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They've been resurrected for a reason...note 
"The Guardians feared the prophecy of the Blackest Night since the days they first began forging the green power of will. But now the Blackest Night is over. The future is unwritten. The Universe has endured its horrible night and entered a new day. The Brightest Day. My Day!"
Krona

Brightest Day is a DC Comics event, beginning in April 2010 and lasting until 2011. Following the events of the Crisis Crossover Blackest Night, Brightest Day depicts the repercussions of the Black Lantern attack in the DC Universe, which has led to the resurrections of many previously killed off characters (collectively known as "The Twelve") and the dawning of a new age, referred to by many as "The Brightest Day" (in reference to the Green Lantern Corps oath).

Unlike 52, Countdown to Final Crisis, or Trinity (2008) (all of which were big event storylines taking place between Crisis Crossovers that were published weekly), Brightest Day is divided up amongst many titles. Many, many titles. The core book itself is a 25 issue bi-weekly mini-series, as is the companion series Justice League: Generation Lost (with the 25th issues of both being extra-sized finales). Other titles also play a major role in the series, most notably the Green Lantern family of books. Also, several new books have been launched from the event, including a new Green Lantern title (Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors), relaunches for Green Arrow and Birds of Prey, and the return of Barry Allen to The Flash after over twenty years.

Like with 52 and other event storylines, there are multiple plot threads, in this case all sharing the theme of having a fresh start and a new lease on life. Most focus on the Twelve and missions given to them by the White Entity.

    Books and Storylines 
  • Six of the Twelve are featured in the main series:
    • Aquaman is reunited with his wife, struggling with his new power to control dead ocean life even as Mera's people hunt the two down to kill them. He has been tasked with finding Black Manta's son before others do in order to reseal the Bermuda Triangle to prevent rebel Atlanteans from laying siege to the surface world.
    • Hawkman and Hawkgirl are on the trail of their archenemy Hath-Set, who has constructed a gateway from the corpses of the heroes' prior incarnations to a dimension called "Hawkworld". There, they meet Hawkgirl's evil Egyptian mother, who seeks to use the two as bait to attract and merge with the Cosmic Entity of Love called "The Predator". They have to stop her from doing this, as well as find a way to nullify the resurrection curse placed upon them by Hath-Set.
    • Martian Manhunter has gone home to try and restore Mars, but returns to Earth to deal with a murderous Green Martian who is targeting people close to the hero. He has been ordered to burn down the new forest; initially thought to be the one in Star City (see Green Arrow below), but later clarified to be the one he's been tending on Mars.
    • Firestorm's two hosts, Ronnie Raymond and Jason Rusch, get stuck together, and it's not going well (for one thing, Jason hates Ronnie for killing his girlfriend as a Black Lantern). But there seems to be a third consciousness in the Firestorm Matrix... the taint of the Black Lantern ring has made it so that the Black Lantern Firestorm (now called Deathstorm) has become part of the Firestorm Matrix. Breaking free, Deathstorm merged with Jason's dad and Martin Stein and stole the White Lantern power battery; Jason and Ronnie must unite and work as a team in order to stop the Anti-Monitor from using the Lantern to increase his power.
    • And Deadman is now a White Lantern, charged with helping the Twelve in order to help the Entity to live. Or rather, find a replacement for the already-dying Entity and save the Parliament of Trees from a Black Lantern-possessed Swamp Thing.
  • The tie-in books follow the rest of the Twelve are as followed:
    • The Flash: Barry Allen, like the Twelve, has recently returned to life thanks to the schemes of the time-traveling Twelve member Professor Zoom. While he's still readjusting to normal life, Captain Boomerang (another of the Twelve) has to prove himself to the rest of the Rogues. Zoom already completed his mission in resurrecting Allen, while Captain Boomerang is to launch a deadly assault on the superheroine Dove. While starting off with the "fresh start" feeling that most of the tie-ins shared, many of these issues were devoted to laying groundwork for the next big event, Flashpoint.
