Not only that but I think that some changes should stay.
What DC should do IMO is see what changes do work and which ones don't and get rid of the ones that don't.
Scarecrow_King said:I don't think many people would read Batman stories if Batman weren't Bruce. Maybe if it were Dick. But past that? I doubt it.
Anubis said:Meaning Batwoman will get thrown out, but everything in Detective will be the basis of Batman for the next 10 years.![]()
If Batwoman was ever erased/cancelled/killed off i would just stop buying any DC comics
And Detective Comics by Tony Daniels is just an abomination.
You know that scene in Event Horizon where we find out the entire crew became psychotic
It was reading Tony Daniels Detective Comics that caused that![]()
I don't think many people would read Batman stories if Batman weren't Bruce. Maybe if it were Dick. But past that? I doubt it.
The New 52 has been a big success for DC. It's not going to change back. There's really no question about that.
Yes, the industry is cyclical (less so if you observe more than the past thirty years), but this is largely irrelevant to the concern of whether the New 52 is going anywhere.The nature of the comic book business is cyclical. Everything ALWAYS reverts back to classic after a period of "new and improved". It's been the way the business has been run since the mid-1980s.
Bucky had a great run as Captain America. But Who is Cap now? Steve Rogers.
Kyle Rayner had solid run as GL for over 100+ issues. But Hal Jordan is Back as the main GL.
Wally West is the Most popular Flash over the past 20 years. But Barry Allen is back form the dead and running around.
Dick Grayson Was a popular Batman. Wildly popular. But Bruce is back as Batman.
Holly Was Catwoman, but Selina is back in the suit.
In the 80's we had Jim Rhodes Iron Man, and John Walker Cap. The 90's had Azbats. But eventually, things went back to status quo.
Once you catch onto the gimmicks you just learn to sit it out and wait for the point where said gimmick stories end.
The return of Wally to the pages of comics is similar to Avengers Vol 2 no. #10 or 11 where Classic Thor came through a portal to the Heroes Reborn Universe at the end of the issue. That set events in motion for the END of the Heroes Reborn Universe and a return of Marvel's Heroes to the 616 and the reboot to a reboot.Been there done, that.
Heroes Reborn was designed as a contained and finite event
Yes, the industry is cyclical (less so if you observe more than the past thirty years), but this is largely irrelevant to the concern of whether the New 52 is going anywhere.
Heroes Reborn was designed as a contained and finite event; the New 52 is a line-wide and long term shift in the publishing approach of the company. Just like we never switched back to Pre-Crisis continuity, we are never switching back to pre-Flashpoint continuity. Changes will be made moving forward,s not backwards, even if those changes resemble backwards steps. As Kurosawa so frequently points out, even though the DC Universe has been changed to superficially resemble the silver age, it is not the silver age. It will never be the silver age. Barry Allen may be back, but we will never go backwards.
Even when the comic book industry restores classical elements (like the pre-Crisis elements of Superman that have been bleeding back in ever since Crisis), it's done by moving forwards, not backwards. This goes for every single example you cited. The reason for this is twofold: 1) the comic book industry is run by creative people, and creative people do not want to spend their time regurgitating someone else's art (even if the distinction is miniscule), and 2) business. Contrary to what you suggested above, even changes that ostensibly involve returning to the "classic" characters and elements are always presented as the "new and improved" approach. Everything is always "new and improved" in comics, because that's business.
Or, simply put: there's a reason every comic book solicitation tells you that "nothing will ever be the same again!" You will never read a solicitation that says "Everything will always be the same again," because that's not how these people sell comics. Pre-Flashpoint continuity is never coming back. Wally will absolutely come back some day, as will plenty of pre-Flashpoint story elements, but the New 52 isn't going anywhere--until they decide to do the next "new and improved" thing.
I think they should just keep it as is
No more reboots or retcons, just work on making the pist flashpoint DCU as good as it can possibly be with good stories, characters and artwork![]()