Videos by ComicBook.com
Looking at the history of the DC Multiverse, there are lots of couples that just don’t fit. Sometimes, these couples work out in the long run, but other times they never come together. These seven DC couples never made sense, each of them leaving readers with a lot of questions.
7) Guy Gardner/Ice

The Justice League International is legendary, and gave readers a relationship that works but doesn’t really make a lot of sense. Guy Gardner is the team’s bad boy, a great hero who is honestly a genuinely bad person in a lot of ways. Ice was the sweetest, most innocent person on the team. The two had nothing in common, and yet they’ve somehow made a long-running relationship. Opposites definitely attract at times, but Guy treated everyone badly, including Ice. Even taking physical attraction into account, there’s no reason that Ice should have given him the time of day.
6) Kyle Rayner/Donna Troy

Donna Troy is DC’s most complicated character, and she’s also had a lot of relationships that made no sense (Terry Long, anyone?), but the one that made the least sense was her time with Kyle Rayner. This honestly mostly just feels like no one had anything else to do with Donna, so they made her into a Darkstar (a group meant to replace the Green Lantern Corps), and she was shoe-horned into sci-fi stories that she didn’t really fit. Her and Kyle had no chemistry, and most fans don’t even remember this relationship, which says it all.
5) Jon Kent/Jay Nakamura

Jon Kent coming out as bisexual caused a pretty big stink from a certain segment of the “fandom”, and his choice of boyfriend didn’t really help the matter. Jay Nakamura was an Internet journalist who basically came out of nowhere and ended up with Jon. Jay barely had a personality, and it felt like the only reason they were together was because he was a reporter like Jon’s mother Lois. It was a relationship with no heat, and the two of them just don’t fit (unlike Jon and Dreamer, hint, hint DC). Their relationship is barely brought up anymore, showing how ill-fitting they were.












