic Book Resources | date=2011-08-10 | accessdate=July 29, 2012 | author=McElhatton, Greg}}</ref> Superman vows to fight on despite the grim future, and Destiny—who reveals herself as Harbinger—and the Monitor later discuss the hero.<ref name="bailey2011">{{cite web | url=http://www.supermanhomepage.com/comics/2011-post-crisis-reviews/c-review-2011.php?topic=retro-sup-80s1 | title=Mild Mannered Reviews - DC Retroactive Comics: DC Retroactive: Superman - The 80s #1 | work=Superman Homepage | accessdate=July 29, 2012 | author=Bailey, Michael}}</ref> |
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On the moons of both Oa and Qward, two similar but opposed beings emerged and came to life; they both became the Monitors. The Monitor of the positive-matter universe simply sought knowledge about his universe, while the Monitor of the other universe sought control over it, creating an army of warriors called the Thunderers and changing some into Shadow Demons. The two Monitors became aware of each other and waged war with each other until a simultaneous attack rendered them both unconscious until the present time. |
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===Action figures=== |
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To commemorate the 20th anniversary of ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'', [[DC Direct]] issued a series of ''Crisis'' [[action figure]]s. However, due to quality-control problems, DC Direct recalled the toys and asked retailers to cut off the heads and ship them back to DC Direct. They were re-released on June 28, 2006. |
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Pariah joins the story with how he got involved: as the leading scientific mind on Earth of his universe, using his skills to turn his world into a paradise, he now sought to examine the origin of the universe, despite concerns from his people that he could end up destroying their universe in his pursuit for knowledge. Not taking heed to the concerns, Pariah set up a chamber in his lab where he could enter a pocket of the anti-matter universe to observe the creation of the universe. As he did, his entrance set off a chain reaction, creating an anti-matter wave that destroyed his universe, leaving Pariah stranded in space, safe but now realizing his error. However, with the destruction of his universe, the Monitor of the anti-matter universe awakened, absorbing the power from the destruction. It also awakened the Monitor of the positive-matter universe, who now sought Pariah to use him for the purpose of saving it. |
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The first wave included action figure representations of [[Robin (Earth-Two)|Earth-2 Robin]], [[Supergirl (Kara Zor-El)|Supergirl]], [[Monitor (comics)|the Monitor]], [[Harbinger (comics)|Harbinger]], and [[Psycho-Pirate]]. The second wave included action figure representations of the [[Flash (Barry Allen)]], [[Kal-L|Earth-2 Superman]], the [[Anti-Monitor]], [[Lex Luthor]], and [[Brainiac (comics)|Brainiac]]. The third and final wave included action figure representations of [[Superman-Prime|Earth-Prime Superboy]], [[Batman]], a [[Weaponers of Qward|Weaponer of Qward]], [[Huntress (comics)|Earth-2 Huntress]], and [[Doctor Light (Kimiyo Hoshi)|the female Dr. Light]]. |
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With a shifting of selected heroes, they are prepared to take on the being they now call the Anti-Monitor. Alexander Luthor Jr. used his powers to open a portal between the two universes, with the assorted heroes flying through this portal, to arrive on the other side, following Pariah's sensing abilities as he directed them to a glowing asteroid which was the Anti-Monitor's fortress. Inside, he watches the heroes approach and calls Psycho-Pirate to him, commanding him to use his powers against them. When Psycho-Pirate reveals that his emotion-controlling powers need to be recharged, Anti-Monitor angrily swats him away and decides to deal with them himself. |
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===Novelization adaptation=== |
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[[Byron Preiss|iBooks, Inc.]], under the distribution of [[Charlie Winton|Publishers Group West]], adapted the comic book miniseries as a novelization with one of its writers, Marv Wolfman. The whole event was narrated by [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Barry Allen]] himself. The hardcover version was released in April 2005 (ISBN 1-5968-7290-X) and the paperback was released in February 2006 (ISBN 1-5968-7343-4). Cover art was done by George Pérez and Alex Ross. |
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Death of supergirl |
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===HeroClix expansion=== |
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Death of Earth-One Supergirl |
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On February 28, 2008, a [[DC Comics]] [[HeroClix]] set entitled "Crisis" was released. |
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Cyberhawk241Added by Cyberhawk241 |
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Soon the heroes find themselves battling the fortress itself as it comes to life with statues attacking them, reassembling themselves as they get damaged. Some of the heroes realize that some of their own powers don't work as they would normally in the anti-matter universe. Nonetheless, Superman of Earth-One and Dr. Light manage to reach the heart of the fortress, where they see a machine converting starlight into energy, that is responsible for the merging of the universes. Superman of Earth-One plans to destroy it, but is suddenly attacked by the Anti-Monitor by a powerful blast. His scream attracts the attention of his cousin Supergirl, who engages the Anti-Monitor in physical combat, destroying his armor and also destroying the universe-merging machine. Dr. Light sees that Supergirl is seriously wounded from her battle and tries to get her out, but Supergirl tells Dr. Light to get her cousin out of there. This distraction enables the weakened Anti-Monitor to hit Supergirl with a titanic blast of energy, killing her in the sight of her cousin Kal-El. |
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As Anti-Monitor enters into an escape ship to recuperate, Superman of Earth-One holds his cousin Kara in his arms as she passes away, screaming that he would get his revenge. Superman of Earth-Two comforts his Earth-One counterpart and gets him to follow the heroes back to their own universe as the Anti-Monitor's fortress falls apart. Back on Earth-One, the heroes gather for a memorial service with Batgirl as the main speaker, stating, "Kara is a hero. She will not be forgotten." Later on, near the Fortress of Solitude, Superman of Earth-One has Kara's body wrapped up in her cape and flies her to New Krypton where she will be buried. |
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===Audiobook adaptation=== |
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[[GraphicAudio]] (who had previously done audiobook versions of ''Infinite Crisis'' and ''52'') released an audiobook version of ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' in May 2009. As with their previous DC story adaptations, it was based on the novelization rather than the comic. |
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A Flash of the Lightning |
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==Collected editions== |
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The Flash is captured, bound to a wall in a space capsule heading for the planet Qward in the Antimatter Universe. Psycho-Pirate is present, but fearful for his life. He wonders if the Anti-Monitor perished during his battle with Supergirl. Suddenly, the Anti-Monitor appears before them wearing new battle armor. He tells the Psycho-Pirate that he will spare him - for now. |
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* ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #1-12 (April 1985 – March 1986) was collected in hardcover (December 1998; ISBN 1-56389-434-3) and [[trade paperback (comics)|trade paperback]] (January 2001; ISBN 1-56389-750-4) editions, with original cover art by George Pérez and Alex Ross.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.dccomics.com/graphic_novels/?gn=1332 | title=''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' graphic novel | work=DC Comics.com | accessdate=June 17, 2010}}</ref> |
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* ''[[Official DC Index|Official Crisis on Infinite Earths Index]]'' (March 1986) was released as a one-shot publication providing a detailed description of each issue in the series, a list of alternative Earths, and a history of the Multiverse concept. |
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* ''Official Crisis on Infinite Earths Cross-Over Index'' (July 1986) was released as a one-shot publication providing summaries of every comic book issue connected to the ''Crisis'' storyline, descriptions of alternative Earths, and a list of every character that appeared in the ''Crisis'' series. |
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* ''Crisis on Infinite Earths: [[DC Comics Absolute Edition|The Absolute Edition]]'' (November 2005; ISBN 1-4012-0712-X)<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.dccomics.com/graphic_novels/?gn=4203 | title=''Crisis on Infinite Earths: The Absolute Edition'' | work=DC Comics.com | accessdate=June 17, 2010}}</ref> was released as an oversized, slipcased, hardcover edition. The first volume reprints the limited series and the second volume provides extras, including scripts, commentaries, retrospectives, and also reprints the two indexes. |
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On Apokolips, DeSaad watches the space capsule and asks his master Darkseid what they're going to do. Darkseid answers that they're simply going to watch and see what happens. If the heroes prevail against the Anti-Monitor, Darkseid says, then the "status quo" will be maintained. If the Anti-Monitor prevails, then he will be weakened enough to the point where Apokolips' sole leader will destroy him. |
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==Parodies and homages== |
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* [[Blackthorne Publishing|Blackthorne Comics]] published the two-issue mini-series ''Freak-Out on Infant Earths'' in 1987.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.atomicavenue.com/atomic/TitleDetail.aspx?TitleID=15629 | title=''Freak-Out on Infant Earths'' | first1=Don | last1=Chin | first2=Herb | last2=Wood | work=Atomic Avenue | accessdate=June 17, 2010}}</ref> |
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* [[Marvel Comics]]' ''[[Mighty Mouse]]'' #4-5 ([[1991 in comics|1991]]) were titled "Mices on Infinite Earths", and had Mighty Mouse meeting Mighty Mousette and helping the Minotaur, Harebinger, and Piranha fight the evil and powerful Anti-Minotaur. George Pérez drew the cover of issue #4, parodying ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #7,<ref>{{Comicbookdb|type=issue|id=72661|title=''Mighty Mouse'' #4}}</ref> and issue #5, parodying ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #12.<ref>{{Comicbookdb|type=issue|id=72662|title=''Mighty Mouse'' #5}}</ref> |
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* The Crisis, along with other crossovers and "event" comics, was [[Parody|parodied]] by ''[[The Simpsons|Simpsons]] Comics'' in the ''[[List of recurring characters in The Simpsons#Radioactive Man|Radioactive Man]]'' series. ''Radioactive Man'' #679 (September [[1994 in comics|1994]]), written by Steve Vance, is entitled "Who Washes the Washmen's Infinite Secrets of Legendary Crossover Knight Wars?"<ref>{{Comicbookdb|type=issue|id=68511|title=''Radioactive Man'' #679}}</ref> In one issue, Radioactive Man also mentions a "Secret Crisis on Erstatz Earths". |
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* ''[[Mad (magazine)|MAD Magazine]]'' #448 provided a review of the fictional "Infinite Secret Crisis on All Earthly Worlds", which sought to solve the continuity problems by killing absolutely everyone, in alphabetical order. |
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* Many images and themes from ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' are repeated in ''[[JLA/Avengers]]'', written by [[Kurt Busiek]] and pencilled (as was ''Crisis'') by [[George Pérez]]. |
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* In the ''[[Justice League (TV series)|Justice League]]'' episode "A Better World, Part 1", an alternate [[Martian Manhunter]] lures the Justice League into a trap by deploying a similar story. The part that can be heard is, "...and the dimensions appear to be collapsing on each other..." and, "...perhaps by combining our forces, we may be able to avert this ''crisis'' which threatens all the ''infinite earths'' and all the divergent timestreams." |
