Flashpoint Beyond
Flashpoint Beyond is a seven-issue limited comic book series published by DC Comics from April to October 2022, serving as a direct sequel to the 2011 Flashpoint crossover event that altered the DC Universe's timeline.[1] The story centers on Thomas Wayne, the alternate Batman from the Flashpoint reality—who had previously sacrificed himself to restore the main DC timeline—awakening to find that fractured world persisting, prompting him to investigate its anomalies alongside allies like The Flash (Barry Allen) and time-traveler Rip Hunter.[2] This narrative explores the lingering consequences of Barry Allen's timeline-altering actions, blending high-stakes adventure with multiversal threats that ripple across DC's past, present, and future.[3] Written by Geoff Johns (issue #0), Jeremy Adams, and Tim Sheridan (issues #1–6), the series features artwork by Eduardo Risso (#0) and Xermánico (#1–6), with colors by Trish Mulvihill and lettering by Rob Leigh.[2] Johns, who co-created the original Flashpoint with artist Andy Kubert, returns to expand on its themes of sacrifice, redemption, and the fragility of reality, incorporating elements from subsequent DC events like Doomsday Clock and Dark Nights: Death Metal.[4] The plot unfolds as Thomas Wayne's quest takes him from a war-torn Gotham to global conflicts involving Aquaman and Wonder Woman, uncovering a "Clockwork Killer" manipulating time and threatening the Divine Continuum—the overarching structure of DC's multiverse.[1] Originally launched with a prelude issue (#0) on April 12, 2022, followed by the six main issues concluding on October 18, 2022, Flashpoint Beyond was collected into a trade paperback released on December 13, 2022, spanning 232 pages and rated for teen audiences.[1] It ties into the broader "DC Infinite Frontier" era, providing crucial lore on timeline stability and character arcs, particularly for Thomas Wayne and Barry Allen, while setting up future stories in DC's evolving continuity.[3] Critics praised its nostalgic return to Flashpoint's alternate history while advancing DC's cosmic mythology, though some noted its dense connections to prior events might challenge new readers.[5]Background
The Flashpoint Event
The Flashpoint event refers to a pivotal 2011 DC Comics crossover storyline in which Barry Allen, the Flash, alters the prime timeline through time travel in a desperate attempt to prevent the murder of his mother, Nora Allen, by his arch-nemesis, Eobard Thawne (the Reverse-Flash). This intervention creates a divergent reality known as the Flashpoint universe, a dystopian world ravaged by catastrophe and marked by profound changes to key heroes' origins and fates. In this timeline, the death of young Bruce Wayne during the infamous alleyway mugging—originally the inciting incident for Batman's creation—instead drives his father, Thomas Wayne, to don the Batman mantle as a ruthless, gun-wielding vigilante driven by grief and vengeance.[6][7] The altered world escalates into global apocalypse through the Atlantean-Amazonian War, a brutal conflict between the underwater kingdom of Atlantis, led by a militaristic Aquaman (Arthur Curry), and the island nation of Themyscira, commanded by a warrior queen Wonder Woman (Diana Prince). This war floods European cities and unleashes devastating aerial and naval assaults, claiming millions of lives and threatening total annihilation. Compounding the chaos, Superman (Kal-El) is not raised as a hero but captured as an infant by the U.S. government following the destruction of his Kansas adoptive home; he spends decades imprisoned in a secret facility, deprived of sunlight and emerging as a pale, emaciated figure unaccustomed to his powers. Barry Allen, stripped of his speedster abilities and thrust into this unfamiliar reality as an ordinary man, must navigate alliances with figures like Thomas Wayne's Batman and the half-human Cyborg to avert further disaster.[6][7] Recognizing the timeline's instability as a direct consequence of his actions, Barry regains his powers temporarily through exposure to a speed force anomaly and undertakes a high-stakes mission to reverse the changes, ultimately sacrificing the altered reality to restore the prime DC Universe—though not without lasting ripple effects. The core narrative unfolds in a five-issue limited series written by Geoff Johns and penciled by Andy Kubert, published from May to September 2011, which served as the centerpiece of a larger event comprising over 20 tie-in miniseries and one-shots exploring facets of the Flashpoint world, such as Batman: Knight of Vengeance by Brian Azzarello and Eduardo Risso. This storyline not only rebooted DC's continuity into the New 52 era but established the Flashpoint universe as a canonical divergent reality within the broader DC Multiverse, influencing subsequent multiversal narratives and explorations of alternate timelines.[6][7]Legacy Leading to Beyond
