I have also heard the rumour. But, even the people who were talking about it at the comic shop were framing it as "rumour".
And then DC went and undid it anyway, jus' becuz! I'm laughing so hard right now.
Yeah. They undid it without time-travel. And, it apparently makes more sense that she was crippled less than 5 years ago, had time build up a rep as Oracle and then (somehow or another) got her legs back.
It's also the same reason you were 'done' with DC a few years go, as I recall, and switched to Marvel (stuff like Dark Avengers/Siege really impressing you on that front). And now look where you are, I imagine it'll all flip around again for you in a year or two.
Fair point. But, it should also be noted that it took something the magnitude of "Flashpoint" to get me back in to DC after "Countdown" and Barry Allen coming back from the dead. And, even so, it took some doing for me to be interested in the new 52. DC had to prove they were serious about it.
Marvel has never, and is unlikely to ever, run a story the scale or significance of "Flashpoint". It just will not happen. "Dark Reign" was not something that I had seen before written by a guy whose main gimmick is readability. Marvel is generally more likely to follow a predictable cycle of "back the way things were" than DC.
I would argue that Marvel's TF series actually pulled this off back in the 80's, even managing to have an 'ending' before wearing out its welcome. Of course, now that storyline has picked up again with ReG1, but even that's carrying on from the previous status quo, and is slated to really end for reals this time we mean it after twelve issues.
It is going to be 20 issues actually. But, yes, the Marvel TF series delivered on this front. Even at its worst, (the middle issues between 20 and 50 or so), the Marvel series was dynamic. Even if you did not like the book, there was reason to think it would get better because it was going someplace and going somewhere.
And, "ReGeneration 1" is largely following that trend, even if the pacing is a bit different.
Why do you care so much whether not-real people in a not-real universe have long-term changes applied to them or not? Books like Dark Knight Returns and, to a degree, Watchmen already successfully illustrated how cape characters would be impacted by a non-sliding timeline, what would be the point of doing it again, over and over?
I just think that it would be an interesting experiment to do this in something resembling real time. DC did this in the 1970s and 1980s, using the (aged) JSA characters to set up for "Infinity Incorporated". Had they followed that trend, the Huntress and other hiers would be dead/retired by now. "The Dark Knight" just assumed a narrative jump. But, imagine seeing Batman age a little every year. Imagine something like what DC did with the JSA or even Marvel with the Invaders/Avengers without back-writing things. Imagine a book like "Fantastic Four". Franklin Richards would be in his 50s. He would the patriarch of the Richard's family, likely with grandkids of his own. Imagine the possiblities for the comics we could get.
I would let up on "give me an impressive idea" if the events would flow and stick more meaningfully.
At a more basic level, I get sick of reading the same comics over and over. I also get sick of picking up a book after having not read it for years, and having seen changes from when I was reading it (or stuff I heard about after) having been so cleanly undone that it may as well have never happened.
Between '97 and '05, I avoided capes and tights almost entirely for this reason. ("Infinite Crisis" got me back in believe it or not.) I discovered GW ("Inferno" and "WarHammer Monthly") in '99. Then in '01/'02, Devils Due and Dreamwave hooked me along with Dark Horse's "Star Wars".
Dom
-"For Super or for Worse", think about it.