He emerges victorious, but is completely drained.
DC Rebirth is intended to restore the DC Universe to a form much like that prior to “Flashpoint”. With his friends and fellow heroes around him - including the Superman of the pre-New 52 universe, removed from the timeline when it was re-written (and set to take over the title in "Rebirth") - the New 52 Superman died. But where comic fans are used to the regular events, crossovers, deaths, and resurrections, the The "Rebirth" started with a bang, thanks to the first issue, "DC Universe: Rebirth" #1 written by Geoff Johns and bringing one beloved, presumed-retconned out of continuity hero. These titles do not fall under the larger headings above, or were not announced with those titles.By the end of August 2016, all Rebirth titles combined accounted for 12 million units shipped, with 11 issues exceeding 200,000 units shipped, over 60 issues exceeding 100,000 units shipped, and 21 issues having multiple printings.Beginning in January 2017, television commercials aired on "All-Star Batman" redirects here. It was Ted Kord who popularized the superhero title 'Blue Beetle' for modern audiences, taking on the name and using gadgets to fight crime, typically alongside his close friend Booster Gold. Earning critical acclaim (including our To make sure that those moments, cameos and teases aren't just confusing, but understood, we're breaking down the moments that could strike an uninformed reader as After some disembodied narration, the story of the comic shifts to Batman, hard at work on his Bat Computer in the Batcave. So, how did it get there? The go-to source for comic book and superhero movie fans. The question isn't The Legion was founded by three future teens (including Saturn Girl, who is likely shown here) seeking to use their powers to become heroes, just like Superman did a thousand years prior. Manhattan's reply that "nothing ever ends" is the chilling note on which the story ends, leading the reader and Veidt to question his meaning.Placed here, readers are forced to imagine how distanced from goodness, love, faith and hope Manhattan could become, that he would steal away the happiness of an entire world of heroes. But when the world starts crumbling to pieces, Barry has to be on his way to set the timeline right. But Thomas gives him one parting gift: a letter from a father to his dead son, or a letter from a dead father to his living son, whichever way you want to look at it.It reduces Bruce to tears, but it's a letter that shouldn't exist; the mere fact that it does is While Batman approaches the letter, it's a glinting in the background that attracts his attention. The thing is, DC Universe: Rebirth is a remarkably efficient comic, and one of the best single issues of anything published by the struggling DC Comics in the last 5 years or more. After the New 52 relaunch made each and every character in the comics a decade younger (at least), the days of Barry Allen and Wally West sharing duties as The Flash were over - Barry still had to Being the world's biggest "Flash" fan, writer Geoff Johns clearly had a much larger role in mind - or came up with one - positioning Wally as the one person who deduced the real threat looming outside of time and space and, no surprise, sought out Bruce Wayne first. Specifically, the moment when he is sucked back into the Speed Force.As Wally describes it, time "rips open" as he's pulled back out of the world, allowing "reality from across existence" to "spill out." Until this scene, a new Ted Kord hasn't appeared in more than a few glimpses in the new universe, so Geoff Johns is planting yet another seed to be delivered upon later.