The conclusion of the 2011 Flashpoint miniseries, which depicted an alternate timeline sparked by Barry Allen's attempt to save his mother and resulting in a devastating war between Atlanteans and Amazons, prompted DC Comics to relaunch its entire superhero line as The New 52 in September 2011. This initiative cancelled all ongoing titles and introduced 52 new #1 issues, effectively rebooting the DC Universe with revised origins, histories, and character developments to refresh the continuity for new readers.[6][8] Elements of the Flashpoint timeline persisted in subsequent DC events, manifesting as echoes that influenced multiversal narratives. In the 2015 Convergence event, pre-Flashpoint characters from various eras, including those from the Flashpoint universe such as an alternate Batman and Cyborg, were trapped in domed cities by Brainiac and forced into gladiatorial battles against threats from other realities, underscoring the lingering instability of timeline alterations.[9] Similarly, Dark Nights: Metal (2017–2018) explored the Dark Multiverse born from fears and failures, with its 2020 sequel Dark Nights: Death Metal explicitly resolving the fractured continuities initiated by Flashpoint and The New 52, as the Justice League confronted existential threats that traced back to those timeline shifts.[10] Specific narrative threads from Flashpoint reemerged through Thomas Wayne, the alternate Batman from that timeline who survived his world's collapse. In the 2017 crossover The Button, co-written by Tom King and Joshua Williamson, Bruce Wayne discovers a mysterious button in the Batcave that emits radiation, leading to a collaboration with Barry Allen and a hallucinatory encounter with Thomas Wayne, who urges his son to abandon vigilantism; this event hinted at ongoing fractures between realities.[11] These elements carried into Doomsday Clock (2017–2019) by Geoff Johns and Gary Frank, where multiversal interference from Doctor Manhattan further destabilized the DC timeline, with Thomas Wayne's existence serving as a conduit for bleed effects—subtle incursions from the Flashpoint reality into the prime Earth—that amplified themes of altered histories and unresolved paradoxes. In January 2022, DC Comics announced Flashpoint Beyond as a direct sequel to the original miniseries, marking Geoff Johns' return to the publisher after a hiatus and coinciding with the approximate 10-year milestone of Flashpoint's debut. Co-written by Johns with Tim Sheridan and Jeremy Adams, the series positioned Thomas Wayne as the central figure investigating the improbable resurrection of his shattered world, delving into the "bleed" between timelines—a residual instability from Flashpoint's incomplete reset—and the Clockwork Killer as a symbolic lingering threat emblematic of the event's enduring narrative consequences.[3][12]Premise and Setting
Core Concept
Flashpoint Beyond centers on Thomas Wayne, the Batman of the alternate Flashpoint timeline, who returns to this fractured reality after a multiversal exile following his sacrifice to aid Barry Allen in restoring the primary DC Universe and saving his son Bruce's life. In the original Flashpoint event, Thomas assumed the Batman mantle after young Bruce was killed by Joe Chill, driving him to a darker vigilantism amid a war-torn world altered by the Flash's time meddling. Awakening in this persistent alternate timeline, Thomas discovers anomalies like the Clockwork Killer that threaten the stability of all realities, prompting him to investigate their origins and implications.[1][13] The series explores profound themes of regret, redemption, and the heavy toll of timeline manipulation, as Thomas grapples with his unresolved paternal failures and heroic shortcomings in a world that refuses to fade. This thematic depth underscores the personal and cosmic consequences of defying fate, positioning Thomas's journey as a meditation on legacy and the limits of atonement within the DC Multiverse.[14] A key innovation of Flashpoint Beyond lies in its fusion of noir detective storytelling—emphasizing Thomas's gritty investigations—with cosmic horror elements, amplified by recurring time loops, interactions with alternate Batmen, and crucial interventions from Barry Allen and other heroes to avert multiversal collapse. This blend heightens the stakes, transforming a personal quest into a high-tension exploration of temporal fragility.[14] The narrative ties the Flashpoint timeline to broader DC lore by establishing it as a pivotal "beyond" nexus in the Multiverse, directly influencing Hypertime mechanics that enable branching divergent realities and their integration into the core continuity.[15]Key Differences from Original Flashpoint
