Following the announcement of three new series coming in March as part of their Next Level initiative, DC today revealed what the post-DC K.O. universe will look like by sharing covers and information on their March titles. Their solicitations for that month, I believe, should arrive tomorrow, but today’s announcement will give you a good idea of what to expect from them.
Some of the changes and stories coming to their regular titles include:
- In a world without Superman (Wha …?) the Superman titles will kick off a storyline called “Reign of the Superboys” that’ll feature Jon Kent, Superboy Prime, the young Clark Kent we’ve been seeing in Action Comics and more.
- Titans becoming New Titans with issue #33 in March, with Tate Brombal and Sami Basri taking over the title
- A 600th issue of Green Lantern featuring creators Jeremy Adams, Ron Marz, Xermanico, Darryl Banks and more
- Ryan North and Gavin Guidry taking over as the creative team for The Flash
- Denys Cowan joining Dan Watters on Nightwing
- Aquaman being retitled Emperor Aquaman, as our hero heads to the stars
- An alternative timeline story that’ll kick off in Wonder Woman, as she teams with her grown-up daughter Trinity to battle the Queen of America, the Matriarch
- An oversized Batman #7 by Matt Fraction and Jorge Jiménez
- Gotham City getting a new mayor who goes by the name Poison Ivy
Read on for more details and to check out March’s covers.
Wonder War




A defining new chapter in DC’s March lineup begins in Wonder Woman #31, written by Eisner Award–winner Tom King (Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow) with art by Daniel Sampere (Wonder Woman, Dark Crisis). Together, this acclaimed duo launches “Wonder War,” the most ambitious Wonder Woman story in years.
et twenty years in the future, “Wonder War” is a fight against the darkest timeline imaginable: the Justice League is dead, the villains of the DC Universe (even Lex Luthor!) have bent the knee, and the Matriarch, first introduced in the sold‑out Wonder Woman #25, has risen to power as the Queen of America. Against this backdrop, Diana and her grown-up daughter Trinity must unite to resist a foe whose insurmountable strength threatens to conquer the entire world.
The story is both a family saga and a war epic, pitting Wonder Woman’s ideals of compassion and justice against authoritarian conquest. With Trinity’s role at the forefront, “Wonder War” is not only Diana’s battle, but a generational fight for the very soul of the DC Universe.
Batman family





In Gotham City, Eisner Award–winning writer Matt Fraction and superstar artist Jorge Jiménez begin their second major story arc on the series, reintroducing The Joker in Batman #7 in a way fans have never seen before. This oversized issue features a breathtaking interior gatefold sequence that plunges readers directly into the Clown Prince’s fractured psyche, redefining his relationship with the Caped Crusader for DC’s mainline comics.
But The Joker is only part of the threat. Commissioner Vandal Savage’s increasingly hostile GCPD and Gotham’s new mayor, Pamela Isley (*see below), escalate their war on the Bat‑Family, tightening their grip on the city and forcing Batman into impossible choices. As the pressure mounts, the story builds toward a devastating police assault that will forever alter the status quo for one of Batman’s closest allies. With Fraction’s sharp storytelling and Jiménez’s dynamic visuals, Batman #7 stands as one of the boldest flagship titles of DC All In’s second act, a story that promises to shake Gotham to its core.



Batman isn’t the only Gotham City series beginning a new chapter in March. Detective Comics #1107, written by Tom Taylor with art by Pete Woods, brings Batman together with Black Canary and Gotham’s newest resident, Green Arrow, to unravel a conspiracy tied to their shared past.


Meanwhile, Nightwing #136 begins a supernatural noir tale as legendary artist Denys Cowan joins Dan Watters to explore Blüdhaven’s urban legends, beginning with a haunted super‑highway.





Selina Kyle returns home in Catwoman #85 from writer Torunn Grønbekk and artist Davide Gianfelice.



Cassandra Cain inherits cursed powers in Batgirl #17 from Tate Brombal and Takeshi Miyazawa,





Harley Quinn splits into two personas in Harley Quinn #60 from Elliott Kalan and Carlos Oliveras.





… and, as referenced in Batman #7, Pamela Isley ascends as Gotham City’s new mayor in Poison Ivy #42 fromG. Willow Wilson and Marcio Takara!
Reign of the Superboys




In March, DC K.O. leaves the DC Universe in need of a new SUPERMAN, kicking off a “Reign of the Superboys” saga across DC’s four ongoing Superman-related titles! The adventure begins on March 11 with Action Comics #1096 by Mark Waid and Skylar Patridge, where young Superboy Clark Kent from the past collides with today’s Justice League Unlimited. This clash across time bridges Superman’s earliest days with the present, while Martian Manhunter, Mary Marvel, and more, search for the missing Man of Tomorrow in the past.






Also on March 11, Supergirl #11 by Sophie Campbell thrusts Kara into the bottled city of Kandor, where she loses her powers and gains a cybernetic upgrade to lead a revolution alongside Conner Kent (Superboy) and a legion of Boy Thunder clones. What do these clones mean for the future of the House of El? Only time will tell! Together, these opening chapters ignite a sweeping storyline that spans the Superman family and propels DC’s new Superboy saga forward across March and beyond.





The following week, on March 18, Superman Unlimited #11 from Dan Slott and Lucas Meyer expands the arc with Jon Kent facing a terrifying time‑bending foe and the debut of Tomorrow Man, a brand‑new character whose arrival shakes the timeline itself.







Finally, the opening month of DC’s new Superboy saga culminates on March 25 with Superman #36 by Joshua Williamson and Dan Mora, as Superboy Prime steps into the spotlight of the ongoing series. Normally reserved for massive crossover events, Prime now claims the mantle of Superman in a bold, action‑packed story that redefines the legacy of Metropolis. With each series spotlighting fan-favorite characters, “Reign of the Superboys” invites fans to follow the saga across all four titles, or dive into the one that spotlights their favorite hero, as the Superman family enters the second act of DC All In.
And the rest!






Beyond Gotham and Metropolis, DC’s cosmic heroes also enter bold new eras in March 2026. Green Lantern #600 celebrates a milestone anniversary with stories from Jeremy Adams, Ron Marz, Xermanico, Darryl Banks, and more, as Hal Jordan is tested and Kyle Rayner returns to Earth.


In Green Lantern Corps #14, Morgan Hampton and Fernando Pasarin make Guy Gardner the Allsight, assembling a team to track vanished Emotional Entities.





DC’s Aquaman series is officially retitled Emperor Aquaman beginning with issue #15, as Jeremy Adams and John Timms launch Arthur on a conquest across the stars, wielding Omega Energy against the Crimson Queen.



The Flash #31 introduces a new creative team of writer Ryan North and artist Gavin Guidry as Wally West faces sinister forces exploiting his heroism.






Justice League Unlimited #17 from Mark Waid and Clayton Henry picks up directly where DC K.O. #5 leaves off (no spoilers here!) and points to a big status quo shift for the villains of the DCU. Who will join Wonder Woman and Batman to lead the new JLU?




And, coming back to Earth after the events of DC K.O., DC’s Titans series becomes New Titans #33 in March, with Tate Brombal and Sami Basri teeing up the next chapter for the next generation of DC Super Heroes with a roster of characters old and new.