DC has an atlas of the new, expanded Multiverse in Dark Crisis: Big Bang
There are a whole lot more multiple Earths now, including some new fu🌼n and intriguing ones

A couple of years back, the 52 Earths of the DC Multiverse (as established by writer Grant Morrison) were pushed aside for an Omniverse (a mul🌱tiverse of multiverses) in the conclusion of writer Scott Snyder's Dark Nights: Death Metal that launched the publisher's Infinite Frontier editorial era.
The "Omniverse" term and the somewhat headache-inducing concept of multiple multiverses haven't really taken root, but the publisher is using writer Joshua William's almost-concluded Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths (the final goes on sale December 20) as a vehicle to expand the known🍒 DC Multiverse.
And December 13's Dark Crisis: Big Bang is doing thꦑe yeoman's work of cataloging the newer, bigger Multiverse𓆏.
Newsarama has already spoken to writ🦋er𒐪 Mark Waid and artist Dan Jurgens about the story, which finds Barry Allen and Kid Flash Wallace West battling original Crisis on Infinit⛦e Earths villain the Anti-Monitor across dozens of Earths in the Multiverse, joined ☂by the heroic inhabitants of those Earths.
And no offense to Waid and Jurgens, but the real fun for hardcore DC readers might be a couple of pages in the rear of the book under the guis🌃e of 'From the Notes of Barry Allen' that assigns numbered Earth designations to many new additions to the Multiverse, both filling in some of the 52 Earth's Morrison never did on their version of the Map and greatly expanding upon 𓆏the numbers, with some interesting additions.
Newer stories like DC Bombshells (Earth-24), the world of ABC's Tom Strong (Earth-25), The Jurassic League 🌳(Earth-27), DC Mech (Earth-28), and the video game and comic book world of Injustice (Earth-49) are some of the more recent stories-formerly-known-as-Elseworlds that now officially inhabit the DC Multiversal Universe or DCMU (we tried DCU Multiverse but the acronym was a non-starter).
DCeased (Earth-55), DC vs🦩. Vampires (Earth-63), Dark Knights of Steel (Earth-118), and JLA: The Nail 𝐆(Earth-898) similarly get added with higher designations.
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Many other of the new Earths are inspired by DC Golden and Silver Ag🌌e one-off and 'imaginary stories,' with their designation corresponding to an original issue number like Earth-216, home of Batman and Superman Jr. (the 'Super Sons' predecessors to today's Jon and Damian) fr🔜om 1973's World's Finest Comics #215. We don't know why there is a one-digit differential.
And then there's Earth-162, based on 1963's Superman #162, which featu🗹red Superman splitting himself into a Red and Blue Superman.
That story inspired the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:1998 storyline and now seems to be inspiring another new modern take. In his interview, Waid told Newsarama he can't wait to someday tell the story of Batman Gray and Batman Blue, seen in the pages of Dark Crisis: Big Bang, implying the story will be told in the pages of his own Batman/Superman: World's Finest ongoing series, a title he tells us 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:he intends to stay on "till I die."
Modern YA graphic novels from the worlds of Green Lantern: Legacy (Earth-98) an🐲d Teen Titans: Raven (Earth-100) join the fun, as does the world of the animated TV series and graphic novels DC Super Hero Girls (Earth-96).
We frankly don't know what the world of Earth-46 is. A "grim young Batman with a unique, unrecognizable rogues' gallery' from "Batman: The Gargoyle of Gotham" doesn't ring a bell, but we couldn't help but think of 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:the 🧜possible mid-2023 event 'Knight Terro𝓀rs' since a Google search turns up nothing but a reference to an obscure in-continui💞ty Batman story from 1992.
And we also can't tell you why the smart primate world (ala the ape Justice League) of Earth-53 h🦂as been redesignated to Earth-52 and no replacement Earth-53 was named.
The world of Batman '66 (Earth-66, of course, the Adam West Batman) officially ꦛjoins the DC Multiverse with what should be the Emmy Award-winning copy "Batman and Robin face exceptionally benign supervillains," and what appears to be to the best of our interpretation the pre-Crisis Earth-One is back as E🦩arth-1956.
The Milestone Dakotaverse is Earth-93 ♑and the DC-Marvel crossover Amalgam universe gets designated Earth-1996 for the nutty year it was published but without actually mentioning Marvel, of course.
Finally, in what almost slipped our attention, DC seems to have estab🐈lished an Earth that merges the Superman movies of the '70s and '80s (along with 1984's Supergirl) with the Batman films of the ⭕late '80s and '90s. Called Earth-789, it's a hybrid of Superman '78 and Batman '89.
DC did crossover Batman '66 with Lynda Carter's Wonder Woman '77, but we can't find a melding of the Christopher Reeve Superman and Michael Keato🐼n Batman on record so unless we're mistaken, this is news.
Readers can check out the entire Barry Allen Multiverse field guide in Dark Crisis: Big Bang, or below. And study it real close, because something in it will pay off in the coming weeks or m༒onths…" at least according to Waid.
"There's one big hint about something that actually doesn't involve me or Dan, that came from editorial as a suggestion," he tells DC readers via Newsarama. ဣ"I won't go into detail, but I think if you read that list carefully, you'll see a hint toward something that must be in our near future."
Dark Crisis: Big Bang #1🧸 went on ෴sale December 13.
How will Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths stack up against 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:every DC Crisis event ever?
I'm not just the Newsarama fღounder and editor-in-chief, I'm also a reader. And that reference is just a little bit older than the beginning of my Newsarama journey. I founded what would become the comic book news site in 1996, and except for a brief sojourn at Marvel Comics as its marketing and communications manager in 2003, I've been writing about new comic book titles, creative changes, and occasionally offering my perspective on important industry events and developments for the 25 years since. Despite many changes to Newsarama, my passion for the medium of comic books and the characters makes the last quarter-century (it's ♒crazy to see that in writing) time spent doing what I love most.