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Superboy-Prime's attempts to punch his way out of the extradimensional space in which he had been trapped since the Crisis on Infinite Earths mini-series, along with Kal-L, Lois Lane (both of Earth-Two), and Alexander Luthor Jr. (of Earth-Three), triggered "ripples" in the fabric of reality which created parallel timelines, causing pivotal events in the present to be overlapped by alternate ...
The eighth chapter, illustrated by Doug Mahnke and Christian Alamy, [53] Ultra Comics takes place on Earth-33 (aka Earth-Prime) and features Ultraa, the first superhero of this world. Earth-33 serves in the DC Universe as a version of the "real world" (the readers' Earth), a planet with no superheroes other than those appearing in comic books.
Earth-One (1961–1985) Notes New Earth / Prime Earth counterpart Kal-El/Clark Kent: Since Superman was one of several DC characters continuously published throughout the 1950s, there is not a clear dividing line between the Earth-One and Earth-Two versions of Superman. Several stories published before the mid-1950s took place on Earth-One.
Earth-260: Pre-Crisis: DC: The New Frontier characters Characters shown in the DC: The New Frontier miniseries [12] Named in The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia (2010) Hypertime versions called Earth-21 and Earth 21; DC: The New Frontier #1 (March 2004) Earth-265: Pre-Crisis: Cetaceans An Earth where the inhabitants evolved from cetaceans
New Earth / Prime Earth counterpart Kal-L/Clark Kent: Kal-El/Clark Kent Val-Zod Superman was born on the planet Krypton, and arrived on Earth as a baby near the start of Earth's First World War. As Clark Kent, he was a reporter for the Daily Star, would become the editor-in-chief and marrying its star reporter Lois Lane.
In a January 2015 interview, writer Reginald Hudlin discussed a relaunch of Milestone Media Group, along with surviving co-founders Denys Cowan and Derek Dingle. [3] The following July, DC Comics announced the creation of "Earth-M" within their multiverse, which would be home to the earlier Milestone characters as well as new ones, and that one or two Earth M imprint titles would be published ...
Earth Prime (or Earth-Prime) is a term sometimes used in works of speculative fiction, most notably in DC Comics, involving parallel universes or a multiverse, and refers either to the universe containing "our" Earth, or to a parallel world with a bare minimum of divergence points from Earth as we know it — often the absence or near-absence of metahumans, or with their existence confined to ...
DC replaced its official decades-old logo (the "DC bullet") with a new one (the "DC spin") that debuted in the first issue of DC Special: The Return of Donna Troy. Aside from marking a major editorial shift within DC Comics, Infinite Crisis was a return to large company-wide crossovers of a sort that had been uncommon since the downturn of the ...