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* In the ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]'' episode "The Once and Future Thing, Part 2", [[Chronos (comics)|Chronos]]' disruption of the timeline nearly results in history being erased with a "white field" effect similar to the anti-matter wave of the Crisis. A mastodon phases in front of the characters at one point. The Western era is visited. Batman and Green Lantern chase Chronos to the beginning of time, where they view a hand similar to the Anti-Monitor's holding the source spiral. |
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* Another episode of ''Justice League Unlimited'', "Far From Home", had Green Arrow, Supergirl, and Green Lantern shanghaied to the 31st century to aid the last free members of the Legion of Super Heroes. The Legion knows that Supergirl disappeared from history at this point, but does not say anything. Supergirl faces a brainwashed Legion — and Green Lantern, too, by that point — and is believed to be killed in the fight. Green Lantern holds her body in the same pose used by Superman on the cover of ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #7, surrounded by the Legion. She survives, but stays in the future, as it is more like her old home. |
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* In the online web comic ''Gaming Guardians'', an entire page is used as an homage to the death of Supergirl, right down to the infamous line, "But... We had a casualty." |
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* The fourth and final issue of the ''Superman & [[Bugs Bunny]]'' mini-series was titled "Cwisis on Infinite Earths". |
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* Issue #25 of the ''[[Animaniacs]]'' comic series showed a preview of fictitious stories supposedly planned for later issues. One of them was "Chaos on Infinite Watertowers!", described as "an epic retooling of the massive [[Warner Bros.|Warner]] universe", in which "worlds collide", "titans clash", and "[[Yakko, Wakko, and Dot#Wakko Warner|Wakko]] gets a new hat." |
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* In the ''[[Legion of Super-Heroes (TV series)|Legion of Super-Heroes]]'' animated series, [[Brainiac 5]] mentions a "Great Crisis" which resulted in many historical records being lost. |
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* ''[[ToyFare]]'' #75 featured a ''Twisted ToyFare Theater'' story entitled "Crisis on Infinite Megovilles!" which involved [[Aunt May]] getting hold of the [[Infinity Gems|Infinity Gauntlet]] and using it to "clean up" alternate realities. |
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* The [[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]] movie, ''[[Turtles Forever]]'', had a similar theme of infinite Earths filled with different variations of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and their enemies. They all originated from "Turtle-Prime", which is a parody of [[Earth Prime]]. |
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* The [[Fox Broadcasting Company|FOX]] series, ''[[Fringe (TV series)|Fringe]]'', a sci-fi show that involves alternate realities and parallel worlds, mentions a major event took place in the year 1985, the same year ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' was first published. The show further featured "alternate" versions of DC Comics in the episode "Over There, Part 2", specifically an inversion of the famous cover of Superman carrying the body of Supergirl suggesting in Fringe's "alternate" universe that it was Superman who was killed as part of the crisis, while Supergirl survived. |
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* Beginning with the October 2010 issue, [[Boom! Studios]]' ''[[Darkwing Duck#Comic books|Darkwing Duck]]'' comic book series begins a four-part story arc deemed "Crisis on Infinite Darkwings", apparently taking strong inspiration from this series.{{Citation needed|date=October 2010}} |
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* In the ''[[Green Lantern: Emerald Knights]]'' movie, the Guardians noted that the Shadow Demons haven't been seen since "the great crisis". |
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* The ''[[Batman: The Brave and the Bold]]'' episode "Night of the Batmen!" homages the cover to ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #7, with a sorrowful [[Aquaman]] holding the badly-injured body of [[Batman]] as [[Green Arrow]], [[Plastic Man]] and [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|Captain Marvel]] look on in shock. |
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* The electro-rock band Judge Rock pays homage to ''Crisis'' in their 2012 song ''Westerner'', in which [[Jonah Hex]], [[Bat Lash]], [[Nighthawk (DC Comics)|Nighthawk]], [[Johnny Thunder]] and [[Scalphunter (DC Comics)|Scalphunter]] appear, along with the alien abduction taking them through time in episode three of the ''Crisis'' comic-book. |
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* The series finale of ''[[Green Lantern: The Animated Series]]'' featured a storyline that involved a character going back in time to re-shape the creation of the universe. In this version, the villain was the sentient robot Aya, who had gained control of the [[Anti-Monitor]]'s body and sought to erase emotion from the universe.<ref>Green Lantern: The Animated Series Episode "Dark Matter"</ref> |
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In the 30th century, the Legion of Super-Heroes monitor the partially merged five Earths. Brainiac 5 throws himself into his research, refusing to come to terms with Supergirl's death. Saturn Girl observes that his mind is in turmoil. |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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In the 20th century, Firestorm communicates with Vixen who finds famed robotics expert Professor T.O. Morrow. They bring Morrow to the remains of the Justice League satellite where they hope he can effect repairs upon the robot that he invented - Red Tornado. Ray Palmer is also present, and is inspecting the Tornado's body from the inside. Suddenly, something deep within the Tornado's bio-system activates and a huge explosion tears through the satellite. Blue Devil, one of the heroes summoned to examine Red Tornado's inner workings, finds himself transported to the Vegan system to deal with the Omega Men. |
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==External links== |
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* [http://www.comics-db.com/DC_Comics/C/Crisis_On_Infinite_Earths/index.html ''Crisis on Infinite Earths''] at the [[Big Comic Book DataBase]] |
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* [http://en.dcdatabaseproject.com/Crisis_on_Infinite_Earths ''Crisis on Infinite Earths''] at the DC Database Project |
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* {{Comicbookdb|type=title|id=47|title=''Crisis on Infinite Earths''}} |
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* Jonathan Woodward's ''[http://www.prismnet.com/~woodward/chroma/crisis.html The Annotated Crisis on Infinite Earths]'' |
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* [http://alankistler.squarespace.com/journal/2007/12/3/alan-kistlers-crisis-files.html Alan Kistler's DC Crisis Files] An in-depth retrospective by comic historian Alan Kistler on the Crisis, including a comprehensive issue-by-issue summary, a map of the multiple universes, a discussion on why the Crisis happened and how effective it was, various art scans, and a discussion on Marv Wolfman's novelization. Also contains information on ''Infinite Crisis'' and ''Final Crisis''. |
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* [http://www.dcindexes.com/planet/index.php?issue=63 Earth Words: Musings on DC's Parallel Worlds – Crisis Edition] |
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* [http://www.sequart.com/columns/index.php?col=12&column=924 Crisis on Infinite Earths: The DC Canon] A study of landmark series as canonical DC work |
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* [http://www.sequart.com/crisis.htm Crisis on Infinite Earths: The Continuity Pages] |
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* [http://www.crisis2crisis.com Infinite Crises] A list of trades spanning ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' to ''Infinite Crisis'' |
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Back on Qward, the Anti-Monitor supervises the construction of an Anti-Matter cannon. With this weapon, he intends on finishing off the remaining Earths. Dozens of Qward's Thunderers work as slaves to complete the weapon. The Flash meanwhile, manages to break free. He grabs the Psycho-Pirate and races off with him across the barren landscape. Moving at super-speed, he exposes the Psycho-Pirate's face to many Thunderers. He forces Psycho-Pirate to warp their emotions into feelings of hatred for the Anti-Monitor. One by one, the Thunderers turn against their master, but the Anti-Monitor easily defeats them. While the villain is distracted, the Flash finds the Anti-Matter energy core that powers the cannon. Running faster than he has ever run in his life, he circles around the energy core thousands of times, turning the unstable anti-matter back upon itself, destroying the cannon. The influx of energy is too much for the Flash's mortal body however. He begins phasing through different points in the time stream, and before long, he loses all physical cohesion and dies. All that is left of him is his empty costume and his ring. His noble sacrifice has saved billions of lives across the Multiverse. |
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{{DC Crisis Anthology}} |
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{{DC events}} |
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From beyond the walls of time and space, one being screams out in unbridled anger. The Spectre has awakened. |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Crisis On Infinite Earths}} |
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[[Category:1985 comic debuts]] |
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War Zone |
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[[Category:Fictional events]] |
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On Oa, the Guardians of the Universe make a last-ditch effort to combat the hysteria that is gripping the universe. They recruit Guy Gardner back into the Green Lantern Corps and give him a ring again. |
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[[Category:Time travel comics]] |
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[[Category:DC Comics dimensions]] |
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Suddenly, a cosmic crimson flame from beyond the void washes over Oa. The Green Lantern Citadel is destroyed and all but one of the six remaining Guardians are killed. Guy Gardner swears vengeance. |
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[[Category:Apocalyptic fiction]] |
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[[Category:Reboot comics]] |
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Meanwhile, a cadre of Earth's most powerful super-villains gathers together aboard Brainiac's starship with T.O. Morrow now joining them. Lex Luthor coordinates the meeting, declaring that they shall take advantage of the Crisis by holding three of the multiple Earths hostage. Alexei Luthor of Earth-Two protests, citing that he should lead the cadre rather than his Earth-One counterpart. Brainiac concedes that there is no need for two Lex Luthors, destroying the Earth-Two Luthor. |
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Reporters have dubbed the point where the five remaining Earths intersect one another as the Warp Zone. Within this area, a strange time-distortion effect has allowed for creatures and entities from various timelines to interact with one another. Dinosaurs are seen stomping through the same New York City streets as World War I era biplanes and futuristic starships. Firehawk flies with Wonder Girl into the Warp Zone, trying to find Donna Troy's husband. |
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At the United Nations, representatives from the various parallel dimensions address the assembly. Key speakers include Pariah, Harbinger and Alexander Luthor. The nation leaders are concerned that the spreading chaos may result in an inter-Earth war. During the address, a holographic image of Lex Luthor appears before them and extends an ultimatum. Citing that he already controls three of the five Earths, he demands the unconditional surrender of the remaining two, or else he and Brainiac will unleash a destructive force that will obliterate all five. |
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While the other heroes struggle to pierce the barrier separating the merging Earths, Jay Garrick recruits Kid Flash to help him. They rebuild Barry Allen's cosmic treadmill and use their combined speed to pierce the barrier with an assembly of heroes standing on connecting platforms, ready to do battle. |
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Meanwhile, Luthor’s cadre of villains takes advantage of the situation. They spread themselves across the realities, sewing chaos and discord at every turn. Chemo poisons the waters surrounding Hudson Bay, killing Aquagirl. Doctor Phosphorus brutally injures Hawkman. The Joker and Poison Ivy capture the Freedom Fighters. Eclipso incapacitates Wonder Woman, and the Justice League fight the Brotherhood of Evil. |
