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DC picked the perfect creators for the story โ DC’s biggest cheerleader and loremaster Mark Waid, the man who redefined Earth-Two Jerry Ordway, DC’s master of teen hero art Todd Nauck, and letterer extraordinaire Todd Klein โ all assisted by researcher David Wielgosz. New History of the DC Universe #1 begins at the beginning of the time and runs til the destruction of Krypton, and longtime DC fans will see a lot of familiar faces, some of them they haven’t seen in a long time. DC has one of the greatest D-list benches in comics, and New History brings many of the best of them back into canon.
New History of the DC Universe #1 Shows Off Some of DC’s Weirdest Characters

One of the things that people forget about the history of the comic industry is that superheroes used to be just one part of the equation. While Marvel and DC are mostly known for superheroes, both publishers put out way more than just people in tights whomping on each other. New History of the DC Universe #1 digs into this history. The issue begins by laying out the creation of the Multiverse, combining ideas from multiple stories. Once the Earth enters the equation, readers are introduced to Anthro, the first homo sapien who had a short-lived series and appeared in Crisis on Infinite Earths and Final Crisis. Anthro is just the tip of the iceberg, though, as we get introduced to many different from characters. Waid decided to use ideas from the New 52 โ the Demon Knights of Demon Knights fame is canon โ and the two Shining Knights are both canon. Arion, one of the most powerful magic users from the ancient continent of Atlantis, has been brought back into existence as well. The Viking Prince is back in continuity, as is Arak, Son of Thunder, a Native American who was found by Vikings and taken on adventures. The pirate characters of DC are back โ the Black Pirate and his son Jon and Captain Fear โ as is Andrew Bennet, the star of the various I, Vampire series. The Revolutionary War heroes โTomahawk, Dan Walker, Miss Liberty, and the other Tomahawk’s Raiders โ are all back. One of the biggest surprises is that Icon, the Superman analogue of the Milestone line of comics, is canon to the mainline universe, meaning that there’s a good chance that more Milestone comics will be printed.









