10 DC Tropes Every New Fan Needs to Know

DC Comics helped popularize the superhero genre way back in the Golden Age of Comics with the creation of Superman. Since then, the DC Multiverse has given readers many of the greatest superhero stories of all time. While DC isn’t always as popular as their marvelous competition, they have a multitude of fans. DC’s stories are very different from Marvel’s, and a big reason for that is that the two publishers use two very different sets of tropes.The DC Multiverse is a vast place full of heroes, villains, gods, monsters, and everything in between. The legion of creators who have defined the length and breadth of it have created tropes that every new DC fan needs to know. These tropes have helped define what a DC comic is in the near century the publisher has been around.Superman’s openness has made it easier for other heroes to see him more as a father figure than a colleague. Many heroes have talked about how much they don’t want to let Superman down, and how bad they feel when he’s disappointed in them. Kingdom Come makes it even more apparent, as when Superman retires, the next generation of heroes is without a role model to shape them. Superman is more than just the most powerful hero on Earth, he’s also everyone’s dad.

DC Comics helped popularize the superhero genre way back in the Golden Age of Comics with the creation of Superman. Since then, the DC Multiverse has given readers many of the greatest superhero stories of all time. While DC isn’t always as popular as their marvelous competition, they have a multitude of fans. DC’s stories are very different from Marvel’s, and a big reason for that is that the two publishers use two very different sets of tropes.

The DC Multiverse is a vast place full of heroes, villains, gods, monsters, and everything in between. The legion of creators who have defined the length and breadth of it have created tropes that every new DC fan needs to know. These tropes have helped define what a DC comic is in the near century the publisher has been around.

Superman’s openness has made it easier for other heroes to see him more as a father figure than a colleague. Many heroes have talked about how much they don’t want to let Superman down, and how bad they feel when he’s disappointed in them. Kingdom Come makes it even more apparent, as when Superman retires, the next generation of heroes is without a role model to shape them. Superman is more than just the most powerful hero on Earth, he’s also everyone’s dad.

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