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Back on Brainiac's ship, Luthor and Brainiac continue to coordinate their plans. Should the governments of the combined Earths fail to meet their demands, Luthor is more than ready to destroy all five planets. Suddenly, Psimon appears from behind the shadows. He is the only super-villain that did not join with the others planet-side. Using his powerful mental energy, Psimon blasts Brainiac, shattering him into a thousand pieces. He then brings himself to bear upon Lex Luthor. |
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Death at the Dawn of Time |
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After destroying Brainiac's shell, Psimon turns his attention towards Lex Luthor. He plans on taking over the united villains after killing Luthor. What Psimon doesn't realize however is that Brainiac's consciousness has been downloaded into the circuitry of his ship. He forges a new body for himself and blasts the top off of Psimon's crown with a beam of energy. |
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On Earth-One at the dawn of mankind, Anthro continues to see wild streaks of red lightning flashing across the sky. He ponders whether he should tell the rest of the tribe, but fears that they may find him crazy. |
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On Earth-Four, Chemo stands next to the ruins of the Statue of Liberty. All about him, the waters surrounding Manhattan Island are bubbling with deadly poisonous fumes. Negative Woman flies about him, ensnaring the gigantic villain with bands of shadow energy. The bands constrict until they eventually succeed in destroying Chemo's artificial shell. In Manhattan, Black Adam fights against Robotman and Dove. Kole of the New Teen Titans flies up behind him and turns his body into solid crystal. Robotman is prepared to shatter him, but Dove holds him back. Meanwhile, Cyborg and Celsius tackle Quakemaster. |
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Meanwhile, Aqualad races back to Atlantis, carrying Aquagirl’s body. He hands her over to the city’s medical specialists, but there is nothing they can do. Aquagirl has died. |
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In the frozen wastelands of Earth-S, Doctor Sivana, Doctor Cyber, Per Degaton, Houngan, Phobia, Despero, Deathbolt, Hector Hammond and Professor T.O. Morrow keep watch over the captured members of the Marvel Family. While Sivana is in the midst of gloating, the Martian Manhunter burrows through the ice and attacks them. He blasts at Deathbolt with his Martian vision. The Atom and Platinum of the Metal Men arrive to give him back-up. Phobia tries to use her powers on Platinum, but they fail, enabling the Atom enough time to loose the gag around Billy Batson’s mouth. Billy shouts the magic word, "Shazam" and transforms into Captain Marvel. |
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On Earth-X, Batman and the original Atom fight up against Calendar Man while the Outsiders and Infinity, Inc. take on the Dummy. Hawkwoman and Tin fight Lightning Lord, and Firestorm and Vixen fight up against Captain Cold and Icicle. Green Arrow of Earth-Two assists Changeling and Mento in combating the Shaggy Man. Green Arrow defeats the Shaggy Man with an explosive-tipped arrow. |
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Suddenly, the Spectre makes his presence known across the five partially merged Earths. He warns all of the heroes that the Anti-Monitor is still alive and that he has retreated into the past to change the course of history at the dawn of time itself. |
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The heroes migrate to Earth-One to coordinate their efforts, with Superboy of the now-destroyed Earth-Prime joining them. They form their teams and develop a strategy using the time-traveling capabilities of the Time Masters, the Legion of Super-Heroes and the Lord of Time. Flash (Jay Garrick) and Kid Flash are outfitted with converter technology to help bridge the gap. With the aid of Magno Lad, Cosmic Boy and Gold, the team creates a large magnetic conductor, which shunts the assemblage backwards in time. Superman of Earth-One personally flies Alexander Luthor, Jr. ahead of the time travelers in order for Luthor to open the portal between the universes before they arrive. |
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Meanwhile, Lex Luthor and his allies travel backwards in time ten billion years to the planet Oa. They arrive on the fateful day when the scientist Krona is destined to witness the hand of creation and inadvertently create the Multiverse. They burst into his laboratory, but Krona is ready for them. He kills Icicle, Mirror Master and Maaldor. |
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At the dawn of time, the heroes face the Anti-Monitor. They channel all of their energy into him, but this only serves to make the Anti-Monitor more powerful. He requires their energy so that when Krona opens the doorway between the positive matter universe and the anti-matter universe, the Anti-Monitor will then be able to obliterate the positive matter universe entirely. |
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The Spectre appears before the Anti-Monitor, channeling all of the mystical energy of Earth’s most powerful sorcerers. He attacks the Anti-Monitor directly and their fight unleashes an explosion of energy, which appears to consume all reality. |
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Aftershock |
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The Big Bang happens again, but this time only one universe, with only one Earth, appears. |
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Clark Kent of Earth-Two finds himself in what appears to be his apartment, thinking he is back in his own universe. He dresses up for work and enters into the Daily Planet building unaware, thinking he is entering that of the Daily Star, and enters into Perry White's office, reading the paper until Perry chews him out for being where he doesn't belong. Clark Kent of Earth-One comes on the scene and rescues the other Clark, referring to him as his "Uncle Clark" to Perry, while Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen of Earth-One amusingly watch. |
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On top the Daily Planet, both Clark Kents transform into Superman and fly off to New York City, where the cordoned-off merged section of the Earths was located. However, they find that not only is the merged section no longer present, but also that no one even remembers that there was a cordoned-off section. They fly off to Central City in the hopes of finding Barry Allen's lab when they notice that Central City of Earth-One is now adjacent to Keystone City of Earth-Two. They find Jay Garrick's residence in Keystone City and, surprisingly, Jay Garrick's wife doesn't recognize Superman of Earth-Two, though Jay still does. He had Wally West in his own lab setting up the Cosmic Treadmill so they can find out together what's going on. |
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As Flash of Earth-Two, Kid Flash, and both Supermen race the treadmill, they find themselves transported out into a void where the Earth-Two universe should have been. Superman of Earth-Two fears that his wife, Lois Lane-Kent, has vanished along with Earth-Two and chooses to fly out into the void, but Superman of Earth-One stops him and they return back to the New Earth, with the Cosmic Treadmill destroyed. Kid Flash decides it is time to gather all the superheroes together to find out the truth. |
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Meanwhile, Rip Hunter's time vehicle emerges out of the timestream with the Forgotten Heroes in it. They also notice that time has reset itself. They board Brainiac's skull ship, still floating in space, and see Brainiac still sitting at the controls as he did before the point of time resetting. Dolphin thinks that Brainiac is now dead. |
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At the Titans Tower, there is a gathering of present-day superheroes from the various universes, with some trying to figure out why they can't go back to their own universe. To answer that question, Harbinger appears unto them, revealing that with time resetting itself, the five surviving positive-matter universes have all merged into one, with histories from those universes merging into a single history. However, in this universe, there was only one Superman that came from Krypton, only one Bruce Wayne that became Batman, only one Dick Grayson that became Robin, and only one Wonder Woman that came from Paradise Island. This makes Dick Grayson of Earth-Two, the Huntress, and Superman of Earth-Two feel as though they were now "non-persons", and it also confuses Power Girl, who in this universe's history is still recognized as a hero, though her Earth-Two cousin isn't. |
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Batman of Earth-One shows up with Jason Todd and Alexander Luthor, Jr. with more revelations to the group: the supervillains that went back in time to Oa to try preventing Krona's experiment from taking place now don't remember ever taking that trip, as evidenced by Batman talking with Lex Luthor in his prison cell, which means that only those who were there at the Dawn of Time were the ones who remembered, and they were the only ones that survived the universes merging. Superman of Earth-Two realizes from this that his wife is now gone and flies off in a rage, with Superman of Earth-One following to try comforting him for his loss. |
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Meanwhile, as stormy clouds appear over the earth, Phantom Stranger and Deadman look on helplessly at the Spectre floating in midair, unable to help them as they sense that a danger is coming. A housemaid at a Las Vegas hotel finds somebody has died in one of their rooms, and Jonni Thunder finds a triangle beside the body, which one of the detectives with her recognizes as the weapon of the Angle Man. Dr. Fate and Etrigan see that Amethyst is being attacked by people who consider her a witch, and so travel to the scene even as Dr. Occult appears to calm the people with his mystical talisman. The Shadow Demons then appear, and Amethyst tries to fight them off, but she ends up being blinded. Etrigan holds off the demons while Dr. Fate transports Amethyst back to Gemworld. Deep inside a cavern, Cave Carson and his team of explorers see a powerful maelstrom forming within the earth. |
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Back at Titans Tower, Pariah suffers pain and Alexander Luthor, Jr. experiences himself shifting into starry darkness as the Earth itself is swallowed up from its own universe into another. The two Superman watch the sky as the face of the Anti-Monitor appears, welcoming the planet's residents to their death. |
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Final Crisis |
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In Brainiac's starship, Dolphin, Captain Comet, Rip Hunter, Animal Man, the Atomic Knight, and Adam Strange convince the reviving robot that his memory was tampered with to make him forget the Crisis. Admitting that his power is inadequate to battle the Anti-Monitor, he sets course for the world of a more powerful being. On Earth, the Anti-Monitor's visage is seen in the skies all over the globe. He repeats that the Earth is now in the anti-matter universe. His past victories over positive universes are meaningless, he says, because of the super-heroes' efforts to stop him. When he lists Supergirl and the Flash as casualties, Kid Flash demands to know what has happened. |
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The Supermen scan the globe and watch the populace panicking. Harbinger appears, and teleports them to a chosen destination, then gathers Dr. Light from Japan, leaving Sunburst to defend the island. When Dr. Light states that she caused Supergirl's death, Harbinger replies that the battle had already killed Supergirl, and that the Anti-Monitor's final attack merely gave her a swift death. In the skies, the darkness splits into a million Shadow Demons, which begin an all-out attack on humanity, and the superheroes mass to resist them. The Global Guardians team with other heroes to free their native lands from the threat, but the demons' numbers seem endless. The Phantom Stranger summons Dr. Mist to help revive the Spectre, who remains comatose. Below, Harbinger has gathered a large group of heroes, along with Pariah and Alex, to lead a final assault on their nemesis. Alex creates a bridge between universes, and they depart near Apokolips. |
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Brainiac's ship goes into stationary orbit over Apokolips, and he and his guests teleport to the planet, where Darkseid appears and introduces himself. |
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Back on Earth, the majority of the heroes are still battling the Shadow Demons. The Dove is slain by a shadow-being as his brother watches in horror. |
