Videos by ComicBook.com
Infinity Gauntlet is an amazing work, and one of the best events ever, hands down. However, if we’re being honest, the best event of the ’90s wasn’t Infinity Gauntlet. It was a four-issue DC miniseries, one that spun out of Grant Morrison’s JLA, and had the most interesting narrative conceit of any event comic ever: DC One Million. DC One Million, from Morrison and artist Val Semeiks, isn’t the flashiest or most important event, but it’s easily the best of its decade, a perfect event series with the best tie-ins ever.
DC One Million Took Readers to the 853rd Century and Blew Their Minds

It all began with one of the best Justice League stories ever, “Rock of Ages”. Wally West, Kyle Rayner, and Aquaman met the Hourman of the 853rd century, and the story ended with the Justice Legion A from that time meeting the Justice League. This began the main plot of DC One Million. The team from the future had come back to bring the Justice League to their time to see the return of the Prime Superman from the Solar Fortress of Solitude. Meanwhile, in the present, Vandal Savage got his hands on nuclear equipped Rocket Red suits, taking the Titans hostage with the League gone and destroying Montevideo, Uruguay. In the future, Savage and the Tyrant Sun Solaris have a plan, using their memories of the past to destroy the heroes in all times.
That was the gist of the series, and it was wild. What made it even better was that every superhero book in DC’s line was given a #1,000,000 issue. The 853rd century was chosen because that was when Action Comics would hit issue #1,000,000 if it kept a monthly schedule (this is actually a piece of Morrison’s ’90s utopianism, when they were trying to use chaos magic to manifest a better future for mankind through comics; yes, everything I just typed is true), and the story’s tie-in issues would take readers to this far off time to see the legacy of heroism that the heroes had created. There are some amazing tie-in issues, with JLA, Starman, Resurrection Man, and Chance the best of them. However, they’re all good when it comes right down to it.