    • Justice League of America: The newly resurrected Jade is offered a membership slot on the JLA, to replace Hal Jordan on the roster. Unfortunately, her return from the dead also brought back the Starheart, the source of power for herself and her father Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern. Now the Starheart has possessed Scott, turning him evil and leading to a team-up between the JLA and Justice Society of America to stop him. Jade was told to "balance the darkness" of her brother Obsidian in their fight against Scott.
    • Justice League: Generation Lost: Max Lord has returned, and has made the entire world forget he existed. His job is to stop Anti-Hero Magog from sparking a worldwide war, but he's obviously not going to stop there. Only four surviving members of Justice League International (Booster Gold, Fire and Ice, and Captain Atom) remember the threat he poses, and they team up with legacies of other members Blue Beetle and Rocket Red while tracking him down. Has its own tie-ins with the Booster Gold and Power Girl series.
    • Birds of Prey: The team is re-forming, with Hawk (one of the Twelve) and Dove (somehow connected to the White Light) as members. Like Flash, is a Red Skies Crossover, as Hawk and Dove's participation in the event occurs in the main Brightest Day book (where they assist Deadman) instead of in Birds. Hawk has been told to stop Captain Boomerang's attack on Dove.
    • Titans: Deathstroke has formed his own mercenary version of the Titans, having murdered the current Atom as their first assignment. One of his recruits is the resurrected Osiris, who has been tasked with the job of restoring Isis to normal (something Deathstroke claims to be able to help with, though in the end it turns out to be lies). As such, Osiris quits the team and goes about his own quest to "free" his sister via mass destruction against evil doers.
    • Brightest Day Aftermath: The Search for Swamp Thing: John Constantine has finally returned to reinteract with the wider DCU to inform them of the consequences of an actively protective Swamp Thing who punishes anyone who might "hurt the earth". But can anyone do anything about it?

Other books feature other new beginnings and/or fallout from Blackest Night:

  • The Green Lantern books dealt with the new status quo involving multiple Lantern Corps, as well as a mysterious villain (eventually revealed as Krona) manipulating their enemies against them; these would lead into the Bat Family Crossover "War of the Green Lanterns".
    • The main book features most of "The New Guardians" (Hal Jordan, Carol Ferris, Sinestro, Atrocitus, Larfleeze, Saint Walker, and Indigo-1) looking for their corps' emotional entities before the mystery villain can capture them all.
    • In Green Lantern Corps, John Stewart and Ganthet have joined Kyle Rayner as part of the Honor Guard. Their first mission involves dealing with the Cyborg-Superman, who has taken control of the Corps' Alpha Lanterns; followed by a Weaponer of Qward who has found a way to harness the power of the White Lantern.
    • New book Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors features Guy Gardner, as part of a deal with Ganthet and Red Lantern Corps leader Atrocitus, going out to explore the unknown regions of space in order to locate someone that's quietly manipulating the Corps.
      • War of the Green Lanterns: Technically post-Brightest Day, but the conclusion of the event's storylines, "War of the Green Lanterns" sees Krona in control of all seven emotional entities, using Parallax to brainwash the entire Green Lantern Corps, and having the others possess the Guardians. Only a few (including the four Earth Lanterns and Ganthet) are able to resist, so they use rings of other-colored Lanterns to try and save the Corps. After many trials & tribulations, the war ends with John Stewart destroying Mogo, Sinestro being reinstated back into the Green Lantern Corps, and Hal Jordan exiled from the Corps because of his use of his ring to murder Krona.
  • Green Arrow: Following the destruction of Star City in the Justice League: Cry for Justice miniseries, the power of the White Lantern has caused a massive forest to grow out of the ruins. Green Arrow (exiled from Star City after murdering the villain responsible for the carnage) has set up shop in the forest, protecting innocents who venture into the area. While at first separate from the other storylines, the final batch of issues ties it into the main series as the new forest is strongly connected to Swamp Thing.
