Spoiler warning for Dark Crisis #2
Years after the Teen Titans rejected DC’s new Superman from membership, Superman finally gets his revenge—even if it is unintentional. Jon Kent has been serving as Superman while his father is fighting for Warworld’s freedom with the Authority, but he began his crime-fighting career at ten years old, known then as Superboy. Now Superman, Jon has accidentally destroyed Titans Tower in the pages of Dark Crisis, an event that might remind long-time Jon fans of the last time he teamed up with the Teen Titans.
Before he was Superman, the ten-year-old Superboy starred—along with Damian Wayne as Robin—in Super Sons, a beloved 2017 series that began shortly after the beginning of DC’s Rebirth era. Jon was aged up to a teenager only a few years later and eventually took on the name “Superman” in his father’s absence from Earth. While he was still palling around with Robin as Superboy, though, Jon encountered the Teen Titans a few times. Notably, in Super Sons #12 by Patrick Gleason, Peter J. Tomasi, Tyler Kirkham, Tomeu Morey, and Rob Leigh, Robin nominated Superboy to be a part-time member of the Teen Titans, to be promoted to full-time once he reached thirteen. Jon was eager to join them, but the team denied him membership.
Years later, now serving as Superman after the apparent death of the Justice League, Jon Kent meets the Teen Titans yet again—this time in the middle of his battle with Cyborg Superman. In Dark Crisis #2 by Joshua Williamson, Daniel Sampere, Alejandro Sánchez, and Tom Napolitano, Nightwing defends Titans Tower (home of the new Titans Academy) from Deathstroke’s attack. Superman shows up to help his friend—only for Deathstroke to unleash Cyborg Superman. In Superman’s battle with his Cyborg counterpart, they crash into the iconic Titans Tower, causing it to crumble—another symbolic low point for the heroes of DC’s latest Crisis event.
Of course, Jon Kent didn’t intend to destroy one of the DCU’s most iconic landmarks—this disaster is simply collateral damage. But the irony remains: Jon was once rejected by the Teen Titans, despite his fervent wish to join the team, and now he has been part of their building’s destruction. It would be easy to call this “revenge,” especially considering how hurt Superboy was when he was denied membership. But Jon has experienced a lot of hardship since that first encounter with the Titans—including the “death” of his own father, Superman—and this destruction will surely weigh heavy on his already burdened shoulders. Jon is already struggling to put together a new Justice League; his crash into Titans Academy won’t earn him any favors.
Superman seems to have gotten his “revenge” on the Teen Titans for rejecting his membership in his childhood, but the destruction of Titans Tower is an accident that Jon Kent will certainly regret. Titans Tower is a hallmark of hope and legacy in the DC Universe, and its destruction—by one of the DCU’s key legacy characters, no less—marks a downward turn for the heroes at the very beginning of this “Dark Crisis” event. Though Jon won’t be looking to join the Teen Titans any time soon—he has enough on his plate as Superman—this disaster definitely bookends his childhood encounter with the iconic team.
Check out Dark Crisis #2 and Super Sons #12, both available now from DC Comics!