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Secrets in comics are fraught with peril, because you never really know how the fans are going to react to them. Some secrets have been rather underwhelming, but some of them are completely justified. These seven big DC secrets needed to be kept, and their reveals are still talked about to this day.
7) Earth as the Cradle of Life in the Universe

Blackest Night is a DC classic, and it changed everything we thought we knew about the DC Universe. For years, the Oans claimed that Oa was the center of the universe and that they were the first lifeforms to ever exist. However, the Black Lanterns and their leader Nekron, a personification of death, attacked the Earth in their quest to destroy the source of life. The last issue of the book revealed that the Life Entity, the embodiment of the white energy of life, was on Earth the whole time and that the planet was the first place to have life. The Oans knew this the whole time, but they kept it a secret because humans are much weaker than they are, and couldn’t handle attacks like the Oans could.
6) The Superman Project

The Superman Project was introduced in Doomsday Clock. Basically, when Superman showed up, the US government decided to create their own superheroes who they could control. They even created supervillains meant to fight them and ingratiate them to the public. It was all kept a secret from the subjects, including Firestorm. The New History of the DC Universe revealed it was still canon, and it makes sense that this would have been a secret. Manipulating people, exposing them to experiments that could kill them, is a terrible thing and if the general public knew about it when it was happening, there would be an endless uproar.
5) Darkseid’s Plans for the Multiverse in DC All-In

Darkseid has long been considered the greatest villain in the DC Multiverse, and DC All-In has used that idea with gusto. It all started with DC All-In #1, with the God of Evil killing his servants on Apokolips, sacrificing them for power to steal the energies of the Spectre, and get the Justice League to kill him, exploding and creating the Omega Rift. Everyone wondered why he did it, and it would soon be revealed: not only did allow him to take over the Alpha Earth, a blank Earth waiting for someone to define it, but also to spread his energy throughout the Multiverse in an attempt to become the basis of everything. Darkseid was able to keep everyone guessing, and would have won if it wasn’t for Doomsday amping Superman in DC K.O. #5.