  • Adventure Comics: Ray Palmer, after already starting to rebuild his life after his return in Final Crisis & role as an Indigo Lantern in Blackest Night, finds himself the target of a conspiracy which seeks to steal his shrinking technology and the white dwarf star matter which powers it. Along the way, he has to bring himself to face his father & uncle, who have found themselves targets in the process. Mainly a backup feature in Adventure Comics, the series had two book-end issues.
  • Action Comics: The Black Ring: Lex Luthor had A Taste of Power during Blackest Night, and in true Orange Lantern fashion he wants more. He seeks to create a Black Lantern Ring for himself using the full resources of his recently regained LexCorps Empire. Not officially part of the Brightest Day branding, but tied so closely to Blackest Night that it's worth including.

Brightest Day provides examples of:

  • Aborted Arc: Brightest Day was almost immediately followed by Flashpoint, which ended with the linewide New 52 reboot. The reboot followed up on some story hooks (the "War Of The Green Lanterns" fallout, Alec Holland as Swamp Thing) while abandoning others (Hawkgirl's disappearance, Firestorm's instability). Brightest Day also failed to do anything with Dove's supposed connection to the White Light.
  • Affirmative-Action Legacy: Jackson Hyde, the new Aqualad.
  • Anachronic Order: (Or possibly just a mistake.) In issue 6, Oracle says it's been "a few months" since the Blackest Night. In issue 7, Deadman has his first food since he was brought back from the dead at the end of the Blackest Night, and it seems to have been no more than a couple days for him.
  • Anticlimax Boss: If you were expecting Deathstorm and Firestorm to have an epic final showdown, the White Light entity doesn't have time for that.
  • Back from the Dead: "The Twelve" are a major focus.
  • Bad Future: During Generation Lost, Captain Atom visits one at two different points in its timeline, all the result of Max Lord's plans. All the superheroes are gone, and regular folk react with panic to hearing their names, with the only survivor being a badly scarred Power Girl, and the moon has been blown apart.
    • Meanwhile, Max's plan is to prevent the events of Kingdom Come from happening.
  • Batman Gambit: Pretty much everything Max Lord does is part of some massive scheme to discredit the JLI, gain control over Checkmate, and prevent Magog from creating a similar future to that of Kingdom Come.
    • The White Light's master plan seems to be one as well. After all, it wants Captain Boomerang to attempt to kill Dove and Hawk to attempt to stop him. Which of them it wants to succeed, much less why, was an open question until the finale. Hawk was to stop Boomerang's attack and die in the process, freeing him from the forces controlling him and allowing Alec Holland to live again through his sacrifice. Unfortunately, he failed and Deadman died instead.
      • It's only until the last five issues of the series that we finally get its main plan explained to us: Star Forest is really the Parliment of Trees, the elemental forest from Alan Moore's legendary Swamp Thing run. Swamp Thing himself, who once thought it was Alec Holland, now thinks it's Nekron and wants the forest destroyed. Deadman, besides his main mission, empowers the White Lantern by embracing his life. Six others were revived to stop disasters and therefore buy time for the others, and five (the Hawks, Aquaman, Firestorm, and Martian Manhunter) were to purge Nekron's corruption by overcoming what held them back in life - and then giving that cleansed life back. In true Chessmaster fashion, it even freed Mera's people to get Aquaman to face them.
    • Lobo attacks Atrocitus, trying to get the bounty on his head. The White Lantern Battery orders Hal Jordan, Carol Ferris, and Sinestro to help Atrocitus, so they do. After Lobo is driven off, the four of them vow to work together to find the missing emotional entities. Atrocitus hired Lobo to attack him in the first place and take a dive, in order to get the others to trust him. As payment, Lobo is given a Red Lantern Ring.
