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Some DC events have naturally rose to the top of the heap, but there are others that don’t get the love they deserve. These lesser-loved events are honestly pretty awesome. These ten DC events are the most underrated of all time, ranked by their quality.
10) Zero Hour: A Crisis in Time

Even after Crisis on Infinite Earths, DC continuity was still pretty wonky and by the mid ’90s, it was decided that a story needed to fix those leftover problems (some of which Crisis actually exacerbated). Zero Hour: A Crisis in Time, by Dan Jurgens and Jerry Ordway, saw the mysterious new villain Extant attacking as various alternate universe heroes show up out of nowhere. This isn’t some amazing story, but it’s way better than it gets credit for. There’s big moments, a couple of cool twists for DC fans, and some awesome art from Jurgens and Ordway. It didn’t actually fix much, but it established a concrete DC timeline and is more fun than most people realize.
9) Armageddon 2001

Armageddon 2001 is an infamous DC event. The story saw Waverider, a man from the future, going back in time to figure out who the evil Monarch, the ruler of the Earth, was and how he took over. However, the identity of the Monarch was leaked before hand, and creators had to scramble to come up with a new ending. The event took place in various annuals, taking readers to the future to see the heroes’ lives in 2001. These chapters are honestly pretty good, and the Armageddon 2001 two-issue series from Archie Goodwin, Denny O’Neil, Dan Jurgens, and Dick Giordano is a pretty fun superhero battle comic. This story doesn’t have a great reputation, but it’s pretty good, honestly.
8) “House of Brainiac”

Superman has loads of underrated stories, and “House of Brainiac” is one of the coolest Superman events in years. This story by Joshua Williamson, Rafa Sandoval, Fico Ossio, Miguel Mendonca, and Edwin Galmon ran through Superman and Action Comics, with a special one-shot, and tie-ins in Green Lantern and Power Girl. The story sees Brainiac use an army of Czarnians to kidnap members of the Super and Luthor families in order to find a secret that will allow the Coluan cyborg to create his ultimate weapon. This story is fantastic, a key part of DC in 2024, and shows how well DC has been treating the Superman titles lately.
7) Absolute Power

The build-up to Absolute Power, by Mark Waid and Dan Mora, began at the end of Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths and ran through the various DC titles of the “Dawn of DC” publishing initiative, as Amanda Waller hatched a plan to take control of the superhero community. This four-issue story showed her final attack, as the heroes scrambled to defeat an enemy who had a plan for everything. Waid and Mora are electric together, and the tie-ins to the event are all excellent. This is a prime example of great DC event creation and Absolute Power is a treasure.
6) Flashpoint Beyond

Flashpoint kicked off the New 52, and hasn’t really aged well despite DC trying to push it as one of the greats. We’d eventually return to the Flashpoint Earth with Flashpoint Beyond, by Geoff Johns, Jeremy Adams, Tim Sheridan, Xermanico, Eduardo Risso, and Mikel Janin. This story saw a returned to life Flashpoint Batman trying to figure out what was going on, and played with numerous plots that Johns had set up over the years in various books. It’s way better than it gets credit for being, with the art by Xermanico being especially good. Even if you didn’t like Flashpoint, this story will do it for you.













