Support The Rebirth omnibus collects all the one-shot Rebirth specials for the major characters of the DC Universe. Just hoped the way I mentally catalogue this massive list of titles and entries might help another new readerHey there - my name's Dave and this is my comic book blog. If you’re after a character specific reading order then this list may be confusing to follow and we may create separate guides for those. I am reading through now and was very confused why it would end with Red Robin in such a cliffhanger.
1 is labeled as “The Return” on your list, but your link leads to “Escaping the Grave”, which I believe is the correct volume. They are in that universe, and main characters pop up passingly in conversation. Nonetheless, if you’d prefer an issue by issue approach more closely aligned to how the comics were released weekly, you can check out the order below. Welcome to the DC Rebirth Reading Order Part 2. Nothing less than Before you get to the DC Rebirth Reading Order its worth mentioning the lineage leading up to DC Rebirth.In the beginning (circa 1938) there was the pre-Crisis era lasting into the 1980’s.
I noticed this specifically with Green Arrow Vol. The publication of DC Universe Rebirth #1 marked the end of The promise of DC Rebirth is a return to the long and rich history of DC Comics. -Superwoman. :/ Loading editor. Below you’ll find the first year of DC Rebirth comic books, as well as the collected editions that allow you to progress through the Rebirth timeline chronologically.Alternatively, those of you looking to cut straight to the chase can try Comic Book Herald’s Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. Any other orders like this in Rebirth I should know about, by any chance?It’s not perfect nor quite up-to-date, but this is my issue-by-issue timeline with any of these crossovers listed in order (as much as is possible!) There are a few titles that I already don’t want to care about I’ll probably get all volume ones, just to not judge a book by it’s cover.Would someone tell me if the following titles are a necessary read, or is surprisingly good;Don’t think Gotham Academy is part of the regular continuity but I might be wrong – I haven’t read an issue of it and I don’t feel like I’m missing anything.The Young Animal series are an acquired taste. It does, however, do a good job of representing a diverse spectrum of characters in terms of minority groups previously i represented in comics. Gotham Academy is probably in-continuity but is definitely self-contained. Thank you very much!Before I read this guide, would you recommend me read the DC New 52 Reading Order?There seem to be a few problems with the issue numbers on the sections. The DC Rebirth event of 2016 has been out for some time now.
1 which is missing issue #6 and the numberings for Suicide Squad, Deathstroke, and Harley Quinn need to be rechecked, they’re off by one or two issues.There’s a small typo for the Rebirth issues listing:I discovered that there is some back and forth of a kind between Action Comics and Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps considering General Zod that may have started with Suicide Squad, does anyone know how they relate to each other?Not sure about Hal Jordan, but Suicide Squad and Action Comics crossed over thusly –Suicide Squad #17: Earthlings on Fire: Part 2: Page 1-17Thanks, mate! Gotham Acadamy – doesn’t have the banner, but I think it’s a continued title from a New 52 entry. The event follows the ending of The New 52, a publishing era that rebooted DC continuity in 2011 after the Flashpoint crossover. Anything in between is total junk. I loved his superman run from before the new 52, but I haven’t read any actual new 52 superman. Can I just do it all where listed in the reading order or should I stop part way and read the road to rebirth issues later on per the reading order?Hey Dave, what would you recommend reading before reading Rebirth?One question, bro: Didn’t “Justice League of America #1 to #6” must go AFTER from “Justice League of America: The Road to Rebirth”?