  • Beast Man: Hawkworld appears to be a place that's full of these, with human/cat hybrid creatures fighting a bloody war against human/bird hybrids.
  • Beyond the Impossible: Mera uses her hydrokinetic powers to pull the whole tide away from the shore. Lampshaded by her sister Siren. It's not effortless, though. Mera is visibly bleeding from the strain.
  • Big Bad Ensemble: Each of whom corresponds to one or more characters/plotlines in the series/tie-ins:
  • Big Friendly Dog: The Predator. No, really.
  • Big Good: The Entity, although it tends to jerk some of the heroes around.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Brightest Day: The original Swamp Thing is dead and Alec Holland (the real Holland, not the plant who thought he was Holland) has become the new Swamp Thing. Shiera has disappeared following the final battle, leaving Hawkman completely alone. Ronnie & Jason learn that the Firestorm matrix was damaged by the Anti-Monitor and will detonate in 90 days. Deadman is dead once again and cannot pass on, leaving a tearful goodbye to Dove. Hawk's life has technically been returned to him, but his rage & warlike nature has prevented him from truly reclaiming his life as his own. Not to mention that Swamp Thing has become an active Gaia's Vengeance, with John Constantine realizing what the consequences of this being. But life and Earth have been saved, J'onn has found solace with his life, and Aquaman (complete with healed hand) has reconciled with Mera.
    • Much less so with Generation Lost: OMAC-Prime has been destroyed and Wonder Woman is still alive. Max undid his mind control over the world, but managed to escape and announce that he's rededicating Checkmate to policing the metahuman/superhero community. Captain Atom is presumably alive, but has been thrown out of current time & space to the unknown. Finally, the JLI has been cleared of their "crimes" and now been reinstated as an active superhero team.
  • Blunt Metaphors Trauma: Rocket Red has serious trouble with English idioms. At least once per sentence.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: During the "Dark Things" JLA/JSA crossover arc, ANYONE on Earth possessing magical/elemental powers - hero, villain, or neutral, and no matter how minutely latent their powers may be - is in danger of being possessed by the Starheart's chaos. This naturally generates massive Paranoia Fuel among the two teams working together to stop the madness.
  • Break the Cutie: Ice's meeting with Guy Gardner post-mindwipe by Max Lord; to keep the JLI from recruiting their Green Lantern friend, Max alters Guy's memories so that a fake post-Blackest Night meeting between the two happened, where Ice tried to kill Guy Gardner for no good reason. Given that this came after the two began dating again after Ice's resurrection, as well as Judd Winick proclaiming that the point of the scene was to sink the Guy/Ice ship, it makes it a major moment of sadness.
    • And then Ice suddenly manifests "repressed memories" of belonging to a Romani tribe (of the stereotyped "mostly thieves and conmen" type) and killing her father and grandfather trying to escape. Her previously revealed family of magical ice people were supposedly her imagination, despite the fact that other people in the Justice League have met them existed, but were not her birth family. After about two issues of angst, Ice puts these developments on the back-burner, however, as she has other things to worry about.
  • Breaking Speech: Hila/Siren, to Arthur and then Mera.
  • Cain and Abel: Hila/Siren, Mera's evil sister who tries to off her and Aquaman and take over the surface world.
  • Call-Back: Arthur gets his hand severed yet again, this time by Black Manta, who quips that he should be used to it by now.
  • Came Back Wrong: Deadman being alive again in the first place. Subverted with Hawkgirl (resurrected in her 1940s body and not the body of her dead niece), as she and Hawkman don't care one way or another.
    • Several of the Twelve were brought back in a slightly altered state, often until their Entity-given missions were completed:
      • Aquaman's ability to communicate with and control sea creatures was altered, allowing him to control dead sea creatures instead.
      • Early on in Generation Lost, Maxwell Lord's mind control occasionally had the side-effect of turning his victims into Black Lantern corpses.
      • The Firestorm Matrix was recreated with Deathstorm's consciousness along for the ride.
