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13* ''ComicBook/AmericasKingdom'' is an indie comic taking place in a world where the United ''Kingdom'' of America emerged from the Revolutionary War. The White House is the White Palace, the Secret Service consists of knights, and nobody has used a gun legally in over a decade.
14* ''ComicBook/{{Arrowsmith}}'', by Creator/KurtBusiek and Carlos Pacheco, is a fantasy take on this trope. At the forging of the Peace of Charlemagne (the Pax Nicephori in the real world), the various hidden magical races of the world decided to make their existence openly known to humanity, also joining in the peace treaty. The United States of America is actually the United States of Columbia in this series, which takes place during this world's version of World War I. Dryads, trolls, dwarves, etc. live among humanity, magic co-exists side-by-side with technology. The Industrial Revolution is causing a magical revolution, as spells become mass-produced for the first time in human history.
15* Samaritan from ''ComicBook/AstroCity'' prevents the Challenger disaster and destroys his own timeline. He apparently remains in existence because of his connection to the fundamental forces of the universe.
16* ''ComicBook/BakerStreet'' is set in an alternate-universe London where World War II never happened and the Victorian influence on British society continued into the 1980s. Supporting material mentions that Hitler annexed Czechoslovakia, but was foiled from any further expansion by an alliance between the UK, France, Russia, and America.
17* The ''ComicBook/BlakeAndMortimer'' series obviously diverged from our history at some point before the 1940's : Tibet rose as a superpower (the Yellow Empire) at that time, accumulating enough super-weapons to conquer the world through a Blitzkrieg World War Three, before being defeated by a world Resistance movement led by the British Empire thanks to their superior super-weapons. Then, during the 1950's, the Soviet Union almost managed to conquer the West thanks to Soviet Super Science and even though its plan was foiled at the last moment, it's very likely it would have resulted in World War Four. However, the series has very little continuity and those wide technological and geopolitical divergences are not really taken into account in other episodes.
18* ''ComicBook/{{Block 109}}''. UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler is killed in 1941. UsefulNotes/NaziGermany wins the war against the Western Allies but is losing the war against USSR. Features Hitler's dreamed capital of Germania, some StupidJetpackHitler stuff such as Nazi nuclear weapons, futuristic aircrafts, futuristic soldiers in armors, mechas and even [[SyntheticPlague zombie-making virus]].
19* MiloManara's ''Borgia'' series is more or less faithful to history, but the last book goes off the rails: the King of France dies in the eruption of the Vesuvius, Savonarola is sodomized to death by the Pope on a bed of spikes, Cesar Borgia conquers cities with Creator/LeonardoDaVinci's working superweapons and flying machines, etc. Though the end sort of snaps back with the death of Cesar in Spain.
20* ''ComicBook/TheBoys'' has a point of divergence in World War II, when a SuperSerum is invented and immediately, unsuccessfully weaponized. The ongoing attempts to turn superheroes into something that can be used in war instead results in the superheroes being the focus of a massive media empire. The main deviations are the presence of [[EvilInc Vought-American]] throughout the twentieth century, Robert Kennedy winning the presidency, George W. Bush dying in a chainsaw accident before his political career manifested and the destruction of the Brooklyn Bridge [[spoiler:due to a botched rescue attempt by the Seven]] instead of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.
21** Since Vought Aircraft in this universe was founded by Frederick Vought instead of Chance M. Vought, the already troublesome [=F4U=] Corsair’s counterpart, the [=F7U=] Grizzly, was disastrous and nearly cost the US its advance in the Pacific.
22** Dakota Bob, the President during the series's present day, apparently got his political career started as a backup vice-presidential candidate for George H.W. Bush, after Dan Quayle's verbal tics got him thrown off the ticket. [[spoiler: After he and his LethallyStupid Vice President are murdered, Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi is sworn in as the 45th President of the United States before presumably stepping down in favor of UsefulNotes/BarackObama.]]
23** In the "Barbary Coast" arc, [[spoiler:Mallory]] tells Hughie about meeting Prescott Sheldon Bush - father of George, grandfather of George W., prominent figure in conspiracy theories - in 1944, on the eve of the Battle of the Bulge. In real history, the elder Bush did not pursue political ambitions until 1950; in ''The Boys'', he's already a senator from Connecticut, although his explicit connections to Vought-American provide a handy reason why he might have gotten ahead of the game. [[spoiler:The elder Bush is promptly shot dead in a German ambush, whereas the real Prescott Bush lived until 1972.]]
24** No one ever mentions why, but the UsefulNotes/WarOnTerror in this universe is being fought primarily in Pakistan. Several characters mention that the U.S. has troops on the ground there.
