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Countdown to Infinite Crisis

Countdown to Infinite Crisis is a one-shot published by Comics on March 30, 2005, that serves as the official prelude to the storyline. Written by , , and , with art by Rags Morales, Ed Benes, , , and Jesus Saiz, and a cover by and , the 80-page special issue follows former member (Ted Kord) as he uncovers a shadowy conspiracy involving the organization and . The narrative culminates in Kord's brutal murder by , revealing Lord's control over the Brother Eye satellite and igniting a chain of events that threatens the entire . This issue marked a pivotal moment in DC's publishing strategy, launching four interconnected six-issue miniseries—The OMAC Project, Day of Vengeance, Villains United, and Rann/Thanagar War—that explored the fallout from Kord's death and the escalating crises across the DCU. delves into Maxwell Lord's activation of the OMAC cyborg army using the Brother Eye satellite to monitor and neutralize superheroes. depicts the Spectre's rampage against magic users, manipulated by , forcing heroes like Enchantress and Nightshade to intervene. Villains United assembles Lex Luthor's of Super-Villains, recruiting criminals for a larger scheme amid internal betrayals. Meanwhile, Rann/Thanagar War escalates an interstellar conflict between the planets Rann and Thanagar, drawing in , , and Green Lantern . These threads converge in the main Infinite Crisis series, which reexamines the DC and the moral compromises of its heroes following . The event's impact extended beyond the page, revitalizing fan interest in DC's interconnected storytelling and influencing subsequent crossovers like 52 and Final Crisis. By killing off a long-standing character like Blue Beetle and exposing vulnerabilities in the superhero community, Countdown to Infinite Crisis heightened stakes and set the stage for a universe-wide reckoning. Priced at $1.00, the one-shot was a commercial success, underscoring DC's ability to build hype through affordable entry points to major events.

Publication and Production

Publication History

Countdown to Infinite Crisis was published on , 2005, as an 80-page one-shot issue with a cover date of May 2005 and an initial cover price of $1.00, significantly lower than typical for such a length to draw in readers as a prelude to 's major crossover event. The comic was officially indexed under the title DC Countdown in industry databases, reflecting its original solicitation name used to obscure its direct ties to the branding and build anticipation without revealing key connections. The issue sold out nationwide shortly after release, prompting DC Comics to announce a second printing that arrived in stores on April 13, 2005. This reprint carried a higher cover price of $1.99 and featured a by and , which highlighted the shadowed figure in Batman's arms as Blue Beetle's corpse, providing a subtle reveal of plot elements while maintaining the original's teaser intent. Marketing for the one-shot emphasized its role as an accessible entry point to the broader storyline, with promotional materials focusing on contributions from high-profile creators and avoiding spoilers such as character deaths to heighten suspense leading into . The low initial pricing and rapid sell-out underscored strong initial sales reception, positioning it as a successful launch for the event's lead-in publications.

Creative Team

The creative team for Countdown to Infinite Crisis #1 consisted of writers , , and , who each contributed segments that bridged into their respective lead-up miniseries, with Johns handling the tie-in, Rucka focusing on and OMAC elements, and Winick addressing Villains United aspects. This collaborative writing approach allowed for a unified narrative voice that emphasized interconnected threats across the , drawing on each writer's established expertise in character-driven intrigue and large-scale events. The artistic contributions were handled by a roster of prominent pencilers and inkers, including Ed Benes for the main story, Rags Morales (pencils) and Michael Bair (inks) for the OMAC segment, Jesus Saiz (pencils) and Jimmy Palmiotti (inks) for the Day of Vengeance portion, Ivan Reis (pencils) and Marc Campos (inks) for the Rann–Thanagar War section, and Phil Jimenez (pencils) and Andy Lanning (inks) for Villains United. These artists' styles blended hyper-detailed, realistic with high-energy poses, creating a sense of escalating tension through dynamic panel layouts and expressive character designs that heightened the issue's suspenseful tone. The cover was penciled by and painted by , featuring a dramatic clash of heroes and villains that captured the impending crisis and underscored the event's epic scope. Lee's precise linework combined with Ross's painterly realism produced a visually striking image that not only promoted the one-shot but also symbolized the moral and cosmic conflicts central to the overarching storyline. Overall, the team's diverse yet cohesive contributions established a foreboding atmosphere, effectively teasing the four interconnected without overshadowing the main investigation.