      • The Martian Manhunter's touch caused plant life to die.
      • Black Lantern residue formed between Hawkman and Hawkgirl's lips when they tried to kiss.
      • Captain Boomerang can now create exploding zombie boomerangs out of thin air.
    • Separate from the Twelve, Isis was restored from being Taken for Granite, but the fact that Osiris murdered in doing so corrupted her and gave her an evil split personality. She got better, which leads to Fridge Logic, since Isis was Taken for Granite in the first place because she turned evil and started to murder innocents.
  • Canon Immigrant: The new Aqualad, who was created for the Young Justice (2010) animated series, made his debut in the DC Universe in this series. Due to the length of the production time on the show, his first comic book appearance actually predated the airing of the pilot episode of the show.
  • Cats Are Mean: Justified, as Dex-Starr has a very good reason for this.
  • Chained Heat: Ronnie and Jason seem to be in a Fusion Dance form of this.
  • Chronic Villainy / The Only One Allowed to Defeat You: Upon hearing that Aquaman is alive again, Black Manta throws away the legitimate life he had built for himself by killing his customers and burning down his house. It has a certain Narm Charm to it, but some people got a chill.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: The oil executives murdered by Swamp Thing in the last issue.
  • Create Your Own Villain: It turns out Mera also crossed paths with Black Manta years ago, as she rescued a then infant Jackson Hyde from Xebel, where the latter had been experimented on, making the former's ongoing feud with Aquaman and murder of Aquababy Mera's equal responsibility in her mind.
  • Cross Through: For the most part, most of the books with the Brightest Day banner don't really have much to do with the main storyline(s), save for the involvement of one of the Twelve or other important characters. The books also usually have the theme of renewal/new beginnings to them (the Birds of Prey team officially reforming, Barry Allen readjusting to superheroing, etc) but are otherwise unrelated to anything else. The plots of Brightest Day & Generation Lost did effect the DCU, but didn't affect any of the related books per se.
  • Desecrating the Dead: Hath-Set is paying mercenaries to locate the skeletons of Hawkman and Hawkgirl's previous incarnations around the globe, so he can use them to power up a portal to another world.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: Hal Jordan and Carol Ferris call out Atrocitus on violently murdering a bunch of thieves on a subway. Sinestro doesn't mind much.
    • This is getting to be Atrocitus' schtick: he later murders a bickering couple in order to work his blood magic.
  • The Dragon: Zardor to Krona's Big Bad. Both already seem to be plotting betrayal upon each other.
    • Zardor may have been eclipsed by Parallax in the immediate lead-up to War of the Green Lanterns.
    • Deathstorm to the Anti-Monitor.
    • Hath-Set to the Queen of Hawkworld.
  • Earn Your Happy Ending: Considering everything they had been through over the past few decades, and how Deadman and Shayera got the short end of the stick from the White Light, Arthur and Mera getting a good end is nothing short of miraculous.
  • Earth-Shattering Kaboom: Deathstorm is trying to goad Ronnie and Jason into triggering one of these.
    • A bad future has one of these happen to the moon.
  • Elemental Embodiment: The concluding chapters have the five heroes Deadman thought he killed emerge as personifications of the elements: Martian Manhunter is Earth, the Hawks are Air, and Firestorm and Aquaman should be obvious.
  • Empathic Weapon: Deadman's White Lantern Ring. Also, The Weaponer's shield laced with the white lantern energy net which, interestingly, was generated by Deadman's ring earlier.
  • Enemy Mine: Deathstroke's Titans team. Composed of Cheshire, Tattooed Man II, Cinder, Deathstroke, Arsenal, and Osiris.
  • Enemy Without:
    • Deathstorm to Firestorm.
    • Having somehow managed to sever the bond between them, Etrigan was one to Jason Blood.
