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Fantastic things have happened in the Superman comics, but it hasn’t always been amazing. There have been some very bad times to read the Man of Tomorrow’s comics. These seven things are the worst parts of Superman’s comics, dragging the high-flying hero down.
7) Electric Superman Red/Superman Blue

Once upon a time, there was an imaginary story (what they called non-canon stories back then) that saw Superman split into red and blue versions. It was fun, it ended, and it was often brought up as a wild Silver Age story. However, it was eventually resurrected in the years after “The Death of Superman”. DC became obsessed with event-driven Superman stories, and that led to him developing electromagnetic-based powers.
This was an unpopular gimmick, but it got worse when the hero was split into a red and blue version. This story killed any excitement that fans had for the Superman comics and spelled the end of Dan Jurgens’ legendary run on the character.
6) The Tomasi/Gleason Superman

DC Rebirth was wildly successful at first. Fans were tired of the New 52, and the publisher fixed that by bringing back pre-Flashpoint ideas. This led to the reintroduction of the post-Crisis Superman and Lois Lane, along with their son Jon. Superman was relaunched by the Green Lantern Corps/Batman and Robin team of Pete Tomasi and Patrick Gleason (along with fill-in artist Doug Mahnke). Fans loved this book, and it definitely has its moments, but the problem is that Tomasi wrote him in a very conservative manner. This Superman felt like the version we got in the late ’80s, a jingoistic character that just never felt right.
On top of that, the book ran out of steam after “Superman Reborn”, with the last story arcs being okay at best. It was great they brought back the actual Superman, but it just felt like a rehash of Byrne’s version of the character (more on that next).
5) John Byrne’s Changes to Superman

Crisis on Infinite Earths changed DC forever, and a big part of that was Superman. Writer/artist John Byrne was given the character and completely rebooted him. Byrne ejected every that wasn’t American about the character. Krypton was changed into a cold, antiseptic society; the various Kryptonian survivors of the Silver Age didn’t exist; Kal-El was born on Earth when he arrived in the United States, taking away his immigrant status. He was also no longer a man of the people, but a Reagan-era conservative, which is hilarious when you think about the original, almost socialist Superman stories.
Then there was the issue where Byrne used Big Barda to disrespect Jack Kirby, with whom he was feuding (Barda was based on Kirby’s wife, and Byrne had her brainwashed and put into porn). The art was great, it was popular, but it damaged the hero for years to come.
4) The Death of Earth-Two Superman

Earth-Two Superman was the original version of the hero. He was the blueprint, the greatest of all-time, and he got everything he deserved. He became editor-in-chief of The Daily Star (the Golden Age version of The Daily Planet), married Lois, raised his cousin Kara as Power Girl, worked with the Justice Society, and defeated the Anti-Monitor, saving all of existence with one mighty punch. He and Lois went to a paradise dimension. It was perfect.
Then, he returned in Infinite Crisis, helped save existence again, and died at the hands of Superboy-Prime. Earth-Two Superman should have stayed alive. There’s something about him that’s so perfect, and having him around would have been awesome. He’s my favorite version of the character, and one day I hope DC gives him back to me and his fans.
3) Brian Michael Bendis’s Superman

Brian Michael Bendis was Marvel’s most popular writer of the ’00s and ’10s, and went to DC in 2018. The publisher handed him anything he wanted, and the Cleveland native (same town that Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created the Man of Steel in) got Superman and Action Comics. Bendis wrote the character well and introduced multiple interesting villains like Rogol Zaar, Synmar, Red Mist, and the Invisible Mafia.
However, Bendis also aged up Jon Kent and told a lot of really boring stories. His run came after the hot DC Rebirth runs of Superman and Action Comics, and fans abandoned the books in droves as time went on. It cooled Superman off immensely. While it has its moments, it took years for the hero to get back to where he was before Bendis got hold of him.