Flashpoint Beyond significantly expands the narrative scope beyond the original 2011 Flashpoint miniseries, which primarily focused on Earth-bound wars and Barry Allen's heroic efforts to reverse an altered timeline. In contrast, Beyond delves into multiversal threats, incorporating elements of hypertime and time travel that span multiple dimensions, including the involvement of forgotten characters like the Time Masters to stabilize or exploit timeline disruptions. This evolution allows for a broader exploration of DC's cosmology, tying into larger events such as the reintegration of Golden Age heroes into the main continuity.[16] The tone of Flashpoint Beyond marks a notable shift from the event-driven spectacle and high-stakes action of the original, which emphasized Barry Allen's heroism amid global catastrophe. Beyond adopts a more character-driven mystery approach, placing heavier emphasis on Thomas Wayne's psychological depth, grief, and personal redemption arc as he grapples with his place in the unstable Flashpoint universe. Writers Geoff Johns, Jeremy Adams, and Tim Sheridan highlighted this focus on emotional hooks, stating that the story prioritizes "what’s the emotional story? Why do we care about this story?" to create a more introspective narrative.[17] Structurally, Flashpoint Beyond diverges from the original's five-issue core series by employing a six-issue miniseries format augmented by a #0 prologue issue, enabling a more conclusive resolution rather than an open-ended reboot. The creative approach also evolves through collaborative writing by Johns, Adams, and Sheridan, paired with multiple artists to deliver varied visual styles that enhance the multiversal and temporal themes. This team dynamic contrasts with the original's primary collaboration between Johns and artist Andy Kubert, allowing for richer character interactions and a definitive ending that forms a new Bat-Family dynamic in the Flashpoint timeline.[16][17] World-building in Flashpoint Beyond introduces instability to the Flashpoint timeline through "bleed" effects, where realities begin to merge and erode, a concept absent from the original's more contained alternate reality. New elements, such as the Clockwork Killer—revealed as Martha Wayne—and threats like a Kryptonian invasion, further differentiate it by weaving in connections to broader DC lore, including Doomsday Clock and the return of hypertime. These changes underscore the sequel's role in evolving the Flashpoint universe into a persistent, multifaceted element of DC's multiverse rather than a one-off event.[17][18]Plot
Overall Summary
Flashpoint Beyond is a seven-issue DC Comics miniseries (#0–6) that continues the alternate reality established in the 2011 Flashpoint event, where Barry Allen's time travel to save his mother resulted in a fractured timeline featuring altered versions of DC heroes, including Thomas Wayne as Batman after his son Bruce's death.[1] In this sequel, Thomas Wayne awakens in a persistent version of the Flashpoint world he thought had been erased, finding himself stranded and compelled to investigate unraveling timeline anomalies amid escalating Atlantean threats in Europe.[2] His journey leads him to confront the mad king Aquaman on the eve of an impending catastrophe, such as the sinking of London, while seeking answers that could preserve or doom this reality.[19] The central antagonist is the Clockwork Killer, an enigmatic and manipulative figure who exploits the fractures in the Flashpoint timeline to accelerate the unraveling of multiple realities.[19] Thomas's pursuit of this threat involves key alliances and encounters, including guidance from Barry Allen and interactions with alternate versions of heroes like Superman and Cyborg, building toward a climactic multiversal confrontation that tests loyalties and reveals betrayals across timelines.[5] These elements underscore major conflicts centered on the consequences of time manipulation and the blurred lines between worlds. Throughout the series, themes revolve around Thomas Wayne's personal quest for closure regarding Bruce's death and the inherent fragility of timelines, as his actions carry profound implications for the stability of DC's prime Earth continuity.[3] The narrative explores sacrifice and identity in an alternate universe on the brink, culminating in resolutions that ripple across the broader DC multiverse without fully restoring or destroying the Flashpoint reality.[1]Major Arcs and Resolutions
The series opens with a prologue in issue #0, where Thomas Wayne, the Batman of the Flashpoint universe, awakens in a reality he believed had been erased following Barry Allen's restoration of the prime timeline. Disoriented and haunted by the loss of his son Bruce, Thomas quickly recognizes the recurring threats of the Atlantean-Amazonian war and determines to dismantle this distorted world once more. His initial investigation uncovers subtle anomalies, including murders linked to an enigmatic figure known as the Clockwork Killer, hinting at manipulations preserving the timeline's existence.[20][21] In issues #1-3, Thomas embarks on an investigation across Europe, traveling to Britain amid the escalating conflict between Aquaman's Atlantean forces and the Amazons. Confronting a deranged Aquaman on the eve of his planned sinking of London, Thomas seeks answers about Barry Allen's disappearance and the timeline's unnatural persistence. Through brutal clashes and interrogations, he discovers evidence of temporal loops resetting key Flashpoint events, orchestrated by the Clockwork Killer's influence over global leaders, which perpetuates the war and prevents the universe's collapse. A detour to the Fortress of Solitude introduces a feral Kal-El variant, underscoring the timeline's divergences and providing crucial insights into external interventions.