  • Everything's Deader with Zombies:
    • Eleven members of the Twelve weren't completely cured of their "undead" status; not until they each complete some mission for the White Light. (Zoom was exempt because he already completed his mission: bringing back Barry Allen.) As a side effect from this, Aquaman's "talk to fish" power was altered to command dead sea creatures.
    • About midway through, Deathstorm also created Black Lantern copies of the rest of the Twelve. They mostly serve to fill the background of scenes he's in, and only Deathstorm really does much in terms of plot-related stuff.
  • Expy: Green Arrow had always been a Robin Hood expy, but now he's an outlaw and has his own "Sherwood Forest".
  • Eye Scream: In order to keep his captive telepaths docile under his control, Zardor has his snakes eat their eyes out.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Deathstorm.
  • Foreshadowing: Almost all of the visions given by the Entity to the Twelve Resurrected count to some degree, but most especially Jade's, which reveals Eclipso as being the one responsible behind the Starheart's rampage, Maxwell Lord's, which depicts in grisly detail his murdering of Magog, and Captain Boomerang's, which shows him chasing down Dove in what looks to be the forest in Star City.
  • Fusion Dance: Firestorm being the usual case. Also adding Obsidian and Jade via Wonder Twin Powers for a mixture of a Composite and Two Beings, One Body (their form is a mix of both twins, which is odd to say the least, and both personalities are present and take turns talking, maybe) with Yin-Yang Bomb thrown in for good measure.
    • Generation Lost has the Metal Men forming into Alloy.
  • From Bad to Worse: Deadman's sojourn leading him to... the Anti-Monitor.
    • Alan Scott's possession by the Starheart and subsequent forced Fusion Dance of Jade and Obsidian upon their reunion.
    • Deadman learning that The Entity, the Embodiment of all life, is dying after Nekron's attack.
    • Ophidian the Greed Entity breaking free of Larfleeze and possessing Hector Hammond.
    • Professor Stein told Jason and Ronnie that as Firestorm, they're basically a human Hadron collider and the most dangerous being in the entire universe. When they argue, they could explode and cause a Big Bang that would wipe out every thing in the universe except the two of them. And then Black Lantern Firestorm or "Deathstorm" came out of hiding knowing full well what Professor Stein just said.
    • Brightest Day #11, full stop. Deathstorm absorbs both Professor Stein and Jason's father so that he can better screw with Ronnie and Jason and trigger a new big bang, as mentioned above. After leading Firestorm on a merry chase, Deathstorm arrives at the White Lantern and corrupts it with Black Lantern energy, allowing him to lift it. Before he can destroy it, a mysterious voice beckons for Deathstorm to bring it the battery, as well as an army. How does he go about doing this? By creating Black Lantern copies of the rest of the 12.
    • Gets even worse when Deathstorm leads Firestorm back to the Anti-Monitor.
  • Good is Not Nice: After Hawkman and Hawkgirl finally throw off their millenia-old curse, and settle into the idea that they might get to grow old and die together in this incarnation, the Entity kills them. It then explains to Deadman that in order to preserve life as a whole it has to take some of the returned lives back. Thankfully, it eventually re-returns those lives as elementals. And then, when all the elementals are returned to normal, Hawkgirl seems to have been excluded. As far as we know, at least.
  • Gotta Catch 'Em All: One of the subplots of the series concerns the search for the Emotion Entities. A mysterious being is hunting them down for some reason and has already captured Parallax and Ion by the time the story starts. It's revealed Krona captured all seven and unleashed them on the Guardians.
  • Heel–Face Door-Slam: Magog, who manages to snap out of Maxwell Lord's control at the last second during his fight with Captain Atom. He is never given a chance to atone; Max Lord appears a moment later and murders him.
  • Hypocrite: Gavril Ivanovich is steadfastly against western culture, to the point of violently attacking American franchises he finds on Russian soil, but he's still giddy at the thought of being with the Justice League. Fire calls him on it, but Gavril doesn't care.