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In Dr. Fate's Salem tower, the magically powered heroes have gathered to pool their sorcerous might. The Earth-Two Green Lantern and Dr. Occult form the nexus of their energy. |
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On Qward, in the anti-matter universe, Harbinger and the heroes have arrived in the Anti-Monitor's old headquarters. Kid Flash insists on joining them because of his mentor's demise. Suddenly, an image of the Flash appears to him—the last one Barry cast before his death. Wally follows the afterimage to where an insane Psycho-Pirate clutches at an empty uniform. Kid Flash knocks him out and realizes that Barry Allen is truly dead when Lady Quark finds his ring. Pariah informs them that a great concentration of evil lies before them. They follow to find a towering Anti-Monitor, ready for the final slaughter. |
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In Atlantis, Aquaman leads his underwater legions against the shadows. Lori Lemaris saves a trapped Mera with a force beam. A demon closes in on her and kills her. In Chicago, Green Arrow of Earth-Two is killed by a shadow. In Philadelphia, Cyborg, the Son of Vulcan, the Vigilante, and the new Wildcat continue rescue operations. |
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In New Orleans, Shade the Changing Man witnesses the death of Prince Ra-Man. In Skartaris, Travis Morgan leads his forces against the black menaces. In Gotham City, both Clayface II and the Bug-Eyed Bandit perish at the hands of the demons. In Salem, the tide finally turns. The sorcerous crusaders send their combined force in a net of energy to gather the demons from the Earth's surface, and bind them helpless in space. Over the Earth, lives have been lost, including those of Kole, Huntress, and Robin of Earth-Two, but other lives have been saved. For a moment, the survivors can take stock. |
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Crisis on infinite earths 12 |
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Final battle of the Crisis of Infinite Earths |
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Cyberhawk241Added by Cyberhawk241 |
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On Qward, the Supermen of Earth One and Two, Captain Atom, Lady Quark, Firehawk, Wonder Woman, and other heroes strike at the Anti-Monitor, but he ignores their blows, feeding on the energy of a nearby star. As Dr. Light absorbs the energy of one of the binary suns they are between, the Anti-Monitor feels his power draining away. Alex begins to drain the anti-matter energy away from their enemy. Negative Woman uses her negative-self to bind the Anti-Monitor and inhibit him; Harbinger then leads all the energy-producing heroes against him, Dr. Light blasts him with the energy of a sun, and he falls into the ruins of his fortress. Alex creates a dimensional hole, large enough to enclose the Earth and return it to its proper universe. The heroes follow. The ball of bound demons hover and then fall on the fallen enemy. Thus, the Anti-Monitor absorbs his slaves energies and rises again, while the heroes start to give battle. Wonder Woman is caught in a withering flash of power, and is borne away to an unknown destination. Superman of Earth-One and Lady Quark vow deadly revenge, but Kal-L knocks them out, and tells Superboy to take them back. Since he has no world and no wife to return to, the elder Superman has the least to lose. Then he confronts the monstrous Anti-Monitor, and batters him. Superboy sends Kal-El and Lady Quark back through Alex's shrinking body, and turns to aid him. Superman continues his one-man war against the Anti-Monitor, striking telling blows, while the villain, his power waning, absorbs more energy from the anti-cosmos, and blasts him and Superboy. Darkseid, watching the conflict on a view screen, proclaims his planet to be endangered if the Anti-Monitor survives, sends a power burst at him through Alex's eyes. The enemy, devastated, is hurled into the core of one of the binary suns. Superman, Superboy, and Alex are stunned to see the spectre of their enemy rising from the sun. Superman smashes into his foe's fiery body, scattering him: the remains fall back into the sun and the star begins to implode. |
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They bravely await the end and Superman wishes that Lois could have lived to see their triumph. At that, Alex produces Lois from a void-pocket in his body where she had been sent to wait. She tells her husband that she had been to a tranquil world. Alex cannot return them to Earth, but he can take them all to this beautiful world. Superman, Lois, and Superboy opt for that choice. The foursome vanish seconds before the exploding sun would have reached them. |
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Back on Earth, Lyla is explaining facets of the Crisis to Pariah and Lady Quark. Wonder Woman was returned to the clay which Aphrodite and Athena had given life, then spread across Paradise Island. |
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Time then continued to reverse itself, as the Amazons were returned to their original homeland before they fled Man's World. Zeus brought the homeless Wonder Woman of Earth-Two and her husband Steve Trevor to Olympus, where they could live peacefully. The bodies of Robin of Earth-Two, the Huntress, and Kole were never found. All those who died were mourned. In Keystone City, Jay Garrick determined that Kid Flash's illness was in remission, his body chemistry being changed by a blast from the Anti-Monitor. He could again move at super-speed, though only at the speed of sound. Wally donned Barry Allen's uniform, and announced, "From this day forth — the Flash lives again!" |
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The Great Disaster will not exist in the Earth's future, but a lost child will he found in Command D., adopted by General Horatio Tomorrow of the Planeteers, and named Thomas. Jonah Jex will be torn from his era to fight in the future, while the Guardians of the Universe must face the first division in their ranks. Thus, Lyla concludes her tale, and Lady Quark and Pariah ask her to help them explore their new homeworld. They leave with her, honoring the memory of their benefactor, the Monitor. And, in Arkham Asylum, the staff discuss a new patient who seems beyond help, straitjacketed in a rubber-lined room. Roger Hayden, formerly Psycho-Pirate, gibbers about Earths beyond numbers, the Anti-Monitor, and the memories, which only he had been allowed to keep. |
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In Summary |
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The Monitor's plans did not completely work against the Anti-Monitor, ultimately costing the Monitor his life. Five universes remained. The heroes, at the Spectre's urging, pool their resources and travel back to the Dawn of Time when they confront the Anti-Monitor. Meanwhile, the villains travel (1,000,000,000 years later) to Oa to try to stop Krona from peering back in time and creating the Multiverse (and the Anti=matter Universe the Anti-Monitor came from). |
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The Anti-Monitor reveals that he lured the heroes to him to absorb their life forces. He explains: |
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Only here, before creation can the future be changed! When Krona taps the cosmic forces, opening the door between matter and antimatter... it shall be my hand he sees! My hand which shall destroy the positive matter multivers for now and forever! My hand which shall make the antimatter universe supreme! ... The Multiverse will no longer exist! [1] |
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However, the Spectre, aided by Earths' mightiest sorcerers managed to (apparently) defeat him. |
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As Krona peers back through the cosmic veil, the Big Bang occurs: |
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In the beginning there were many. A Multiversal infinitude... so cold and so dark for so long... that even the burning light was imperceptible... but then the light grew, and the Multiverse shuddered... and the darkness screamed as much in pain as in relief. For in that instant, a Universe was born. A Universe with mighty worlds orbiting burning suns. A Universe reborn at the Dawn of Time. What had been many became one.[1] |
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The resulting reality was able to resist the Anti-Monitor's attacks due to the successful depowering efforts brought about mostly identified in battles noted to Supergirl and the Flash which cost them their lives. Vastly depowered, the Anti-Monitor attacked the resulting Earth directly where he was finally killed by Kal-L. With both "Monitors" dead, the resulting primary Earth underwent further changes and readjusted into a new state of existence which differed in many major ways from its preceding versions. The universe reformated all of its inhabitants to be native to its history and time line which conflicted with the previous multi-dimensional originating people now in it such as Power Girl. |
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Some would be changed in the later Zero Hour/Hyper-Time event, whereby the existence of infinite dimensions would again be accessible in the DC primary reality (other dimensions existed, but were completely inaccessible and thus termed "Elsewhere Stories"). But this interaction with these other dimensions was unstable and these separate realities' influences threatened to destroy the singular DC New Earth. This would be the same occurrence when the Dark Flash entered into the DC primary reality [2]. |
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It would not be until the later Infinite Crisis occurrence that stable extradimensional realities would be shown to exist within the DC universe again. In fact, a duplicate recreated version of the Classic Earth-Two seems to have survived the event. But it was barren and unpopulated. If it still exists, this new Earth-Two is a dead world. This world should not be confused with the same name given to the home Earth of the Crime Syndicate of AmeriKa that exists in the anti-matter universe of Qward. Most usually refer to the Crime Syndicate Earth as Earth-Two now. |
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Only a handful of powerful beings remember the realities of the previous DC Multiverse. |
Revision as of 20:14, 14 December 2013
History The Crisis on Infinite Earths was a Multiversal catastrophe that resulted in the destruction of countless parallel universes, and the recreation of a single positive matter universe (and an anti-matter universe) at the dawn of time.
The Summoning At the beginning of time, the Big Bang occurred, forming the universe. However, where there should have been one universe, there were many, each one a replication of the first, with their own separate histories.
At the present time, a great white wall of pure anti-matter energy stretches out across the cosmos. It pervades the Multiverse, consuming entire galaxies. On an unknown parallel world, a being named Pariah arrives. He is forced to witness the death of multiple worlds in multiple dimensions He disappears as he is transported to the parallel world known as Earth-Three. On that world, the Crime Syndicate, in a rare demonstration of heroism, strives to save their beleaguered planet. However, even their combined might cannot prevent their deaths at the anti-matter wall.
The planet's sole hero, Alexander Luthor, retreats to his home where his wife, Lois, holds their infant son, Alexander Jr., in her arms. Luthor places his son into an experimental rocket capsule and launches him from the planet Earth. As Earth-Three dies, Alexander's capsule pierces the vibrational wall separating dimensions. It lands on the abandoned Justice League Satellite orbiting Earth-One.
On board another satellite, a being called the Monitor summons his assistant Lyla (also known as Harbinger). He instructs her to travel to various alternate Earths and bring together a select group of super-powered beings. Harbinger uses her power to create replicant versions of herself and sends them to the various Earths. The Monitor, meanwhile, prepares to gather Alexander Luthor, Jr.’s space capsule.
The first of Harbinger's replicants travels to Earth-One and gathers King Solivar from Gorilla City. Another travels to Earth of the 30th century and summons Dawnstar of the Legion of Super-Heroes to her cause. A third replicant journeys to Earth-Two of the year 1942 to enlist the aid of Firebrand. One version gathers the Blue Beetle from the Chicago of Earth-Four. Another version of Harbinger collects the Psycho-Pirate from Earth-Two's present timeline. She brings him to Earth-One, where they encounter Firestorm and Killer Frost. The Psycho-Pirate uses his Medusa Mask to make Killer Frost fall in love with Firestorm. Another replicant travels to Pre-Cataclysmic Atlantis to find Arion the Sorcerer. However, a Shadow Demon attacks her and takes possession of Harbinger. The possessed replicant finds Arion and brings him back to the Monitor's satellite.
