Continuity changes during Infinite Crisis - Factbites
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Topic: Continuity changes during Infinite Crisis


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In the News (Mon 21 Dec 09)

  
 Encyclopedia article on Crisis on Infinite Earths [EncycloZine]
Crisis on Infinite Earths was a 12 issue comic book mini-series produced by DC Comics in 1985 in order to clean up their 50-year-old, convoluted and confusing continuity.
Readers unfamiliar with the complicated continuity of the DC universe may find the story of Crisis on Infinite Earths confusing, as it was written especially for readers who were intimately familiar with the many hundreds of characters created in the pages of DC comics over the space of fifty years.
Crisis was used by DC as an excuse to wipe much of its slate clean and make major changes to many of their major revenue-generating comic book series.
encyclozine.com /Crisis_on_Infinite_Earths   (1436 words)

  
 Crisis on Infinite Earths - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crisis on Infinite Earths was a twelve-issue comic book limited series (identified as a "12 part maxi-series") and crossover event, produced by DC Comics in 1985 in order to simplify their fifty-year-old continuity.
Crisis was again parodied in MAD Magazine issue #448, with the review of the fictional "Infinite Secret Crisis on All Earthly Worlds," which sought to solve the continuity problems by killing absolutely everyone, in alphabetical order.
Crisis was used by DC as an opportunity to wipe much of its slate clean and make major changes to many of their major revenue-generating comic book series.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Crisis_on_Infinite_Earths   (2360 words)

  
 Crisis on Infinite Earths - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crisis on Infinite Earths was a twelve issue comic book event miniseries/crossover, produced by DC Comics in 1985 in order to simplify their fifty year old continuity.
Crisis was used by DC as an opportunity to wipe much of its slate clean and make major changes to many of their major revenue-generating comic book series.
Crisis (along with other crossovers and "event" comics of the period) was parodied by Simpsons Comics' Radioactive Man series: Radioactive Man #679 (Sept 1994), entitled "Who Washes The Washmen's Infinite Secrets Of Legendary Crossover Knight Wars?" by Steve Vance.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Crisis_on_Infinite_Earths   (1970 words)

  
 Comic Book Profiles: The Swashbuckler
And, with all the "retroactive continuity" changes in the post-Crisis on Infinite Earths DC Universe, it has been speculated that Michael Carter never existed, since he was apparently the nephew of the Earth-One Vigilante (who had assisted the JLA in Justice League of America #78-79).
The Swashbuckler was, for all intents and purposes, a throwaway character.
This page is created with the utmost respect for the characters and their creators, for the purpose of entertaining comic book fans and drawing more attention to these singular works.
members.tripod.com /originalvigilante/swashbuckler.htm   (599 words)

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