25** The Battle of Ia Drang in this universe was a total defeat for the US, with the 1000 American airmobile cavalry troops ''completely wiped out'' by the 2500 Vietnamese they faced, thanks to being issued the useless [[IncompetenceInc Vought]] [=M-20=]. Presumably, Colonel Hal G. Moore and Sergeant Major Basil L. Plumley were among those killed.
26** The Fall of Saigon in 1973 is implied to have gone much worse. The flashback image is a frantic version of [[https://static01.nyt.com/images/2009/05/17/arts/15vanesobit.jpg this famous picture by Hugh Van Es]], with several South Vietnamese civilians trying to cling onto the last helicopter as it's taking off, while others are seemingly being trampled to death by the crowds rushing up the stairs.
27* ''ComicBook/{{Chassis}}'': History deviates during UsefulNotes/TheGreatWar. ThePlague known as 'The Virus' or the 'Perfect Plague' swept across the world in 1915; forcing hasty peace talks and and an end to the war in 1916. A Global Unification Congress (GUC), consisting of the world leaders present at the peace conference, is established to find a cure for the plague. By the time a cure is found in 1917, 80 million people have dies worldwide. The money and effort put into finding a cure rapidly advance the development of science and technology. Lower world population figures make it easier to deal with poverty and food shortages on a global level, averting the Great Depression and UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. By 1949, the GUC has rebuilt Europe, there is not a sign of global aggression in sight, births are at an all time high, Eleanor Roosevelt is president of the USA, and [[FlyingCar the Aerorun]] is the number one sport in the world.
28* The ''Patient Zero'' arc of ''{{ComicBook/Crossed}} Badlands'' (issues 50-56) confirms that UsefulNotes/GordonBrown was Britain's prime minister when the civilization-ending Crossed pandemic began, thereby making him (presumably) the last ever Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in that world.
29* ''Franchise/TheDCU'''s resident MirrorUniverse, Earth-Three/Earth-3/Earth 3 and its SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute the Antimatter Earth, isn't just an inversion in terms of the moral alignments of its heroes and villains, but in terms of geography and history as well. For example, the British colonies fought back against the tyranny of President UsefulNotes/BenedictArnold.
30* Creator/ValiantComics' ''ComicBook/{{Divinity}} III'' took place in an alternate reality called "the Stalinverse" in which the Soviet Union was much more powerful than it was in real life. An early point of divergence is in 1922, when UsefulNotes/JosefStalin assassinated UsefulNotes/VladimirLenin (in real life, Lenin died of natural causes in 1924). In the 1930s, the Soviet Union annexed several European countries, expanding throughout the Eurasian continent while installing UsefulNotes/JosephMcCarthy as their puppet president of the U.S. and setting their sights on space. Following a second American civil war in the 60s, the Soviet Union claimed North and South America as colonies, effectively ruling the entire world by the 90s. This new history has also affected the Valiant heroes, such as ComicBook/XOManowar joining the communist cause after arriving in 2012 and Colin King, a.k.a. ComicBook/{{Ninjak}} being a government official.
31* Vertigo's ''ComicBook/{{DMZ}}'' is a variant that alters recent American history, in that the reaction to 9/11 and the ensuing change in U.S. foreign policy, was a far more violent and self-destructive one anwhat's left of d led to the USA erupting into a second civil war. The end result is a [[CrapSackWorld less than perfect union]], with the resultant factions being the so-called Free States, the United States and the titular DMZ (formerly known as Manhattan).
32* The Creator/ImageComics book ''ComicBook/Elsewhere2017'' is this, presenting a world where both Amelia Earhart and D. B. Cooper are transported into another world and go on an adventure to free said world from a ruthless warlord. Later taken even further as [[spoiler:said world has been used by the US Government to create and distribute medicines that do not exist in our world]].
33* ''ComicBook/ExMachina'' is a minor example, where the main character managed to save one of the Twin Towers during the 9/11 attacks.
34* ''ComicBook/GiveMeLiberty'', by Dave Gibbons and Creator/FrankMiller, about the United States under the more and more authoritarian Republican president Erwin Rexall, which [[DividedStatesOfAmerica eventually fall apart]] after an assassination attempt leaves him in a coma.
35* ''ComicBook/JFKSecretOps'': In this comic's timeline, John F. Kennedy survived the bullet to the head he took on November 22nd, 1963. From there he started hunting down everyone who was involved in his assassination attempt at the behest of his government.
36* ''ComicBook/JourJ'' has this has the premise of each volume. What if the Cuban Missile crisis had gone hot? [[spoiler: France and England become the world's only superpowers after the USSR is destroyed and what's left of the US falls apart.]] What if France had preemptively bombed Nazi Germany's military buildup? [[spoiler:France becomes a fascist regime and goes to war with England.]] What if Spain was still a Muslim kingdom when Christopher Columbus sets out? [[spoiler:The expedition is killed by [[VikingsInAmerica the descendants of Viking settlers]].]] What if the Titanic hadn't sunk on its maiden voyage? [[spoiler:It still sinks two decades later, taking Albert Einstein and Adolf Hitler with it.]] What if the Germans had taken Paris in World War 1? [[spoiler:The French send assassins to kill the Tsar before he can pull Russia out of the conflict, who end up killing the future Lenin and Stalin.]]