When they arrive, they find a room full of heroes and villains from alternate realities. Before the assemblage has a chance to acclimate itself to their foreign environment, a horde of Shadow Demons attacks them. They fight them off until the Monitor arrives. He casts a brilliant burst of light, which dispels the shadows. Introducing himself, he tells the impatient gathering that the Multiverse may soon be destroyed.
Time and Time Again! The Dawn of Man Anthro the Cave-Boy leads a herd of mammoths away from the village of the Bear Clan tribe. After falling from atop one of the great beasts, he peers through the underbrush where he sees an image of a great futuristic city. He shakes his head and when he looks again, the image is gone. In addition, the herd of mammoths that he had corralled is likewise missing.
30th Century Earth Members of the Legion of Super-Heroes discover the displaced mammoths stampeding through Plaza Square in Metropolis. Colossal Boy attempts to scoop them up into his giant arms, but they suddenly disappear.
Earth One – July 1985 In Gotham City, the Joker murders film mogul, Harold J. Standish. Batman crashes through the window and attempts to disarm the villain, but the Joker keeps him at bay with an adhesive-shooting flower. Suddenly, a distraught image of the Flash appears before them, warning about the end of the world. Batman tries to talk to the Flash, but he disintegrates before his eyes.
On board the Monitor’s satellite, the Monitor warns his assemblage that a wave of antimatter energy is sweeping through the Multiverse, consuming entire realities. He has established certain devices throughout the various realities designed to halt the anti-matter wall. He requires the heroes to travel to each reality and activate each of the devices. Nobody truly trusts the Monitor, but they realize that they have little choice but to heed his warnings.
Superman of Earth-Two, King Solovar and Dawnstar travel to Earth-AD, the world of Kamandi. They find the adventurer, Kamandi, scaling the side of an immense golden tower. The heroes realize that this is of the devices that the Monitor spoke of. A horde of Shadow Demons arrives to sabotage the tower, but the heroes manage to drive them away.
Arion, Obsidian and the Psycho-Pirate arrive in ancient Atlantis. Suddenly, Pariah arrives, but quickly falls sway to the Psycho-Pirate’s emotion manipulation. Arion turns his power against the Psycho-Pirate and frees Pariah of his influence. Psycho-Pirate suddenly disappears and rematerializes in a darkened room. A deep voice bellows forth to him, commanding him to follow his every order. Psycho-Pirate, terrified by this mysterious individual, meekly complies.
Meanwhile, back on the Monitor's satellite, the Monitor asks Harbinger to retrieve Alexander Luthor from his nursery. Harbinger is shocked to discover that Alex, formerly an infant, is now the age of a young child. Suddenly, the dark influence of the Shadow Demon takes control of her, commanding her to betray the Monitor.
Oblivion Upon Us Harbinger walks into the Monitor's sanctum as he continues testing young Alexander Luthor. Luthor is aging at an accelerated rate, and is now the physical age of an adolescent boy. The Monitor discovers he is composed of both positive matter and anti-matter, and believes that this composite life form may hold the key towards stopping the Crisis. Harbinger, still under the influence of a dark, mysterious entity, leaves the Monitor's satellite and reports to her new master.
On Earth-One in the 30th century, the Flash races through the streets desperately attempting to halt a series of natural disasters. He sees a wave of pure antimatter spreading outwards in the distance. He vibrates his molecules at super-speed, sending himself backwards through time.
In the 20th century, the antimatter wave has reached Earth-One and it slowly begins to dissolve everything in its path. The Teen Titans team up with the Outsiders to save as many citizens of New York as possible. Batman and Superman arrive as well to lend a hand. Suddenly, Batman sees the Flash appear before his eyes. However, before the Flash can respond, he screams in pain and terror as he is pulled into another dimension and disappears.
In outer space, Brainiac's brain-ship surveys the progress of the anti-matter wave. He logically deduces that in order to preserve his own life, he must help to save the Multiverse. Brainiac flies off to find his old partner, Lex Luthor.
Meanwhile, Blue Beetle, Doctor Polaris and Geo-Force arrive in Markovia in the spring of 1944. Markovia is currently under Nazi occupation and the Nazis attempt to secure the Monitor’s energy tower. The American military forces known as Easy Company, the Losers and the Haunted Tank are present as well. While the heroes engage the Nazis, they must also contend with a horde of Shadow Demons. The Shadow Demons succeed in killing several war-time soldiers, including Easy Company's Flower and the Losers; Johnny Cloud, Captain Storm, Gunner, and Sarge. On Earth-AD, Superman-Two, Dawnstar, Solovar and Kamandi stand by helplessly as they watch the sky turn the color of blood and lightning storms erupt all around them. Solovar, finally succumbing to his recent injuries, dies in Kamandi's arms.
Meanwhile, Cyborg, Green Lantern, Psimon and Firebrand materialize in the town of Coyote, Texas in the year 1879. They meet up with several Southwestern heroes including Nighthawk, Scalphunter, Bat Lash, Johnny Thunder and Jonah Hex. The two disparate groups join forces and locate another one of the Monitor’s towers.
However, the destructive wave of antimatter that the Monitor warned of strikes the Earth at all time periods simultaneously. While the other heroes fight against more Shadow Demons, Nighthawk is consumed by the anti-matter wave.
Across time in the 30th century, the Legion of Super-Heroes shares a similar tragedy. While saving innocent civilians in England, Kid Psycho falls prey to the white energy wall.
Back on the Monitor's satellite, Harbinger returns. Consumed by the influence of her new master, she releases a blast of energy at the Monitor.
And Thus Shall the World Die As Supergirl joins a despondent Batgirl on top of a city building on Earth-One, trying to encourage her before she is called to rescue a plane that falls apart approaching the anti-matter wave, Pariah arrives on Earth-Six where he confronts the royal superhero family of Lord Volt, Lady Quark, and Princess Fern as the antimatter wave destroys their world as well. Lady Quark watches helplessly as both her husband and daughter are consumed in the wave while Pariah transports her safely out of the universe.
Meanwhile, the Monitor prepares to create a new hero to help him in his quest. By firing an ion-based energy ray into an unstable star in the Vegan system in the Earth-One universe, he causes a powerful flare of solar energy to travel to Earth. It reaches the observatory of Dr. Kimiyo Hoshi, who berates her staff as she uses the telescope to observe the destructive phenomenon present. She screams as the flare strikes her and then mysteriously transports her out of the lab, leaving her fellow workers and her father wondering what happened to her.
In the dark place where the Psycho-Pirate is taken prisoner, the shadowy figure watches on the screen the Red Tornado in action and uses his power to teleport him to the same place.
On Earth-Two in the time of Camelot, Firestorm and Killer Frost (still under the love thrall of Psycho-Pirate) get help from the Shining Knight to protect the cosmic tuning fork planted there in that time period, as Vandal Savage watches from a window. The three heroes engage the Shadow Demons in battle, but it is all for naught as they merge and form a giant Shadow Demon. This also happens in the other time periods that the cosmic tuning forks and the Shadow Demons appear.
In the present time of Earth-One in Metropolis, the superheroes see yet another cosmic tuning fork appear, though this time with a female in a costume similar to that of Dr. Light. She tries to warn the heroes approaching her to stay away from the tower, and blasts them away with a burst of light. Katana, who understands Japanese, realizes that this Dr. Light is not their enemy, but an ally. Superman, who is able to converse in Japanese, tells Dr. Light that he knows the situation they are in and they only want to help.
While on board the satellite, the Monitor watches the heroes valiantly but vainly try to protect the cosmic tuning forks, as Pariah emerges to find that the Monitor was expecting him. He reveals to Pariah that he was responsible for his survival when he should have died for his deeds, but before he could say anything more, Harbinger appears, obviously not in control of herself. She strikes the Monitor with a powerful blast that sends him hurtling down platforms until he finally lands dead. Pariah mourns as he realizes that with the death of the Monitor came the death of all hope.
At that moment, the heroes of both Earths One and Two can only watch as their worlds, consumed by anti-matter, fade into nothingness.
Worlds in Limbo In the Antimatter Universe, a dark, malevolent force addresses his new playthings, Psycho-Pirate, the Flash and Red Tornado. He has Psycho-Pirate use his emotion-controlling abilities to keep the Flash in line, while also promising that he will soon have his own worlds to rule.
On the Monitor's satellite, Harbinger regains control of her mind, and realizes what she has just done - she has just killed the Monitor. Pariah is present, and tries to get answers from her, but Harbinger has no memory of the attack. Suddenly, a view screen activates and a pre-recorded image of the Monitor addresses both of them. He tells them that he knew of his eventual demise at Harbinger's hands, and bears her no ill will. To safeguard the remaining universes, he turned his body into an energy conduit. Upon his death, the Monitor's life essence shunted Earth-One and Earth-Two into a Netherworld, keeping them safe from his adversary's attack - at least for now. However, in his haste to save them, all time has become one. Alexander Luthor enters the chamber and hears the last of the Monitor's speech.
On Earth-One, varying timelines begins to intermingle with one another. Dinosaurs and World War I era bi-planes exist side by side with modern day Metropolis skyscrapers, and strange vessels from the far-flung future. Amazingly, Earth's populace remains relatively calm - another side-effect of the Monitor's influence.
Back on the Monitor's satellite, Alex, Pariah and Harbinger summon together a massive congregation of heroes from Earth-One and Earth-Two. They explain the present situation, but also explain that in order for things to correct themselves, the Multiverse must be folded back upon itself and become a single universe once again, or else all worlds will be destroyed.
On Earth-One, other heroes continue to help out amidst the confusion. Batman invites a group of heroes and villains into the Batcave for consultation. Starfire and the Legionnaire Sun Boy fly to Russia to help Red Star tackle a dinosaur. Members of the Green Lantern Corps fly to Oa to seek aid from the Guardians of the Universe, but the Guardians are swept up in an unforeseen attack. Rip Hunter and the Time Masters try to solve the mystery of the inter-connecting timelines. Wildcat saves a little girl from crumbling debris, but his legs are crushed in the process.
Meanwhile in the Anti-Matter Universe, the unseen enemy takes control of the Red Tornado and reconstructs him to do his bidding. He turns him into a force of primal energy and sets him upon the Earth. As the Red Tornado storms across the country, Earth-One and Earth-Two begin to slowly merge together. People see ghost-like astral images of people from the parallel worlds.
