DC Comics has built up one of the strongest legacies in comics through a combination of serialized storytelling and epic sagas. Since 1986’s Crisis on Infinite Earths (by Marv Wolfman & George Pérez), the company has come to embrace the event format as their go-to way to tell big and transformative stories. It’s no secret that the event format has come to include stories that, in years gone by, would have been limited to a single story arc.Both formats have their pros and cons, with some stories having missed an opportunity at world-building by being limited to six issues or less. Reader opinion on these events is mixed, but for some stories, it’s hard to deny they had all the makings of a line-wide crossover event.Modern Flash is certainly no stranger to either multiversal adventures or events, often combining the two as was seen in 2011’s Flashpoint. Barry Allen was actually the first character to explore the multiverse, as was shown in Flash #123, where he met his Justice Society counterpart, Jay Garrick.RELATED: 10 Best Science Heroes In DC Comics
DC Comics has built up one of the strongest legacies in comics through a combination of serialized storytelling and epic sagas. Since 1986’s Crisis on Infinite Earths (by Marv Wolfman & George Pérez), the company has come to embrace the event format as their go-to way to tell big and transformative stories. It’s no secret that the event format has come to include stories that, in years gone by, would have been limited to a single story arc.
Both formats have their pros and cons, with some stories having missed an opportunity at world-building by being limited to six issues or less. Reader opinion on these events is mixed, but for some stories, it’s hard to deny they had all the makings of a line-wide crossover event.
Modern Flash is certainly no stranger to either multiversal adventures or events, often combining the two as was seen in 2011’s Flashpoint. Barry Allen was actually the first character to explore the multiverse, as was shown in Flash #123, where he met his Justice Society counterpart, Jay Garrick.
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