Plot Overview

Blue Beetle's Investigation

In Countdown to Infinite Crisis #1, , the second and a former member, launches a personal investigation into financial irregularities at his company, Kord Industries, where $20 million has been embezzled and funneled through dummy corporations, nearly bankrupting the business. provides initial leads on the theft, prompting Kord to trace the transactions back to a shadowy organization. His probe reveals connections to , a longtime associate and financier of superhero teams, who is secretly orchestrating the scheme as part of a larger effort to control activities. Seeking support, Kord approaches key members, including Batman, , and , to share his findings and express concerns about the potential threat to the superhero community. However, Batman views the evidence as inconclusive and agrees only reluctantly to look into it further, while and , along with at , dismiss Kord's warnings as unfounded paranoia, citing his history of eccentric behavior and lack of concrete proof. This rejection isolates Kord, underscoring the League's internal fractures in the post-Identity Crisis era, and forces him to pursue the matter independently. Kord's sole ally proves to be his longtime friend Booster Gold, who believes the threat's severity and joins the surveillance operation, even suggesting they confront Lord directly for answers. Together, they hack into related systems, but during a stakeout, Booster sustains severe injuries from an explosive trap planted by Lord's operatives, highlighting the dangers of their unauthorized probe. Undeterred, Kord hacks into Batman's Brother Eye MK I satellite—a surveillance network originally designed for global monitoring—and accesses stolen files from the Justice League Watchtower, uncovering a comprehensive database that tracks the identities and activities of every major DC Universe hero and villain under Lord's Checkmate organization. This revelation exposes the scale of the surveillance operation, positioning Kord as the first to unravel the conspiracy's scope.

Confrontation with Maxwell Lord

Following his investigation into a series of thefts from Kord Industries and anomalous activities across the , () tracks the culprits to a fortified complex in the . Infiltrating the facility, Kord accesses a central computer and uncovers encrypted files containing the secret identities of numerous superheroes, including his own marked as "deceased," revealing a vast surveillance operation. As Kord attempts to escape, he is confronted by , who emerges with armed guards and declares himself the "White King" of a reorganized agency. Lord discloses that , empowered by advanced OMAC technology, has been systematically spying on activities worldwide to compile these dossiers and neutralize potential threats. He justifies the program as a necessary safeguard against the destabilizing influence of superheroes, arguing that unchecked power endangers global security and requires centralized control to prevent catastrophe. Lord offers Kord a position within , leveraging their past alliance from the era to appeal to his sense of pragmatism. When Kord vehemently refuses, denouncing the operation as a of heroic ideals, Lord signals an OMAC unit to disarm him. In a shocking escalation, Lord then executes Kord with a single gunshot to the head, marking a irreversible villainous pivot for the former ally and shattering the pre-Infinite Crisis .

Ties to Infinite Crisis

The OMAC Project

Following the murder of () by in Countdown to Infinite Crisis, the narrative transitions directly into miniseries, where the Brother Eye satellite—initially designed by Batman as a tool to superheroes after the Justice League's psychic violations in —activates a global network of OMAC drones. These drones, cybernetically enhanced humans transformed via nanite technology, represent an escalating technological threat, emerging as an army programmed to neutralize activities worldwide. Maxwell Lord, operating through his control of the Checkmate organization, commandeers Brother Eye to oversee this OMAC network, turning it into a pervasive system specifically aimed at identifying and eliminating perceived threats from the community. Lord's hijacking of the satellite allows him to manipulate its vast data-gathering capabilities, which penetrate secure locations like the and , enabling targeted strikes against heroes and villains alike. This setup underscores the miniseries' exploration of paranoia and control in the , with OMACs serving as unwitting enforcers in Lord's bid for global stability through suppression. The miniseries establishes the core conflict by delving into Batman's realization that his own creation has been subverted, forcing him into a reluctant alliance with figures like to dismantle the network. Meanwhile, heroes such as Batman and begin uncovering the full extent of the OMAC threat in the wake of Kord's death, piecing together clues from his final investigation into Brother Eye and alerting the to the imminent danger. This discovery propels the plot toward broader confrontations, teasing the technological horror that will ripple across the leading into .