The Flash overcomes Psycho-Pirate's control and demands to see the face of the being who abducted him. The enemy steps forward and introduces himself as the Monitor. This Monitor however, is not the same as the one who just died. Unlike the more human-looking Monitor, this one is a gruesome mechanical-looking alien with blazing red eyes and jaundiced yellow skin.
3 Earths! 3 Deaths! The new Monitor gloats that the other Monitor is dead, and now he has only his enemy's remaining energies to absorb as well as those of three remaining positive-matter universes, and the heroes on board his satellite headquarters to destroy, before ultimate power can be his. As the Flash slowly recovers, the new Monitor grants Psycho-Pirate his wish for a world to control. He makes the Psycho-Pirate see three Earths, each of them belonging to the three positive-matter universes, and causes the villain's emotion-controlling powers to increase to an incredible scale, affecting all three Earths.
On board the earlier Monitor's satellite, the heroes try to rescue each other as it is now being ripped apart. Pariah screams as he finds himself being transported elsewhere. Alexander Luthor Jr. tries to use his powers to save the heroes on board, but Harbinger stops him from doing so and instead flies into the energy chamber where their main non-powered self is located. Just as Harbinger merges back into her original form, the satellite explodes.
Back on Earth-Two, Al Pratt takes the injured Ted Grant to his apartment to rest, trying to comfort his friend as he now feels useless in the battle. Outside his apartment, Yolanda Montez watches from a window, silently promising that Wildcat will still carry on. On Earth-One, Lex Luthor is transported from being in a cyclone via a teleportation beam to Brainiac's skull skip, where he sees his old partner in his new form, ready to conquer the universe.
Some of the heroes on board the satellite find themselves on Earth-X, which they see is now being devoured by the anti-matter wave, but they also see within the wave the appearance of Harbinger, attempting to do something. They soon spot people heading toward the anti-matter wave like lemmings. Northwind flies down to stop them, but he is attacked by Uncle Sam's Freedom Fighters. The new Dr. Light uses her light powers to create a blinding barrier to keep the people from reaching the wave, but the Ray attacks her, causing her to fall into the arms of the Earth-Two Hawkman.
Some other heroes were transported to Earth-Four, where they see the anti-matter wave devouring the Earth in the middle of a rainstorm. Azrael spots the Blue Beetle's Bug hovering overhead and tries to investigate it, but is blasted away by Captain Atom. Nightshade and Peacekeeper join the fray on the ground, along with Judo Master who assaults Katana, mistaking her for "Nazi filth". Jay Garrick prevents Thunderbolt from speeding his way into a death run with the anti-matter wave. The Question is with Blue Beetle in his Bug, wondering why they are compelled to head toward the wave.
Back on Earth-One, Aquaman along with Aqualad and Aquagirl discover that the underwater cities of Tritonis and Poseidonis have mysteriously disappeared. As they swim off, Black Manta and the Ocean Master watch until they also disappear. Dolphin notices this as she swims behind them.
The final group of heroes from the Monitor's satellite appear on Earth-S, where Changeling as an elephant is hurled through a brick building by Captain Marvel. Supergirl tries to reason with him as she fights him, but Captain Marvel only answers her with his fists. Kole erects a crystal barrier to prevent people from entering the anti-matter wave, while Wonder Woman vainly struggles with Mary Marvel wrapped in her magic lasso, resisting the Amazon's efforts. Black Canary stuns both Mary Marvel and Captain Marvel Jr. with her sonic "canary cry". Wonder Woman is left looking at the image of Harbinger in the anti-matter wave, wondering what she's doing.
Soon, the cosmos shudders as the three remaining positive-matter universes are now transported into the Netherverse through Harbinger's power, and Psycho-Pirate realizes that he is losing control over the people's emotions. Now drained of her power, Harbinger reverts back to being Lyla and joins Alexander Luthor Jr. on an asteroid overlooking the five universes slowly merging with each other, and now in danger of annihilating each other.
Back on Earth-Two, Alan Scott, Power Girl, and Johnny Quick chase after Star Sapphire, Per Degaton, and Deathbolt when the three villains suddenly vanish, leaving the heroes wondering where they went. Back at the apartment building of Ted Grant, as he is resting in his bed, Yolanda Montez now makes her debut in costume as the new Wildcat.
Beyond the Silent Night With a group of heroes selected from the five surviving universes and transported there with the help of Pariah, Lyla reveals to them the origin of the universes they're trying to protect: Krona, a scientist on the world of Oa, performed a forbidden experiment of looking in time to the creation of the universe, which had dangerous repercussions. It created not only an evil anti-matter duplicate of the known universe, it also created endless positive-matter duplicates of the universe, with Oa being the only planet not duplicated except in the anti-matter universe, where it was called Qward, the home of the Thunderers. Krona was banished from his world, and since then the Oans attempted to atone for his misdeed through the creation of both the Manhunters and the Green Lantern Corps.
On the moons of both Oa and Qward, two similar but opposed beings emerged and came to life; they both became the Monitors. The Monitor of the positive-matter universe simply sought knowledge about his universe, while the Monitor of the other universe sought control over it, creating an army of warriors called the Thunderers and changing some into Shadow Demons. The two Monitors became aware of each other and waged war with each other until a simultaneous attack rendered them both unconscious until the present time.
Pariah joins the story with how he got involved: as the leading scientific mind on Earth of his universe, using his skills to turn his world into a paradise, he now sought to examine the origin of the universe, despite concerns from his people that he could end up destroying their universe in his pursuit for knowledge. Not taking heed to the concerns, Pariah set up a chamber in his lab where he could enter a pocket of the anti-matter universe to observe the creation of the universe. As he did, his entrance set off a chain reaction, creating an anti-matter wave that destroyed his universe, leaving Pariah stranded in space, safe but now realizing his error. However, with the destruction of his universe, the Monitor of the anti-matter universe awakened, absorbing the power from the destruction. It also awakened the Monitor of the positive-matter universe, who now sought Pariah to use him for the purpose of saving it.
With a shifting of selected heroes, they are prepared to take on the being they now call the Anti-Monitor. Alexander Luthor Jr. used his powers to open a portal between the two universes, with the assorted heroes flying through this portal, to arrive on the other side, following Pariah's sensing abilities as he directed them to a glowing asteroid which was the Anti-Monitor's fortress. Inside, he watches the heroes approach and calls Psycho-Pirate to him, commanding him to use his powers against them. When Psycho-Pirate reveals that his emotion-controlling powers need to be recharged, Anti-Monitor angrily swats him away and decides to deal with them himself.
Death of supergirl Death of Earth-One Supergirl Cyberhawk241Added by Cyberhawk241 Soon the heroes find themselves battling the fortress itself as it comes to life with statues attacking them, reassembling themselves as they get damaged. Some of the heroes realize that some of their own powers don't work as they would normally in the anti-matter universe. Nonetheless, Superman of Earth-One and Dr. Light manage to reach the heart of the fortress, where they see a machine converting starlight into energy, that is responsible for the merging of the universes. Superman of Earth-One plans to destroy it, but is suddenly attacked by the Anti-Monitor by a powerful blast. His scream attracts the attention of his cousin Supergirl, who engages the Anti-Monitor in physical combat, destroying his armor and also destroying the universe-merging machine. Dr. Light sees that Supergirl is seriously wounded from her battle and tries to get her out, but Supergirl tells Dr. Light to get her cousin out of there. This distraction enables the weakened Anti-Monitor to hit Supergirl with a titanic blast of energy, killing her in the sight of her cousin Kal-El.
As Anti-Monitor enters into an escape ship to recuperate, Superman of Earth-One holds his cousin Kara in his arms as she passes away, screaming that he would get his revenge. Superman of Earth-Two comforts his Earth-One counterpart and gets him to follow the heroes back to their own universe as the Anti-Monitor's fortress falls apart. Back on Earth-One, the heroes gather for a memorial service with Batgirl as the main speaker, stating, "Kara is a hero. She will not be forgotten." Later on, near the Fortress of Solitude, Superman of Earth-One has Kara's body wrapped up in her cape and flies her to New Krypton where she will be buried.
A Flash of the Lightning The Flash is captured, bound to a wall in a space capsule heading for the planet Qward in the Antimatter Universe. Psycho-Pirate is present, but fearful for his life. He wonders if the Anti-Monitor perished during his battle with Supergirl. Suddenly, the Anti-Monitor appears before them wearing new battle armor. He tells the Psycho-Pirate that he will spare him - for now.
On Apokolips, DeSaad watches the space capsule and asks his master Darkseid what they're going to do. Darkseid answers that they're simply going to watch and see what happens. If the heroes prevail against the Anti-Monitor, Darkseid says, then the "status quo" will be maintained. If the Anti-Monitor prevails, then he will be weakened enough to the point where Apokolips' sole leader will destroy him.
In the 30th century, the Legion of Super-Heroes monitor the partially merged five Earths. Brainiac 5 throws himself into his research, refusing to come to terms with Supergirl's death. Saturn Girl observes that his mind is in turmoil.
In the 20th century, Firestorm communicates with Vixen who finds famed robotics expert Professor T.O. Morrow. They bring Morrow to the remains of the Justice League satellite where they hope he can effect repairs upon the robot that he invented - Red Tornado. Ray Palmer is also present, and is inspecting the Tornado's body from the inside. Suddenly, something deep within the Tornado's bio-system activates and a huge explosion tears through the satellite. Blue Devil, one of the heroes summoned to examine Red Tornado's inner workings, finds himself transported to the Vegan system to deal with the Omega Men.
Back on Qward, the Anti-Monitor supervises the construction of an Anti-Matter cannon. With this weapon, he intends on finishing off the remaining Earths. Dozens of Qward's Thunderers work as slaves to complete the weapon. The Flash meanwhile, manages to break free. He grabs the Psycho-Pirate and races off with him across the barren landscape. Moving at super-speed, he exposes the Psycho-Pirate's face to many Thunderers. He forces Psycho-Pirate to warp their emotions into feelings of hatred for the Anti-Monitor. One by one, the Thunderers turn against their master, but the Anti-Monitor easily defeats them. While the villain is distracted, the Flash finds the Anti-Matter energy core that powers the cannon. Running faster than he has ever run in his life, he circles around the energy core thousands of times, turning the unstable anti-matter back upon itself, destroying the cannon. The influx of energy is too much for the Flash's mortal body however. He begins phasing through different points in the time stream, and before long, he loses all physical cohesion and dies. All that is left of him is his empty costume and his ring. His noble sacrifice has saved billions of lives across the Multiverse.
