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The Justice League had some amazing adventures in the ’00s. We got to see the team in a new light, and had a throwback to the League’s most creative era. The best Justice League stories of the ’00s took a team in flux and showed them in the possible light, and readers were given multiple stories that showed just how great the Justice League could be. These 10 Justice League stories are the best of the ’00s, giving readers the kind of JLA stories that would last the test of time.
10) Justice League Elite

Justice League Elite, by Joe Kelly and Doug Mahnke, spun out of the classic Action Comics #775 and Kelly and Mahnke’s JLA run, which is one of the most underrated JLA runs (honorable mention to “The Obsidian Age”). Justice League Elite sees members of the Justice League โ Wally West, Green Arrow, Manitou Raven, Manitou Dawn, and Major Disaster โ team with the Elite, a group of more proactive and violent heroes under the command of Manchester Black’s sister Sister Superior. The JLE acts as a black ops team, but eventually get pulled into a revenge scheme with nothing less than the fate of all reality at hand. Justice League Elite is twelve issues of Justice League action unlike anything you’ve seen ever before. The book has some excellent twists and turns, and Mahnke’s art is never anything less than brilliant throughout the story.
9) “Crisis of Conscience”

“Crisis of Conscience”, by Geoff Johns, Allan Heinberg, and Chris Batista, ran through JLA #115-119. The story spun out of Identity Crisis, with members of the League dealing with their mindwiping sins. Those sins come back to haunt them when the Secret Society of Supervillains returns. They know what the Justice League did to their minds and are out for revenge, ready for the world to know the truth about the League. Hal Jordan, Hawkman, Martian Manhunter, Green Arrow, Black Canary, Zatanna, and Batman have their work cut out for them, as the secrets of the League are finally revealed, which has disastrous consequences. “Crisis of Conscience” is an outstanding story, taking the best part of Identity Crisis and using it to push the League forward. The end brought readers at the time a massive shock โ and a clue to Infinite Crisis โ that still holds up. This is honestly Johns’s finest hour writing the Justice League, a story mostly forgotten in the years since it dropped.
8) Justice League of America (Vol. 2) #12

Justice League of America (Vol. 2) #12, by Brad Meltzer and Ed Benes, is the final issue of Meltzer’s run on the team. It’s titled “Monitor Duty”, and gives readers a look at a day in the life of the Justice League, as various members take up shifts on monitor duty, dealing with their problems and making friends (looking at you Hawkgirl and Red Arrow). Meanwhile, two legends of the League discuss the newest roster, weighing its pros and cons. It’s an issue that focuses on the characters instead of the action, and it’s so much fun. It’s funny and touching, the perfect ending to a run that’s entire purpose was to make fans fall in love with the Justice League again. It really doesn’t get the credit it deserves in Justice League history, and hopefully that will change.
7) Justice

Justice, by Jim Krueger, Alex Ross, and Doug Braithwaite, is basically what would happen if SuperFriends was written with a more modern sensibility. The villains of the Earth are given visions of the end of the world as the heroes fail to stop disaster. This leads to them coming together as the Legion of Doom. Brainiac has a plan to “save the world”, on that involves the Legion working to make the world a better place. Of course, there’s more to it than that, and they begin systemically defeating the Justice League, and eventually a rift in the Legion of Doom forms as the Justice League digs deep to defeat them. Justice is classic Justice League, with twists and turns that will drop readers’ jaws. Kruger and Ross, who worked together on the Earth X trilogy at Marvel, make a sensational writing team, and the cherry on top if the combination of Braithwaite’s pencils and Ross’s paint. Justice is an amazing story, and it will make anyone remember why they loved the Justice League so much.
6) “The Tornado’s Path”

Brad Meltzer made quite a splash at DC in the ’00s, writing “The Archer’s Quest” and the now maligned Identity Crisis. After Infinite Crisis, Meltzer was tapped to reboot the Justice League along with artist Ed Benes, and their opening story was “The Tornado’s Path”, which ran through Justice League of America (Vol. 2) #0-7. As Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman decide to start a new version of the League, a group of disparate heroes โ Vixen, Black Lightning, Hal Jordan, Black Canary, Red Arrow, and Red Tornado โ find themselves enmeshed in a scheme from the suddenly smart Solomon Grundy. It’s an excellent story, a story that feels like a Justice League classic while also being thoroughly modern. It gave readers an idea of where the League would go in the days to come, and is an all-around excellent story.













