[dct 4] With the New 52 reboot in September 2011, the Wildstorm characters were adapted into the DC Universe within the "Edge" line, which also featured the Western and war comics.
Pat McCallum took the DC superhero titles and Mark Doyle the two mature imprints, Vertigo and Young Animal.
The other title, All Star Batman & Robin, the Boy Wonder, was never finished (the last two issues remain unpublished to this day), but created a lot of discussions.
[dct 4] A direct-to-video animated film was made based on All-Star Superman by Warner Home Video and released in February 2011.
The initial lineup included creators such as Frank Miller, Kelly Sue DeConnick, Scott Snyder, Lee Bermejo and more.
[23] Founded in 2009, Earth One graphic novels feature re-imagined and modernized versions of the company's superhero characters from the DC Universe.
[dct 2] Impact was launched in July 1991 with several titles: Black Hood, The Fly, Jaguar, Comet, Legend of the Shield and The Web.
[dct 2] The miniseries Crucible began in February 1993 by writers Mark Waid and Brian Augustyn and artist Joe Quesada and was an attempt to relaunch the line, but with sales still lagging, the imprint was instead cancelled.
Three new titles, Billy Batson and the Magic of Shazam!, Tiny Titans and Super Friends, were launched in August 2007 by Coordinating Editor Jann Jones.
In February, Tiny Titans first issue was released, while in March the Super Friends title was relaunched, now based on the Mattel toyline of the same name.
[dct 4] Minx was an imprint of DC Comics graphic novels aimed at the young adult market, particularly teenage girls.
The book establishing the imprint's tone was Beautiful Stories for Ugly Children (BSfUC), an anthology by Dave Louapre and Dan Sweetman.
[29][30] The imprint published a series of 18 one-shots over two years starring the Tangent version of the major DC Universe characters.
In February, several creator-owned titles begin printing with Vertigo from Disney's aborted Touchmark imprint starting with Enigma.
[dci 4] Starting in January 1999, The Trenchcoat Brigade brought Phantom Stranger, John Constantine, Dr. Occult and Mr. E together in one series lasting four issues.
[dct 4] The same year, Vertigo saw another Fables spin-off, Cinderella: From Fabletown With Love and its 100-page "Spectacular" reprints program began.
[dct 10] In 2018, Neil Gaiman and Mark Doyle began to oversee a Sandman Universe imprint under the Vertigo banner.
[dct 3] Moore became increasingly dissatisfied with DC, wrapping up the various series and moving League of Extraordinary Gentlemen to Top Shelf / Knockabout.
[citation needed] In July 1998, the Cliffhanger comic Danger Girl was licensed out to New Line Cinema for a film adaptation.
The line consisted of a Young Justice book written by Bendis with art from Patrick Gleason, Naomi by Bendis, David Walker and Jamal Campbell, Wonder Twins by Mark Russell with art by Stephen Byrne, and Dial H for Hero, which was written by Sam Humphries and drawn by Joe Quinones.
[39] In April 2016, DC teamed up with Gerard Way to launch a new "pop-up imprint" aimed at mature readers, described as "comics for dangerous humans".
Mother Panic, which features art by Tommy Lee Edwards, is about a new Gotham vigilante who by day is the celebrity heiress Violet Page.
The final series in the initial line-up was Shade the Changing Girl by Cecil Castellucci and Marley Zarcone, with covers by Becky Cloonan.
[41] The Killing Zone is planned pop-up imprint from DC Comics curated by Geoff Johns, formally announced at San Diego Comic-Con 2018.
[citation needed] The universe was a melding of licensed pulp fiction characters with versions of established non-superpowered DC heroes.
The limited series was six issues long, published in 2010 and written by Brian Azzarello, and drawn by Rags Morales featuring the main characters of the universe.
[9] The First Wave fictional universe is a part of the DC Multiverse[43] and was launched in the Batman/Doc Savage one-shot, by writer Brian Azzarello with Phil Noto as artist.
[9] The miniseries added additional characters, such as the Black Canary,[43] the Blackhawks, Rima the Jungle Girl, the Avenger, the Spirit, and Doc Savage's group the Fabulous Five.
[49] Dan DiDio and Jim Lee began a new partnership between Hanna-Barbera and DC Comics in January 2016, both companies owned by Time Warner, in order to remake most of the studio's comedic characters and adapt them into darker and edgier settings.
This line was headed up by DC Comics' master class with contributors such as Greg Capullo, Andy Kubert, Jim Lee and John Romita Jr.[53] The Dark Multiverse concept is a fluxing reality responding to the viewer's subconscious fears.