Day of Vengeance

In Countdown to Infinite Crisis, the wizard confronts the Enchantress amid growing signs of imbalance in the DC Universe's magical fabric, foreshadowing a supernatural crisis that threatens all users of mystic arts. This encounter underscores the vulnerability of ancient mystical forces to emerging chaos, as warns of a divine wrath that could eradicate magic entirely. The tension escalates in the miniseries, where the —God's spirit of vengeance, now empowered and manipulated by —embarks on a genocidal rampage targeting every magic user in existence. Deceived into viewing magic as an inherent evil, the slaughters hundreds of sorcerers, including devastating attacks on sacred sites like the Mist Woods, forcing survivors to band together in desperate defense. Key figures like , empowered directly by , join the fray to counter the Spectre's onslaught, but the battle reaches its climax at the Rock of Eternity, Shazam's eternal sanctuary and the of magical energies. There, deploys artifacts from the mortal world, including the scarab entrusted to him earlier, in a futile stand against the unstoppable force, resulting in the wizard's death and the Rock's shattering. This cataclysmic fallout unleashes primordial evils, ending the Eighth Age of Magic and ushering in the Ninth Age of Magic, profoundly destabilizing the Universe's supernatural order. By paralleling these mystical upheavals with the technological and interstellar threats in other Infinite Crisis preludes, Day of Vengeance illustrates a multifaceted unraveling of reality, where the erosion of magic amplifies the multiversal peril central to the larger event.

Rann–Thanagar War

In Countdown to Infinite Crisis, Maxwell Lord utilizes Checkmate's surveillance network, augmented by Batman's stolen Brother Eye satellite, to monitor global and interstellar threats, including the burgeoning conflict between the planets Rann and Thanagar. This war erupts when Thanagar is mysteriously displaced into the Vega star system near Rann, leading to mutual accusations of sabotage and rapid escalation into full-scale interstellar combat involving allied forces from the Dominion and Khund Empire on opposing sides. The one-shot teases the involvement of and (Katar Hol and Shayera Thal) in the war's outbreak, as Rannian explorer urgently recruits the Thanagarian duo to mediate and prevent planetary annihilation, drawing on their shared heritage and diplomatic ties. This setup launches the Rann–Thanagar War miniseries, where the heroes navigate political intrigue, cultist uprisings on Thanagar led by the Shadow Thief, and ancient threats like the demon Onimar Synn, all while the —particularly and —intervenes despite Guardians' prohibitions on Vega sector activity, highlighting tensions within the Corps. The conflict serves as a pivotal cosmic destabilizer in the lead-up to , with the ensuing cosmic storm—fueled by weaponized anomalies and battles—creating rifts that exacerbate multiversal vulnerabilities alongside Earth-centric threats like the OMAC uprising. In the Rann/Thanagar War: Infinite Crisis Special, assembles a team of space champions to quell the storm, revealing manipulations by external forces that tie the war directly to the broader crisis, underscoring themes of interstellar paranoia and heroic intervention.