    • Booster Gold also points out how Max's claims of "saving humanity" don't mean as much thanks to his willing to kill thousands to accomplish the goal.
  • Irony: After making everyone in the world forget his existence, Max Lord is happy to begin his plans for revenge on Wonder Woman... only to find that suddenly, all memory of Wonder Woman has been erased from the world. He assumes the heroes did it to cover for her while Fire, Ice, Booster Gold and Captain Atom (who somehow also remember) assume it's part of Max's game.
  • Kick the Dog:
    • Max Lord forcing two cops who tried to apprehend him to shoot each other in the face. With his mind control powers, he could have just as easily made them walk away and forget him. Then, upon erasing everyone's memories of them, goes the extra mile to ruin the reputations of the JLI members (save for Booster Gold, who is already sort of a black sheep in the eyes of everyone but Superman and Batman) and manipulating Captain Atom and Fire to nearly kill/horribly maim innocent people in order to escape when they find him.
  • Killed Off for Real:
    • The Atom Ryan Choi, via a hired hit from Deathstroke's Titans team. The one who gave the order? Dwarfstar, who was Choi's former student.
    • Magog, as of Generation Lost #13, thanks to Maxwell Lord.
    • This also happens to Deadman, but this is really just a return to the status quo for him.
  • Kill It with Fire: Martian Manhunter ends up doing this to D'Kay rather than to the Martian forest as the White Lantern vision had shown.
  • Lack of Empathy: The Queen of Hawkworld. She doesn't even care about her own daughter, Hawkgirl.
  • Legacy Character:
    • Swamp Thing. The original had the memories of Alec Holland; the new one is Alec Holland. Which makes Alec Holland himself a Legacy Character within a Legacy Character.
    • Jaime Reyes following in Ted Kord's footsteps, the new Rocket Red, and the new Aqualad.
  • Lonely Together: Arthur, Mera, Jackson and Lorena have all connected over how it feels to be isolated between two worlds.
  • Long Lost Sibling: Mera's sister Hila/Siren escapes Xebel's aquatic prison and meets her after years.
  • Lotus-Eater Machine: In an effort to stop J'onn from destroying the Martian Forest and to get him to love her, D'kay uses her mental powers to make J'onn believe he used the White Light to resurrect Mars and everyone on it. Including his family. He spends what he thinks is about twenty years in this simulation with D'kay posing as J'onn's real wife until the simulation falls apart as his mental defenses finally kick in and make him realize his situation by "killing" his friends in the Justice League. When he breaks out of it, he's not happy at all...
  • Luke, I Am Your Father:
    • The Queen of Hawkworld is Hawkgirl's mom.
    • The new Aqualad is the son of Black Manta.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Quite a few. First and foremost is Maxwell Lord; everything from his mind-wiping of the entire planet to reforming the JLI and duping them into chasing after him so as to make both them and Checkmate look like a complete joke, the man may as well be the Trope Codifier.
    • Also Zardor, who's been creating a massive psychic amplifier powered by a network of hostage telepaths to pinpoint new Green Lantern recruits and remotely brainwash them to serve his schemes.
    • Deathstroke is exploiting the horrors that have befallen his teammates, in terms of recently having loved ones savagely murdered, to recruit them for his murder squad. But in a subversion, when he takes Roy Harper onto his team, Roy and his evil ex-girlfriend Cheshire, pull a double-cross and cost Deathstroke his only remaining eye.
    • And then there’s Eclipso, who has been hinted at being the true culprit behind the mayhem caused by the Starheart during the JLA/JSA team-up. Only time will tell what the upcoming JLA story arc will show.
    • And finally, the White Entity itself.
  • Memetic Badass: Batman's status as this is lampshaded by Deadman, who thinks he's the chosen bearer of the White Ring. Because it's always Batman.
  • Names to Run Away from Really Fast: Deathstorm, D'kay D'razz
  • '90s Anti-Hero: The writers have confirmed that Deathstorm was designed in this vein, complete with Totally Radical speech.
