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DC has changed so much in the last 46 years, giving readers all kinds of amazingly dark stories. Sometimes, these stories land beautifully and become legends. Other times, they fail and become legendary for a completely different reason. These seven stories are DC’s darkest, changing the way fans looked at the publisher.
7) Injustice: Gods Among Us

Injustice: Gods Among Us had numerous series, telling the story of a world where Superman was fooled into killing Lois Lane by the Joker and went mad. This comic, over its various volumes, is a meat-grinder, killing numerous big name heroes in terrible ways. Some fans love the books, some fans hate them, but no one denies how dark they are. Watching the greatest heroes ever fight each tooth and nail to the death is as dark as it can get, and this story managed to be extremely popular with all kinds of fans.
6) Justice League: Cry for Justice

The Justice League is DC’s most important team, but there have been some times that fans wanted to forget it existed. Justice League: Cry for Justice, by James Robinson, Mauro Cascioli, Scott Clark, Ardian Sayif, and Ibraim Roberson, is the darkest moment in the team’s history in the worst way possible. Prometheus attacks the cities of the US, doing massive damage, bringing together a new Justice League. The story is most well-known for killing off the young Lian Harper, the daughter of Roy Harper, and the former drug addict hero going off the deep end. This is taking things in a darker direction for no good reason, and there are very little good things to say about this story.
5) Identity Crisis

Identity Crisis, by Brad Meltzer and Rags Morales, is another example of DC taking the darkness too far. This murder mystery story opened with the death of Sue Dibney. Then we learn that she was once sexually assaulted by Doctor Light. Then we learn that the Justice League mindwipes people. Then Tim Drake’s dad and Captain Boomerang kill each other. Then we learn the League mindwiped Batman and the Atom’s wife was the murderer. That’s a lot of dark. There are some good ideas (and great art) in this book, but it went way too far with the “maturity”, destroying one of the coolest wives in comics just to make the story work.












