Top 3 major Superman crossovers

  1. Crisis on Infinite Earths #7 (1985)— death of Supergirl in the arms of Superman, iconic cover by George Pérez
  2. Superman #75 (1993)— death of Superman in the face of Doomsday, cultural phenomenon and peak of speculation in the 90s
  3. Kingdom Come #1-4 (1996)— Aging Superman returns to save a world in distress, masterpiece by Alex Ross

Superman is the character most involved in major DC Comics crossovers since the creation of the editorial event concept. From the first Crisis to modern Rebirth, the Man of Steel systematically occupies a central place in the sagas that redefine the DC universe. For the collector, these crossovers represent historical milestones with strong heritage value.

Every great DC crisis revolves around Superman — whether he's the hero, the victim, or the catalyst. Identifying the key numbers within these sprawling events requires precise knowledge of Clark Kent's role in each arc. Consult our guide toSuperman key issuesfor a complete overview.

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Crisis on Infinite Earths (1985) — the seminal overhaul

The first major DC crossover places Superman at the heart of the destruction of the multiverse. Marv Wolfman and George Pérez orchestrate a 12-issue event that rewrites the foundations of the DC Universe. Superman plays a tragic and heroic role simultaneously.

Superman of Earth-1 and Superman of Earth-2 fight side by side before the universes merge. This is the final appearance of the Golden Age Superman in continuity, adding a unique historical dimension.

Collectible Key Numbers

Death of Superman (1992-1993) — the media phenomenon

The Death/Funeral/Reign/Return arc constitutes the most high-profile Superman crossover in history. Polybagged Superman #75 was printed in millions of copies, making common copies of little value. The classic lesson on speculation vs. real rarity.

The real key issue for connoisseurs remains Superman: Man of Steel #18 (first appearance of Doomsday), whose rating continues to increase regularly.

Collectible Key Numbers

Kingdom Come (1996) — the Elseworlds masterpiece

Mark Waid and Alex Ross bring together the entire DCU in a gouache-painted dystopian future. Superman, retired for a decade, takes up the costume to face an uncontrollable new generation. Alex Ross's paintings give each board the status of a work of art.

Collectible Key Numbers

Infinite Crisis (2005) — the return of the multiverse

Geoff Johns brings back Superman from Earth-2 and Superboy-Prime in this spiritual sequel to the original Crisis. The seven-issue event with multiple variant covers offers interesting collection diversity. The main series is enough to capture the essence of Superman's role.

Collectible Key Numbers

DC Rebirth and the modern era (2016–2018)

DC Universe Rebirth #1 (2016) repositions Superman as the pillar of the new continuity. Action Comics #1000 (2018) then celebrates the character's 80th anniversary with a historic issue including multiple, highly sought-after variants.

Collectible Key Numbers

Superman crossover collection strategy

Crisis #7 and Kingdom Come #1 are top priorities for their stability and historical significance. Avoid common copies of Superman #75 in favor of rare variants. Modern crossovers still offer reasonable buying windows before the next DCU movie sparks another surge.

From Crisis to Rebirth, manage your Superman crossovers and identify missing issues in each DC event with ourcollection management application.