37* ''ComicBook/TheLastWest'' takes place in a world where the first atomic bomb test was a failure, leading to the US abandoning its quest for atomic weapons and all scientific and technological progress halting in 1945.
38* Back around 1994, the Epic Comics series ''Lawdog'' revolved around the idea of travel, sometimes accidental, between alternate histories and alternate worlds, and a square-jawed tough cop who patrols the roads between the worlds and tries to protect the more civilized and peaceful Earths from things like invasion by technologically advanced Nazis who won World War II in some timelines, or contamination by aggressive and dangerous lifeforms from an Earth where evolution took some very different turns one or two billion years back.
39* ''ComicBook/LiberalityForAll'', made in 2005 and set in 2021, has Al Gore win the 2000 American presidential election instead of George Bush (WordOfGod says this is due to Ralph Nader dying in a car crash beforehand), which [[AuthorTract somehow]] results in a future where al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein still rule Afghanistan and Iraq, and American conservative pundits are fugitives.
40* ''{{ComicBook/Lilith}}'': The titular heroine gradually alters history. First in small ways, leaving an almost unnoticeable effect on history, and then in major ways. Like averting the assassination of [[spoiler: Emperor Commodus]], and reversing the outcome of the Battle of [[spoiler: Sekigahara]].
41 * ''Mini Comics Included'' features the Literary Commandos; in their world, just about every celebrated writer in history is, uh, ''not'' a writer (except for Charles Dickens, who is a OneBookAuthor and whose only book is crappy and long forgotten). No, instead they're either members of the elite Literary Commandos, who guard the timestream, or among the cadre of villains who threaten it. Members of the LC include the taciturn archer Marksman Twain, the cunning ranger Virginia Wolf, and the massive wrestler Thomas Pain.
42* ''ComicBook/MinistryOfSpace'' by Creator/WarrenEllis is an alternate history in which the UK captures all the WWII German rocket scientists before the US and USSR can. Thanks to this and the iron will of Space Ministry head John Dashwood (who funds research with stolen Nazi gold), the UK space program reaches the moon by 1960, and has colonies on Mars and the asteroid belt before the end of the 20th century, but equal rights for non-whites is unheard of.
43* Some of the comics that Creator/AlanMoore created for America's Best Comics and DC Comics lean toward Alternate History. ComicBook/TomStrong, for example, lives in a city designed by architect Creator/WinsorMcCay (in our world, the cartoonist creator of ''ComicStrip/LittleNemo''.)
44** The existence of costumed vigilantes (and one actual superpowered being) in ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' caused several major differences from real-world history (e.g. the United States won the Vietnam War; UsefulNotes/RichardNixon is still President in 1985; the threat of the UsefulNotes/ColdWar going hot is all too real even in the late 80s; electric-powered cars became commonplace in the US). [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking Also]], since superheroes are real, comic books as a medium were instead dominated by pirate stories.
45*** The DistantSequel comic ''ComicBook/Rorschach2020'' takes place in the same continuity as ''Watchmen'', but 35 years later. In this history's 2020, Vietnam became America's 51st state, Creator/RobertRedford has been serving as president for his fifth term, people still use pagers and landline phones as smartphones and the internet don't seem to exist, and [[Series/Watchmen2019 the events that took place in Tulsa, Oklahoma]] [[BroadStrokes may or may not have happened.]] Perhaps the strangest additions (and surprisingly most relevant) are the allusions to several real-world comic creators: [[Creator/SteveDitko a man named William Myerson]] created a famous comic book-based franchise called [[ComicBook/SpiderMan "Pontius Pirate"]] in the sixties, then spent his later years writing heavily political diatribes, including [[ComicBook/MrA "The Citizen"]].
46** ''ComicBook/TheLeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen'' initially starts out as a steampunk crossover of characters of Victorian literature, but in following volumes all of fiction begins to intertwine with actual history. Half-fairie [[Literature/TheFaerieQueene Queen Gloriana]] rules instead of Elizabeth I, postwar Britain sees the rise and fall of the [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour Ingsoc regime]] and there's a war in [[Series/TheWestWing Qumar ]] in the Noughties.
47* ''ComicBook/OmegaComplex'' is set in a world in which US president John F Kennedy wasn't assassinated; he ends the UsefulNotes/VietnamWar and gets elected for a second term, during which he sponsors research into the effects of radiation on humans.
