Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Dave-El's Spinner Rack: DC K.O.

 And we're back for a 3rd week of spinning around Dave-El's ol' spinner rack.

Since comics are sold out of comic book shops, the concept of the spinner rack is an antiquated one from my kidhood when I first got into comics.

In my small southern town where I lived, there were two spinner racks, 1 at a convenience store called the Pantry and another at a drug store downtown. 

Both racks made a loud "SQUEE-AWK!" sound when you turned them. All the better I assume to let some clerk know some kid was messing with the comic books and be on high alert in case someone decided to bolt out of the store with a handful of free comic books.  

I dutifully paid for all my comics. 

I kind of miss the thrill of turning the spinner rack and being surprised by what comics I might find on sale that week. 

Well, that's all nostalgia and this post is about new comics I have purchased recently.

Today's post is about DC Comics' big event comic DC K.O.

The "KO" in DC K.O. does NOT stand for "Knock Out" but refers to "King Omega".  

King Omega is an ultimate source of power that is needed to stop Darkseid who is returning to our universe after being banished outside our dimension where he created his own universe.  (Stories set in the universe are chronicled in DC's Absolute line.)   

To earn the right to obtain the power of King Omega, various heroes and villains have to fight each other until only one remains, the one who will be come King Omega.

There are various obstacles along the way as the field of heroes and villains is winnowed down. 

For example, the mind controlled heroes of the Absolute Universe show up to cause some problems. 


The Batman of our universe thinks the Batman of the Absolute Universe has an ugly Bat emblem. (And he's right!) 

One battle after another (hey, that would be a great title for an Oscar winning movie) ensue along with various shenanigans and betrayals and twists and what have you and finally the field is narrowed down to....

Superman and Lex Luthor.

Big blue boy scout that he is, Superman suggests teaming up with Lex to take the King Omega power and stop Darkseid.

Lex remembers that them's not the rules and ambushes Superman. 

There can only be ONE winner!

And Lex Luthor declares himself King Omega!


If DC K.O. seems an RPG in comic book form, writer Scott Snyder points that out with a flashback subplot to a game night at the Kents where Clark and Lois welcome Diana and Bruce to play a board game based on their super hero exploits. 

Bruce gets all the best dice rolls.  Clark asks if Bruce is cheating.

Bruce replies he's not cheating. He's Batman.

Those interludes are a lot of fun and I would like to see more of that sort of interaction in the DC Universe.

Meanwhile, back to the brouhaha that is the main event of this book.

A prime rule in the DC Universe, let's call it Rule #1: when Lex Luthor thinks he's winning, he's not.  


Ultimately, Darkseid's opponent is who we kind knew it always had to be: Superman.

The knock down drag out between Darkseid and Superman crosses different Crisis events of of the DC Multiverse such as 2011’s Flashpoint and 1985’s Crisis on Infinite Earths

All of this is brought to life by some spectacular art by  Javier Fernández and brilliant colors by Alejandro Sánchez.

In the series epilogue by  Joshua Williamson, Xermanico and Wes Craig, we get a glimpse of the future with more universe shattering events and perhaps more changes to the canon that was just established in Mark Waid’s New History of the DC Universe.

Such is the state of modern comics: the only constant is change. 

Speaking of Mark Waid’s New History of the DC Universe, I don't think I've made note of my impression of that series.

cover by Chris Samnee 

Props to Mark Waid for trying to forge a cohesive narrative to a comic book universe riddled by decades of revamps, reboots, revisions, ret-cons and contradictions.  

The unifying thread to this narrative is Barry Allen, the Silver Age Flash whose time travelling and dimension spanning super speed provides a unique and very human perspective on the various crisis level events that have struck Earth and the surrounding universe.  

Points to Mark Waid for trying but there's still too much that has gone on in DC's near century existence to not make this a bit of a slog to get through. 

It can be a bit of fun for a trivia obsessed nerd like myself but as a coherent story of DC's definitive history, it doesn't quite stick the landing.

And since the events of VDC K.O. opens the door to that "definitive" history already being re-written mere months after it was published, well, what was the point? 

I also took issue with shifting artists on New History of the DC Universe which undermines the idea of some kind of unified historical narrative.  

For truly dedicated trivia nerds, the back pages of each issue is an illustrated glossary that reference the specific comics Mark Waid used in his history story. 

Variant cover by Scott Koblish  

And that is that for this edition of Dave-El's Spinner Rack. 

I began this post with an exercise in nostalgia. Next week's comic book post is ALL nostalgia as I take another look back at comic books I bought 50 years ago.

What did Dave-El buy off the spinner rack in March 1976?

"SQUEE-AWK!"

We'll find out next week.  

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