It's not even that - it seems like DC can't stick to a plan for 24 months and follow it through anymore. They'll have changed the plot and the ending (even if it's already been published) by time it's time to even finish a storyline, much less anything like a long-term future. I can totally understand not wanting a set future- in an open-ended on-going story with multiple authors, it just boxes them in - but I just wish you could depend on a proper beginning, middle, and end to major, universe-establishing, reality-setting stories, and it's been seen in recent years that they aren't prepared to do that.By the way, once again, I don't like that they're defining the future before writing the present. Any other authors I would've been fine because that's how people sometimes write, the ending first, but the way DC work, nothing will ever be the actual future. They've done this before and it got cancelled.
Certainly makes it "matter" less, but is probably a better move.Well at least now they're admitting it's only "possible futures." Basically a bunch of what-ifs
Which kinda feels unnecessary to have a story for given how much they've recently changed on the fly or had contradicted in different books. I don't even know what some of the broadstrokes are now, much less the minor bits. I don't know that I can hope for anything that I like to come out of the change in continuity, but since i find the current one a wash, I guess it doesn't really matter.I expect something similar to Final Crisis in which the hiccup in time and space allows them to tweak whatever they want while keeping the broad strokes more or less the same as they've been for decades, with the specifics growing more and more vague as the years pass.
I don't care for a clean slate reboot (which they'd still want to preserve newer IPs for, of course so major changes there) or stand alone stories with no continuity. But to me it seems DC is losing it both ways right now - too much continuity and confusion to appeal to casual fans, and too little consistent continuity between books or over time to keep the traditional floppy fans. But maybe that's just my own biases and this'll turn out great.