From beyond the walls of time and space, one being screams out in unbridled anger. The Spectre has awakened.
War Zone On Oa, the Guardians of the Universe make a last-ditch effort to combat the hysteria that is gripping the universe. They recruit Guy Gardner back into the Green Lantern Corps and give him a ring again.
Suddenly, a cosmic crimson flame from beyond the void washes over Oa. The Green Lantern Citadel is destroyed and all but one of the six remaining Guardians are killed. Guy Gardner swears vengeance.
Meanwhile, a cadre of Earth's most powerful super-villains gathers together aboard Brainiac's starship with T.O. Morrow now joining them. Lex Luthor coordinates the meeting, declaring that they shall take advantage of the Crisis by holding three of the multiple Earths hostage. Alexei Luthor of Earth-Two protests, citing that he should lead the cadre rather than his Earth-One counterpart. Brainiac concedes that there is no need for two Lex Luthors, destroying the Earth-Two Luthor.
Reporters have dubbed the point where the five remaining Earths intersect one another as the Warp Zone. Within this area, a strange time-distortion effect has allowed for creatures and entities from various timelines to interact with one another. Dinosaurs are seen stomping through the same New York City streets as World War I era biplanes and futuristic starships. Firehawk flies with Wonder Girl into the Warp Zone, trying to find Donna Troy's husband.
At the United Nations, representatives from the various parallel dimensions address the assembly. Key speakers include Pariah, Harbinger and Alexander Luthor. The nation leaders are concerned that the spreading chaos may result in an inter-Earth war. During the address, a holographic image of Lex Luthor appears before them and extends an ultimatum. Citing that he already controls three of the five Earths, he demands the unconditional surrender of the remaining two, or else he and Brainiac will unleash a destructive force that will obliterate all five.
While the other heroes struggle to pierce the barrier separating the merging Earths, Jay Garrick recruits Kid Flash to help him. They rebuild Barry Allen's cosmic treadmill and use their combined speed to pierce the barrier with an assembly of heroes standing on connecting platforms, ready to do battle.
Meanwhile, Luthor’s cadre of villains takes advantage of the situation. They spread themselves across the realities, sewing chaos and discord at every turn. Chemo poisons the waters surrounding Hudson Bay, killing Aquagirl. Doctor Phosphorus brutally injures Hawkman. The Joker and Poison Ivy capture the Freedom Fighters. Eclipso incapacitates Wonder Woman, and the Justice League fight the Brotherhood of Evil.
Back on Brainiac's ship, Luthor and Brainiac continue to coordinate their plans. Should the governments of the combined Earths fail to meet their demands, Luthor is more than ready to destroy all five planets. Suddenly, Psimon appears from behind the shadows. He is the only super-villain that did not join with the others planet-side. Using his powerful mental energy, Psimon blasts Brainiac, shattering him into a thousand pieces. He then brings himself to bear upon Lex Luthor.
Death at the Dawn of Time After destroying Brainiac's shell, Psimon turns his attention towards Lex Luthor. He plans on taking over the united villains after killing Luthor. What Psimon doesn't realize however is that Brainiac's consciousness has been downloaded into the circuitry of his ship. He forges a new body for himself and blasts the top off of Psimon's crown with a beam of energy.
On Earth-One at the dawn of mankind, Anthro continues to see wild streaks of red lightning flashing across the sky. He ponders whether he should tell the rest of the tribe, but fears that they may find him crazy.
On Earth-Four, Chemo stands next to the ruins of the Statue of Liberty. All about him, the waters surrounding Manhattan Island are bubbling with deadly poisonous fumes. Negative Woman flies about him, ensnaring the gigantic villain with bands of shadow energy. The bands constrict until they eventually succeed in destroying Chemo's artificial shell. In Manhattan, Black Adam fights against Robotman and Dove. Kole of the New Teen Titans flies up behind him and turns his body into solid crystal. Robotman is prepared to shatter him, but Dove holds him back. Meanwhile, Cyborg and Celsius tackle Quakemaster.
Meanwhile, Aqualad races back to Atlantis, carrying Aquagirl’s body. He hands her over to the city’s medical specialists, but there is nothing they can do. Aquagirl has died.
In the frozen wastelands of Earth-S, Doctor Sivana, Doctor Cyber, Per Degaton, Houngan, Phobia, Despero, Deathbolt, Hector Hammond and Professor T.O. Morrow keep watch over the captured members of the Marvel Family. While Sivana is in the midst of gloating, the Martian Manhunter burrows through the ice and attacks them. He blasts at Deathbolt with his Martian vision. The Atom and Platinum of the Metal Men arrive to give him back-up. Phobia tries to use her powers on Platinum, but they fail, enabling the Atom enough time to loose the gag around Billy Batson’s mouth. Billy shouts the magic word, "Shazam" and transforms into Captain Marvel.
On Earth-X, Batman and the original Atom fight up against Calendar Man while the Outsiders and Infinity, Inc. take on the Dummy. Hawkwoman and Tin fight Lightning Lord, and Firestorm and Vixen fight up against Captain Cold and Icicle. Green Arrow of Earth-Two assists Changeling and Mento in combating the Shaggy Man. Green Arrow defeats the Shaggy Man with an explosive-tipped arrow.
Suddenly, the Spectre makes his presence known across the five partially merged Earths. He warns all of the heroes that the Anti-Monitor is still alive and that he has retreated into the past to change the course of history at the dawn of time itself.
The heroes migrate to Earth-One to coordinate their efforts, with Superboy of the now-destroyed Earth-Prime joining them. They form their teams and develop a strategy using the time-traveling capabilities of the Time Masters, the Legion of Super-Heroes and the Lord of Time. Flash (Jay Garrick) and Kid Flash are outfitted with converter technology to help bridge the gap. With the aid of Magno Lad, Cosmic Boy and Gold, the team creates a large magnetic conductor, which shunts the assemblage backwards in time. Superman of Earth-One personally flies Alexander Luthor, Jr. ahead of the time travelers in order for Luthor to open the portal between the universes before they arrive.
Meanwhile, Lex Luthor and his allies travel backwards in time ten billion years to the planet Oa. They arrive on the fateful day when the scientist Krona is destined to witness the hand of creation and inadvertently create the Multiverse. They burst into his laboratory, but Krona is ready for them. He kills Icicle, Mirror Master and Maaldor.
At the dawn of time, the heroes face the Anti-Monitor. They channel all of their energy into him, but this only serves to make the Anti-Monitor more powerful. He requires their energy so that when Krona opens the doorway between the positive matter universe and the anti-matter universe, the Anti-Monitor will then be able to obliterate the positive matter universe entirely.
The Spectre appears before the Anti-Monitor, channeling all of the mystical energy of Earth’s most powerful sorcerers. He attacks the Anti-Monitor directly and their fight unleashes an explosion of energy, which appears to consume all reality.
Aftershock The Big Bang happens again, but this time only one universe, with only one Earth, appears.
Clark Kent of Earth-Two finds himself in what appears to be his apartment, thinking he is back in his own universe. He dresses up for work and enters into the Daily Planet building unaware, thinking he is entering that of the Daily Star, and enters into Perry White's office, reading the paper until Perry chews him out for being where he doesn't belong. Clark Kent of Earth-One comes on the scene and rescues the other Clark, referring to him as his "Uncle Clark" to Perry, while Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen of Earth-One amusingly watch.
On top the Daily Planet, both Clark Kents transform into Superman and fly off to New York City, where the cordoned-off merged section of the Earths was located. However, they find that not only is the merged section no longer present, but also that no one even remembers that there was a cordoned-off section. They fly off to Central City in the hopes of finding Barry Allen's lab when they notice that Central City of Earth-One is now adjacent to Keystone City of Earth-Two. They find Jay Garrick's residence in Keystone City and, surprisingly, Jay Garrick's wife doesn't recognize Superman of Earth-Two, though Jay still does. He had Wally West in his own lab setting up the Cosmic Treadmill so they can find out together what's going on.
As Flash of Earth-Two, Kid Flash, and both Supermen race the treadmill, they find themselves transported out into a void where the Earth-Two universe should have been. Superman of Earth-Two fears that his wife, Lois Lane-Kent, has vanished along with Earth-Two and chooses to fly out into the void, but Superman of Earth-One stops him and they return back to the New Earth, with the Cosmic Treadmill destroyed. Kid Flash decides it is time to gather all the superheroes together to find out the truth.
Meanwhile, Rip Hunter's time vehicle emerges out of the timestream with the Forgotten Heroes in it. They also notice that time has reset itself. They board Brainiac's skull ship, still floating in space, and see Brainiac still sitting at the controls as he did before the point of time resetting. Dolphin thinks that Brainiac is now dead.
At the Titans Tower, there is a gathering of present-day superheroes from the various universes, with some trying to figure out why they can't go back to their own universe. To answer that question, Harbinger appears unto them, revealing that with time resetting itself, the five surviving positive-matter universes have all merged into one, with histories from those universes merging into a single history. However, in this universe, there was only one Superman that came from Krypton, only one Bruce Wayne that became Batman, only one Dick Grayson that became Robin, and only one Wonder Woman that came from Paradise Island. This makes Dick Grayson of Earth-Two, the Huntress, and Superman of Earth-Two feel as though they were now "non-persons", and it also confuses Power Girl, who in this universe's history is still recognized as a hero, though her Earth-Two cousin isn't.
Batman of Earth-One shows up with Jason Todd and Alexander Luthor, Jr. with more revelations to the group: the supervillains that went back in time to Oa to try preventing Krona's experiment from taking place now don't remember ever taking that trip, as evidenced by Batman talking with Lex Luthor in his prison cell, which means that only those who were there at the Dawn of Time were the ones who remembered, and they were the only ones that survived the universes merging. Superman of Earth-Two realizes from this that his wife is now gone and flies off in a rage, with Superman of Earth-One following to try comforting him for his loss.
Meanwhile, as stormy clouds appear over the earth, Phantom Stranger and Deadman look on helplessly at the Spectre floating in midair, unable to help them as they sense that a danger is coming. A housemaid at a Las Vegas hotel finds somebody has died in one of their rooms, and Jonni Thunder finds a triangle beside the body, which one of the detectives with her recognizes as the weapon of the Angle Man. Dr. Fate and Etrigan see that Amethyst is being attacked by people who consider her a witch, and so travel to the scene even as Dr. Occult appears to calm the people with his mystical talisman. The Shadow Demons then appear, and Amethyst tries to fight them off, but she ends up being blinded. Etrigan holds off the demons while Dr. Fate transports Amethyst back to Gemworld. Deep inside a cavern, Cave Carson and his team of explorers see a powerful maelstrom forming within the earth.
