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Readers were introduced to the Sinestro Corps, the Red Lanterns, the Orange Lantern, the Blue Lantern Corps, the Star Sapphires (who had existed before but were made a part of the Emotional Spectrum), and Indigo Tribe )with the undead Black Lantern Corps, the White Lanterns, Lanterns powered by sadness, and more appearing later). All of this would lead to the blockbuster event comic Blackest Night, and the Green Lantern mythos were changed forever. While the multiple Lantern Corps’ led to some cool stories, it’s also kind of pulled the Green Lanterns away from what they once were. The Emotional Spectrum and its Corps’ have been something of a mistake, and it’s about time we all realized that.
The Various Lantern Corps’ Have Diluted the Concept of the Green Lantern Corps

I’m not going to mince words โ “The Sinestro Corps War” and the resulting stories in Green Lantern (Vol. 4) were so hype. It was unlike anything that Green lanterns fans had seen before and felt like a great expansion of the Green Lanterns. Power rings were always the greatest weapon in the universe, and the whole War of Light storyline โ that ran from “The Sinestro Corps War” to Blackest Night โ was a great read. However, the problem became apparent as the years have gone on. Before, the amazing members of the Green Lantern Corps were the focus of the books. After, it became the power ring show. The powers and their effects on people became more important than the character, and it hurt things. One of the great things about the Green Lantern mythos is the sheer amount of cool characters โ heroes like Guy Gardner, Kyle Rayner, John Stewart, Jessica Cruz, Kilowog, Soranik Yatu, and many more โ gave readers so much to read about. Each Green Lantern was different and their adventures were defined by their differences as heroes and people. As the all of the multicolored Lantern shenanigans became more important, they stopped being used like they used to. They were just soldiers in the War of Light and its aftermaths, trading power rings, and joining new Corps’, becoming defined by that instead of who they were. Suddenly, comics that should have had a universe of possibilities felt small.









