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That all said, Batman comics have changed a lot since the character first showed up in 1939. Over the years, multiple new dimensions of lore and character have been added to Batman comics, and made them better than ever. Here are 10 examples of moments or developments that changed the Batman comics for the better, making them true milestone events.
10) The 1966 Batman TV Show

Batman was one of the first superheroes to make his way out of the pages of comic books, starring in movie serials in the ’40s, and eventually a 1966 live-action TV show, Batman. Starring Adam West as Batman and Burt Ward as Robin, this show made kids love Batman and led many of them to the newsstands to buy Batman comics. The comics changed their tone to fit the show, and it led to Batman becoming the bestselling comic.
Batman stayed on TV for decades thanks to syndication, and served as a lot of people’s first introduction to Batman stories. It helped make Batman into a superstar.
9) Batman’s Amazing Villains

Batman has some of the greatest villains in comics, and those villains have played a huge role in his popularity. Over the years, Batman’s villains have become the best parts of the comics, and he best ones have been fleshed out to an extent that even many heroes aren’t, sometimes becoming just as legendary as Batman (ex: The Joker).
Villains like Catwoman, Harley Quinn, and Poison Ivy have all become superstars apart from Batman, while Two-Face, the Penguin, Mister Freeze, Bane, and more have all become household names. The Batman comics wouldn’t be the same without the great villains, and they’ve allowed the books to grow to such great heights.
8) Grant Morrison’s Batman Run

Grant Morrison is one of the greatest superhero writers of all time, and their run on Batman has earned its place among the best superhero comic runs ever. Morrison proved it with work like Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, “Gothic”, and their work with Batman on JLA. That work was so acclaimed that eventually, DC let Morrison write the main Batman comic.
Morrison’s work on Batman #655-683, #700-702, Batman and Robin #1-16, Batman: The Return of Bruce Wayne #1-6, Batman Incorporated (Vol. 1) #1-8, and Batman Incorporated (Vol. 2) #0-13 is an essential character omnibus every fan should own. They wrote a three-act Batman epic, introducing Damian Wayne, seeing Dick Grayson become Batman, and Batman expanding the mantle internationally. It’s brilliant, and some of the best Batman lore ever. Even the wilder elements Morrison introduced (like whole new lore about Batman’s “Zur-En-Arrh” persona) are still shaping Batman stories in the 2020s.
7) Scott Snyder & Greg Capullo Run

The New 52 changed DC Comics for years to come, but it wasn’t exactly a long-term success. Most fans don’t look back on the New 52 comics with much love, except for Batman (Vol. 2). Running for 52 issues, this book was from creators Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo, and the two of them pulled out all the stops, introducing new factors to Batman and his world.
Snyder and Capullo made an excellent team, giving readers epic arcs like “The Court of Owls”, “Death of the Family”, “Endgame”, “Year Zero”, “Superheavy”, and more. Their Batman run has set the tone for every run that’s come after, and it broadened the Batman mythos beautifully.
6) The Dark Knight Returns

The Dark Knight Returns changed Batman comics forever. Frank Miller’s four-issue miniseries took readers to a future where a retired Bruce Wayne puts the cowl back on to save a crime-consumed Gotham City, having to deal with a new world. Many people give The Dark Knight Returns credit for bringing mature storytelling back to Batman for the first time since the 1966 TV show.
That’s not exactly true (as we’ll talk about later), but Miller did bring a sense of gravitas to Batman comics that had been missing. The Dark Knight Returns played a big role in maturing the comic medium at just the right time, and it’s gone down as one of the greatest comics of all time.
5) The Bat-Family

Batman is a great character, but seeing him on his own can get a little tiring. There’s only so much Batman you can take. That’s why the Bat-Family has become such an important part of the Batman comics.
While there was always something of a Bat-Family when one takes Alfred and Dick Grayson into account, it wouldn’t be until the modern day that we’d get the small army of superheroes we now know as the Bat-Family. The Bat-Family allows readers to look at Batman in a different way and see how other people deal with Batman’s mission. They are integral to the success of Batman, and DC has ridden them to the bank, with characters like Nightwing, Red Hood, Catwoman, Harley Quinn, Batgirl, Batwoman, the various Robins, Azrael, and others all getting their own comics.