Back at Titans Tower, Pariah suffers pain and Alexander Luthor, Jr. experiences himself shifting into starry darkness as the Earth itself is swallowed up from its own universe into another. The two Superman watch the sky as the face of the Anti-Monitor appears, welcoming the planet's residents to their death.
Final Crisis In Brainiac's starship, Dolphin, Captain Comet, Rip Hunter, Animal Man, the Atomic Knight, and Adam Strange convince the reviving robot that his memory was tampered with to make him forget the Crisis. Admitting that his power is inadequate to battle the Anti-Monitor, he sets course for the world of a more powerful being. On Earth, the Anti-Monitor's visage is seen in the skies all over the globe. He repeats that the Earth is now in the anti-matter universe. His past victories over positive universes are meaningless, he says, because of the super-heroes' efforts to stop him. When he lists Supergirl and the Flash as casualties, Kid Flash demands to know what has happened.
The Supermen scan the globe and watch the populace panicking. Harbinger appears, and teleports them to a chosen destination, then gathers Dr. Light from Japan, leaving Sunburst to defend the island. When Dr. Light states that she caused Supergirl's death, Harbinger replies that the battle had already killed Supergirl, and that the Anti-Monitor's final attack merely gave her a swift death. In the skies, the darkness splits into a million Shadow Demons, which begin an all-out attack on humanity, and the superheroes mass to resist them. The Global Guardians team with other heroes to free their native lands from the threat, but the demons' numbers seem endless. The Phantom Stranger summons Dr. Mist to help revive the Spectre, who remains comatose. Below, Harbinger has gathered a large group of heroes, along with Pariah and Alex, to lead a final assault on their nemesis. Alex creates a bridge between universes, and they depart near Apokolips.
Brainiac's ship goes into stationary orbit over Apokolips, and he and his guests teleport to the planet, where Darkseid appears and introduces himself.
Back on Earth, the majority of the heroes are still battling the Shadow Demons. The Dove is slain by a shadow-being as his brother watches in horror.
In Dr. Fate's Salem tower, the magically powered heroes have gathered to pool their sorcerous might. The Earth-Two Green Lantern and Dr. Occult form the nexus of their energy.
On Qward, in the anti-matter universe, Harbinger and the heroes have arrived in the Anti-Monitor's old headquarters. Kid Flash insists on joining them because of his mentor's demise. Suddenly, an image of the Flash appears to him—the last one Barry cast before his death. Wally follows the afterimage to where an insane Psycho-Pirate clutches at an empty uniform. Kid Flash knocks him out and realizes that Barry Allen is truly dead when Lady Quark finds his ring. Pariah informs them that a great concentration of evil lies before them. They follow to find a towering Anti-Monitor, ready for the final slaughter.
In Atlantis, Aquaman leads his underwater legions against the shadows. Lori Lemaris saves a trapped Mera with a force beam. A demon closes in on her and kills her. In Chicago, Green Arrow of Earth-Two is killed by a shadow. In Philadelphia, Cyborg, the Son of Vulcan, the Vigilante, and the new Wildcat continue rescue operations.
In New Orleans, Shade the Changing Man witnesses the death of Prince Ra-Man. In Skartaris, Travis Morgan leads his forces against the black menaces. In Gotham City, both Clayface II and the Bug-Eyed Bandit perish at the hands of the demons. In Salem, the tide finally turns. The sorcerous crusaders send their combined force in a net of energy to gather the demons from the Earth's surface, and bind them helpless in space. Over the Earth, lives have been lost, including those of Kole, Huntress, and Robin of Earth-Two, but other lives have been saved. For a moment, the survivors can take stock.
Crisis on infinite earths 12 Final battle of the Crisis of Infinite Earths Cyberhawk241Added by Cyberhawk241 On Qward, the Supermen of Earth One and Two, Captain Atom, Lady Quark, Firehawk, Wonder Woman, and other heroes strike at the Anti-Monitor, but he ignores their blows, feeding on the energy of a nearby star. As Dr. Light absorbs the energy of one of the binary suns they are between, the Anti-Monitor feels his power draining away. Alex begins to drain the anti-matter energy away from their enemy. Negative Woman uses her negative-self to bind the Anti-Monitor and inhibit him; Harbinger then leads all the energy-producing heroes against him, Dr. Light blasts him with the energy of a sun, and he falls into the ruins of his fortress. Alex creates a dimensional hole, large enough to enclose the Earth and return it to its proper universe. The heroes follow. The ball of bound demons hover and then fall on the fallen enemy. Thus, the Anti-Monitor absorbs his slaves energies and rises again, while the heroes start to give battle. Wonder Woman is caught in a withering flash of power, and is borne away to an unknown destination. Superman of Earth-One and Lady Quark vow deadly revenge, but Kal-L knocks them out, and tells Superboy to take them back. Since he has no world and no wife to return to, the elder Superman has the least to lose. Then he confronts the monstrous Anti-Monitor, and batters him. Superboy sends Kal-El and Lady Quark back through Alex's shrinking body, and turns to aid him. Superman continues his one-man war against the Anti-Monitor, striking telling blows, while the villain, his power waning, absorbs more energy from the anti-cosmos, and blasts him and Superboy. Darkseid, watching the conflict on a view screen, proclaims his planet to be endangered if the Anti-Monitor survives, sends a power burst at him through Alex's eyes. The enemy, devastated, is hurled into the core of one of the binary suns. Superman, Superboy, and Alex are stunned to see the spectre of their enemy rising from the sun. Superman smashes into his foe's fiery body, scattering him: the remains fall back into the sun and the star begins to implode.
They bravely await the end and Superman wishes that Lois could have lived to see their triumph. At that, Alex produces Lois from a void-pocket in his body where she had been sent to wait. She tells her husband that she had been to a tranquil world. Alex cannot return them to Earth, but he can take them all to this beautiful world. Superman, Lois, and Superboy opt for that choice. The foursome vanish seconds before the exploding sun would have reached them.
Back on Earth, Lyla is explaining facets of the Crisis to Pariah and Lady Quark. Wonder Woman was returned to the clay which Aphrodite and Athena had given life, then spread across Paradise Island.
Time then continued to reverse itself, as the Amazons were returned to their original homeland before they fled Man's World. Zeus brought the homeless Wonder Woman of Earth-Two and her husband Steve Trevor to Olympus, where they could live peacefully. The bodies of Robin of Earth-Two, the Huntress, and Kole were never found. All those who died were mourned. In Keystone City, Jay Garrick determined that Kid Flash's illness was in remission, his body chemistry being changed by a blast from the Anti-Monitor. He could again move at super-speed, though only at the speed of sound. Wally donned Barry Allen's uniform, and announced, "From this day forth — the Flash lives again!"
The Great Disaster will not exist in the Earth's future, but a lost child will he found in Command D., adopted by General Horatio Tomorrow of the Planeteers, and named Thomas. Jonah Jex will be torn from his era to fight in the future, while the Guardians of the Universe must face the first division in their ranks. Thus, Lyla concludes her tale, and Lady Quark and Pariah ask her to help them explore their new homeworld. They leave with her, honoring the memory of their benefactor, the Monitor. And, in Arkham Asylum, the staff discuss a new patient who seems beyond help, straitjacketed in a rubber-lined room. Roger Hayden, formerly Psycho-Pirate, gibbers about Earths beyond numbers, the Anti-Monitor, and the memories, which only he had been allowed to keep.
In Summary The Monitor's plans did not completely work against the Anti-Monitor, ultimately costing the Monitor his life. Five universes remained. The heroes, at the Spectre's urging, pool their resources and travel back to the Dawn of Time when they confront the Anti-Monitor. Meanwhile, the villains travel (1,000,000,000 years later) to Oa to try to stop Krona from peering back in time and creating the Multiverse (and the Anti=matter Universe the Anti-Monitor came from).
The Anti-Monitor reveals that he lured the heroes to him to absorb their life forces. He explains:
Only here, before creation can the future be changed! When Krona taps the cosmic forces, opening the door between matter and antimatter... it shall be my hand he sees! My hand which shall destroy the positive matter multivers for now and forever! My hand which shall make the antimatter universe supreme! ... The Multiverse will no longer exist! [1] However, the Spectre, aided by Earths' mightiest sorcerers managed to (apparently) defeat him.
As Krona peers back through the cosmic veil, the Big Bang occurs:
In the beginning there were many. A Multiversal infinitude... so cold and so dark for so long... that even the burning light was imperceptible... but then the light grew, and the Multiverse shuddered... and the darkness screamed as much in pain as in relief. For in that instant, a Universe was born. A Universe with mighty worlds orbiting burning suns. A Universe reborn at the Dawn of Time. What had been many became one.[1] The resulting reality was able to resist the Anti-Monitor's attacks due to the successful depowering efforts brought about mostly identified in battles noted to Supergirl and the Flash which cost them their lives. Vastly depowered, the Anti-Monitor attacked the resulting Earth directly where he was finally killed by Kal-L. With both "Monitors" dead, the resulting primary Earth underwent further changes and readjusted into a new state of existence which differed in many major ways from its preceding versions. The universe reformated all of its inhabitants to be native to its history and time line which conflicted with the previous multi-dimensional originating people now in it such as Power Girl.
Some would be changed in the later Zero Hour/Hyper-Time event, whereby the existence of infinite dimensions would again be accessible in the DC primary reality (other dimensions existed, but were completely inaccessible and thus termed "Elsewhere Stories"). But this interaction with these other dimensions was unstable and these separate realities' influences threatened to destroy the singular DC New Earth. This would be the same occurrence when the Dark Flash entered into the DC primary reality [2].
It would not be until the later Infinite Crisis occurrence that stable extradimensional realities would be shown to exist within the DC universe again. In fact, a duplicate recreated version of the Classic Earth-Two seems to have survived the event. But it was barren and unpopulated. If it still exists, this new Earth-Two is a dead world. This world should not be confused with the same name given to the home Earth of the Crime Syndicate of AmeriKa that exists in the anti-matter universe of Qward. Most usually refer to the Crime Syndicate Earth as Earth-Two now.
Only a handful of powerful beings remember the realities of the previous DC Multiverse.