Villains United

In Countdown to Infinite Crisis, a pivotal sequence depicts Alexander Luthor Jr., the son of from Earth-3, reaching out to , offering him a position within a nascent of Super-Villains as part of a grand scheme to reshape the world amid escalating threats. This recruitment underscores Lord's shift from a manipulative financier to a key operative in organized villainy, leveraging his control over to align with Luthor Jr.'s vision. The Villains United six-issue miniseries, written by with art by Dale Eaglesham and others, expands directly on this foundation, chronicling the formation of the as a vast criminal syndicate uniting hundreds of villains under Luthor Jr.'s leadership. Luthor Jr., portrayed as a strategic mastermind, assembles a ruling inner circle including , , , , and the , who coordinate operations from a . The narrative teases the Society's overarching plan to manipulate the chaos of —including multiversal incursions and heroic fractures—for villainous dominance, positioning the group to exploit weaknesses in the hero community and potentially install a . Central to the miniseries are the Society's internal conflicts, exemplified by the pursuit of six reluctant villains—Catman, , , , , and —who reject Luthor Jr.'s coercive alliance and form their own uneasy pact while evading assassins. emerges as a prominent enforcer, clashing with dissenting members and highlighting fractures within the organization, such as ideological rifts between power-hungry leaders like and more pragmatic operatives. These tensions reveal the Society's fragility despite its scale, as personal ambitions threaten to undermine collective goals. This storyline ties into the broader event by depicting coordinated villain actions that sabotage heroes across simultaneous crises, including targeted strikes on allies and diversions that amplify global instability. The Society's machinations, rooted in Lord's betrayal of former heroic ties, ensure villains play an active role in escalating the multiversal conflict, setting the stage for widespread upheaval.

Legacy and Reprints

In-Universe Significance

The death of , the second , in Countdown to Infinite Crisis marked a shocking major casualty among heroes, shattering the relative stability following and eroding trust within the superhero community. Kord's investigation into a uncovered against heroes, leading to his execution by gunshot from , which exposed deep-seated betrayals and prompted widespread hero distrust. This event directly influenced reforms in the , emphasizing greater accountability and oversight to prevent internal threats from former allies. Maxwell Lord's portrayal shifted dramatically from an ambiguous ally and former Justice League financier to an outright antagonist, as his role in orchestrating surveillance and assassinations revealed a ruthless agenda to control or eliminate superhumans. In Countdown to Infinite Crisis, Lord's murder of Kord solidified his villainy, setting the stage for his own demise at Wonder Woman's hands during Infinite Crisis, where his public execution further fractured hero-villain dynamics and public perception of superheroes. As a narrative catalyst, Countdown to Infinite Crisis ignited the four interlocking miniseries—The OMAC Project, Day of Vengeance, Villains United, and Rann–Thanagar War—which converged into the larger Infinite Crisis event, unraveling the unified post-Crisis on Infinite Earths continuity through escalating global threats and moral ambiguities. This destabilization highlighted vulnerabilities in the hero community, paving the way for multiversal incursions and a reevaluation of the DC Universe's foundational history. The one-shot's repercussions extended long-term, with Booster Gold grappling with profound grief over Kord's loss, driving his evolution into a dedicated guardian of the and fueling repeated, futile attempts to alter the . Batman's pre-existing paranoia about surveillance intensified, as revelations tied to Kord's discoveries validated his creation of the Brother Eye satellite, though it backfired catastrophically into the OMAC crisis, amplifying themes of unchecked vigilance. Overall, these changes primed the for multiversal threats, reshaping character motivations and continuity for years ahead.

Collected Editions

"Countdown to Infinite Crisis" has no standalone collected edition and is always bundled with related miniseries material from the lead-up to the Infinite Crisis event. Its primary print collection is in the trade paperback The OMAC Project, released on November 2, 2005 (ISBN 978-1401208370), which reprints the one-shot alongside The OMAC Project #1-6. Subsequent inclusions appear in larger omnibus volumes, such as the Infinite Crisis Omnibus (2012 edition, ISBN 978-1401235024), compiling the full event with prelude issues including this one-shot. A revised 2020 edition of the omnibus (ISBN 978-1779503443) also features it among the collected titles. Digitally, the one-shot is available on , where it can be read as part of the platform's archives of DC Comics issues. As of 2025, no major new print reprints have been released.

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