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In most of the DC Comics media, the Multiverse is a "cosmic construct" that is composed of the many fictional universes the stories of DC media take place in. The worlds within the multiverse share a space and fate in common, and its structure has changed several times in the history of DC Comics.
The Multiverse is a collection of several different types of parallel dimensions and realities in existence.
The DC Multiverse is a fictional continuity construct used in numerous DC Comics publications. The Multiverse has undergone numerous changes since its introduction and has included various universes, listed below between the original Multiverse and its successors.
- DC’s Multiverse Was First Introduced With The Team-Up Of Two Flashes. Most people associate The Flash with Barry Allen, but the first to hold the moniker was Jay Garrick - also a founding member of the Justice Society of America, a superhero team predating the Justice League, but later retconned out of DC’s main timeline.
- The Multiverse Has Allowed DC To Introduce New Characters And Stories. After Gardner Fox and DC editor Julius Schwartz introduced the Multiverse, DC Comics now had a chance to create even more Earths, where stories that would not work within the comics’ main continuity could exist.
- DC’s Multiverse Was Destroyed After Crisis On Infinite Earths. Fans of the Arrowverse TV shows will recall the jam-packed “Crisis on Infinite Earths” crossover event as a fun way for The CW’s shared universe of DC TV shows to explore different iterations of its most famous characters.
- DC’s Flashpoint Created A New Multiverse Incarnation, The New 52. Geoff Johns’ 2005-2006 sequel to Crisis on Infinite Earths, called Infinite Crisis, would reintroduce the Multiverse, which was brought back in proper fashion with the preceding arc of weekly published stories called 52.
Sep 9, 2014 · In DC’s Multiverse, 52 Earths, all occupying the same space, are separated because they vibrate at different frequencies. Each one of these planets has its own set of heroes and villains.
- Alex Abad-Santos
Apr 22, 2020 · The DC Comics universe is actually a multiverse of 52 parallel worlds — each one influenced by the existence of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and the rest of the Justice League.
Jul 18, 2020 · After Marvel revolutionized the cinematic universe concept, it took DC a long time to find its stride but then it finally found the solution: a Multiverse. Instead of focusing on one universe, DC used the multiverse to connect all of its many TV shows and movies, opening the door to countless possibilities.