[22][23] The narrative escalates in issues #4-6 into a multiversal climax, as Thomas forms tenuous alliances with Barry Allen, Superman, and time-traveler Rip Hunter to combat the growing threat. Revelations emerge tying the Clockwork Killer to the original Flashpoint paradox created by Barry's time travel, revealing a larger scheme involving time manipulation across realities. The arc culminates in an intense final battle, where Thomas confronts the Killer's machinations, blending personal vendettas with cosmic stakes to disrupt the loops and restore equilibrium to the multiverse. Rip Hunter's actions in releasing 13 time-displaced heroes further interconnect the events with DC's broader continuity.[24][25][26][27] The resolutions address Thomas's arc by integrating his brutal Batman persona—forged from years of grief and violence—into a path toward redemption, as he grapples with the impossibility of reviving his son while aiding in the timeline's stabilization. Family legacy finds closure through indirect reconciliation with the prime Bruce Wayne, whose covert efforts preserve fragments of Flashpoint. These events subtly interconnect with DC's Infinite Frontier continuity from 2021, laying groundwork for ongoing multiversal explorations without fully erasing the altered reality.[28][29][30]Publication
Creative Team and Development
Flashpoint Beyond was co-written by Geoff Johns, Jeremy Adams, and Tim Sheridan, with the series collaboratively written by all three, and Johns writing the #0 prelude issue. This project represented Johns' return to the Flashpoint universe, which he originally co-created in 2011 as a pivotal event that rebooted DC's continuity.[31][3] The artwork was contributed by a team of artists, including Xermánico on interiors for several issues, alongside Mikel Janín, Eduardo Risso (for the #0 prelude), and Gary Frank, allowing for stylistic variations that aligned with the shifting tones across the narrative arcs. Dan Mora provided select variant covers, enhancing the series' visual appeal with his dynamic style.[15][13] Announced on January 14, 2022, Flashpoint Beyond was developed as an anniversary sequel to the original Flashpoint, timed roughly a decade after its debut and positioned within DC's ongoing multiverse reconfiguration following the 2020 Dark Nights: Death Metal event.[12][3] Editorially, the series aimed to provide resolution to Thomas Wayne's lingering storyline from the 2017 "The Button" crossover between Batman and The Flash, where the Flashpoint Batman was left displaced in the primary DC Universe, ensuring continuity ties without altering broader lore.[12]Issues and Release
Flashpoint Beyond is a seven-issue limited series published by DC Comics, beginning with a zero issue and spanning from April to October 2022. The series follows a monthly release schedule after initial delays shifted the planned biweekly cadence, influenced by industry-wide production challenges during that period.[2][32] The issues are as follows:| Issue | Release Date | Brief Description |
|---|---|---|
| #0 | April 12, 2022 | Prologue setting Thomas Wayne's return to the Flashpoint timeline, establishing the central mystery of the Clockwork Killer; 48 pages.[2] |
| #1 | May 3, 2022 | The European hunt for clues begins, introducing conflict involving Aquaman and escalating the threat to the altered reality.[19] |
| #2 | June 7, 2022 | The mystery deepens with the emergence of time anomalies, drawing Thomas Wayne further into unraveling the timeline's instability.[33] |
| #3 | July 5, 2022 | Midpoint revelations emerge regarding the Clockwork Killer, heightening the stakes as connections to key Flashpoint events surface.[34] |
| #4 | August 2, 2022 | Multiversal elements intensify, expanding the scope beyond the Flashpoint world and introducing broader cosmic implications.[35] |
| #5 | September 6, 2022 | Hero alliances begin to form across realities, uniting figures from the Flashpoint universe to confront the escalating crisis.[36] |
| #6 | October 18, 2022 | The finale delivers resolutions to the central conflicts, concluding the series with lasting impacts on the DC Multiverse; 32 pages.[37] |
Collected Editions
The Flashpoint Beyond collected edition was released as a trade paperback by DC Comics, compiling the complete seven-issue miniseries for readers seeking a single-volume format. This edition includes the prelude issue #0 along with the main storyline in issues #1–6, providing a self-contained narrative of Thomas Wayne's investigation into the remnants of the Flashpoint universe.[1]| Title | Format | Release Date | Pages | ISBN-13 | MSRP | Contents |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flashpoint Beyond | Trade Paperback | December 13, 2022 | 232 | 9781779517371 | $16.99 | #0–6 |