DC gives a brief glimpse of the big Death Metal finale
Dark Nights: Death Metal #7 promises to redefine the DC Universe. Are there any clues in these pages?
DC is promising a whole lot of ramifications stemming from this week's finale of Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo's magnum opus Dark Nights: Death Metal.
The publisher has tied to the launch of Generations: Shattered #1 (and February's Generations: Forged #1), their two-month event Future State (both also launching this week), and their March-debuting new editorial era Infinite Frontier to Death Metal #1.
That's a lot of narrative heavy-lifting (we'll skip the obvious 'heavy metal' joke) for a few pages, and Newsarama has shot our shot on trying to figure out just exactly what the finale will offer up (we think it likely can be properly characterized as a reboot).
But the actual pages won't be fully digestible until Tuesday, January 5.
Until then DC has offered these three pages along with the creative credits that seem to indicate about ten pages (drawn by Yanick Paquette and Bryan Hitch ) will be devoted to the pair of highly important epilogues that may map the future of the superhero universe.
As a reminder: "Dark Nights: Death Metal has created an infinite multiverse," reads DC's description of the post-Death Metal-Infinite Frontier era. "DC's heroes saved all of reality from the brink of destruction and shook loose the very fabric of space and time. The entire history of the DC Universe has been restored. Every epic battle that ever happened is part of one timeline where everything matters!"
If everything matters then so do these three preview pages courtesy of DC. And be sure to check back Tuesday as Newsarama covers all the important ramifications of the Death Metal finale.
Death Metal is what Scott Snyder calls an anti-Crisis. Check out Newsarama’s ranking of all of DC’s Crises from best to worst.
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I'm not just the Newsarama founder and editor-in-chief, I'm also a reader. And that reference is just a little bit older than the beginning of my Newsarama journey. I founded what would become the comic book news site in 1996, and except for a brief sojourn at Marvel Comics as its marketing and communications manager in 2003, I've been writing about new comic book titles, creative changes, and occasionally offering my perspective on important industry events and developments for the 25 years since. Despite many changes to Newsarama, my passion for the medium of comic books and the characters makes the last quarter-century (it's crazy to see that in writing) time spent doing what I love most.