48* ''ComicBook/{{Primordial}}'', beginning during the peak of UsefulNotes/TheSpaceRace in the late 1950s and 1961, has the test launches of the dog Laika in 1957 and the primates Able and Baker in 1959 go wrong. When their readings suggest that they died upon reaching orbit (as a result of them actually being captured by some kind of alien), this results in both the U.S. and the Soviet Union giving up on the Space Race. This also somehow leads to UsefulNotes/RichardNixon being elected President in 1960 instead of UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy, which in turn eventually leads to [[spoiler:a Cold War that heated up, with both the East and West getting into a full-on shooting war and the USSR conquering a large portion of Europe]].
49* The graphic novel ''Rome West'' runs on this, as its premise is a Roman fleet being blown far off course by a storm and arriving in the future site of the real world NYC. From there, they strike alliances with the local tribes and create a new Roman Republic which comes to dominate North America, except for small colonial purchases by the British and Dutch (the Spanish being driven off after the Western Romans capture Columbus' crew and reverse engineer their guns). Among other things also demonstrated in the wider world, the Byzantine Empire lasts until the late 20th century, Spain and China fight a colonial war in Australia, and the Panama Canal gets dug by the Western Romans in the 16th century.
50* ''ComicBook/TheRoyalsMastersOfWar'', has the presence of super powered royalty though [[InSpiteOfANail much remains similar to real life history]]. Their intervention in the Second World War, however, makes more drastic deviations from our timeline. [[spoiler:With the war ending with the bombing of Hitler's bunker in Berlin by the RAF, guided by one of the British Royals.]]
51* PatMills' ''[[ComicBook/{{Savage}} Invasion]]'', which ran in the 80s, was a straightforward story in which the USSR is conquered by the renegade Volgan republic which then launches an invasion of all Western Europe in the then [[TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture near future]] of 1990. When the series was resurrected in the 2000s and set in what had become modern times, it was simply declared an alternate history in which, during the 90s, Russian dissidents break away and form the Volgan republic, which then manages to conquer all of Russia, and thus the events of ''Invasion'' occur in the 90s. Each StoryArc of ''Savage'' opens with the words "Another Britain" to reinforce this.
52* Ian Edginton and D'Israreli's ''ComicBook/ScarletTraces'' and ''Scarlet Traces: The Great Game'' are unofficial sequels to ''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds''. Both involve a Great Britain where it became an even greater world power through the reverse engineering of the failed Martian invasion technology, which later leads to a war on UsefulNotes/{{Mars}}. However, the setting is a CrapsackWorld, with many living in poverty, and a increasingly fascist state developing.
53* ''ComicBook/SecretEmpire'' runs on this trope: [[spoiler: [[ComicBook/CaptainAmerica Steve Rogers]] had his mind altered to not only be a ComicBook/{{HYDRA}} agent, but also believe that the Nazis were actually winning and the Allies created the Cosmic Cube to alter history and have it so that they won instead. When he takes over the United States, one of the changes he does in have the history books changed to have his view of history inserted.]]
54* ''ComicBook/SpiderManLifeStory'': [[spoiler:On account of the intervention of the superheroes, on ''both'' sides, the Vietnam War drags on and continues until 1977. However Nixon apparently still resigned. Actual nuclear bombs drop in The80s furthermore as the Cold War gets hot during the Secret Wars. By The90s, America had won the "Russian War" with the help of its superheroes and Tony Stark's weapons.]]
55* Much like the aforementioned ''Spider-Man: Life Story'', ''ComicBook/DCTheNewFrontier'' avoids ComicBookTime and actually shows a universe where the Justice Society fought in World War II, Hal Jordan served in the Korean War, and Superman and Wonder Woman helped out with Korea, among other changes. ''ComicBook/TheMultiversity'' added to this by revealing that UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy was never killed in this universe.
56* DC Comics' ''[[Creator/TangentComics Tangent]]'' books take place in a world where the Cuban Missile Crisis ends in Florida and Cuba nuking each other at roughly the same moment, turning the Cold War hot. The resulting world, compared to ours, is ahead of the times technologically (paper books are seen as antiquated and quaint) but behind the times culturally (the hippie movement has only recently begun). Despite being published by DC, this alternate reality was ''not'' a divergent DC universe; Amazons, the Justice Society, Gotham City, there's nary a concept from the DCU to be seen. This is due to the premise of the world, which takes DCU names and applies them to entirely different concepts.
57* In ''{{ComicBook/Uber}}'', the Nazis successfully create an army of near-unstoppable superhumans – but only in April 1945, when Germany was already an utter ruin. Thus, as one character describes it, it's not so much a story of "Germany winning" as one of "everybody losing". The course of World War 2 rapidly changes as the series progresses, with a new German offensive on the Eastern Front, the destruction of most of Paris, and the partial defeat of the US Navy by Japanese superhumans.
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