  • Obnoxious In-Laws: For all intents and purposes, Queen Khea, the mother of Chay-Era, who is Shiera's first incarnation, is Hawkman's mother-in-law. Khea tries to murder an incarnation of her daughter and her lover to power up a portal.
  • Oh, Crap!: When Captain Atom takes the blast of the nuclear device Max left behind as a trap, his energies take him through the timestream until he falls in a simpler moment in time, where two kids find him. Their father, a settler, mistakes him for a member of a freak show and takes him in until he can move on. Then, night comes, and he peers out of the window... to see the moon completely shattered in the night sky. When asked what year it is, he learns it is the 24th century, and upon invoking the names of the superheroes he thought would have staved disaster off, everybody gets scared. Taken to a "Karrie" living on an atomic wasteland who might have some answers for him, he opens her tent to find she recognizes him, being Kara, the former Power Girl. Horribly irradiated, she points Max Lord as the inception of a horrific catastrophe, begging him to stop his plans as he returns to his time before it all goes to Hell.
    • When Boston Brand finally understands what The Entity wants from him, it proceeds to assigning "The Twelve" with assignments to truly reclaim their lives. Martian Manhunter's assignment is to burn down the forest in Star City on Mars.
    • Max Lord, in the middle of his plans in Generation Lost, realizing that Wonder Woman has somehow become a complete Unperson. Even to him. Literally, there is no record of Diana, nor can anyone else remember her. Except for, as it turns out, Booster, Captain Atom, Fire, and Ice. This seems to fit in with the apparent plans that Geoff Johns, J. Michael Straczynski, and Dan Jurgens has been setting up with a problem with time itself and how the "newly rebooted" Wonder Woman fits in with it all.
  • The One Guy: Hawk, on the otherwise all-female Birds of Prey.
  • Pet The Cat: Atrocitus with Dex-Starr.
    Atrocitus: Good kitty.
  • Preorder Bonus: Like in Blackest Night, certain issues of Brightest Day came bundled with plastic rings. The Flash #1 came with a Flash ring, Green Lantern #53 came with a GL ring, and Brightest Day #1 gave us a White Lantern ring.
  • Putting the Band Back Together: The JLI in Generation Lost. Booster even uses the phrase while accusing Max of doing it on purpose.
  • Reptiles Are Abhorrent: Snakes are a recurring theme with Zardor.
  • The Reveal: The Champion of Life is Alec Holland, aka the scientist whose mind was imprinted onto Swamp Thing.
  • Revenge Before Reason: Lex Luthor finally bonds with an entity of godlike power from the Phantom Zone, making him more powerful than Superman, and is able to create a state of universal bliss. However, he learns that the Phantom Zone entity will not allow Luthor to do anything malevolent to anyone. As Luthor cannot accept a world where he is god but cannot take revenge on Superman, he gives up the power.
  • Ripped from the Headlines:
    • Deadman is brought into the presence of some Ruthless Modern Pirates; specifically Somali pirates like the ones that were in the news at the time, and laments that he is unable to help the people they have captured. Fairly standard "superheroes can't solve real-world problems" bit, right? Heh. WRONG! Aquaman shows up and feeds them to undead sharks. This is why we should all read comics.
    • A few issues later, Aquaman goes to plug up an oil leak "off the Bermuda Triangle", again mirroring a major real-life news item. This is followed at the end of the event with Swamp Thing murdering the executives responsible for the leak.
  • Ruthless Modern Pirates: Aquaman and Mera fight Somali pirates in the first issue.
  • Screw Destiny: Not as clearly intentional as normal, but J'onn ends up killing D'kay without burning down the Martian forest. Interestingly, this means the visions from the white light must not necessarily be correct.
  • Ship Sinking: Ice and Guy Gardner. The effect of Max Lord's mind-control being undone has yet to be seen, in regards to Ice and Guy.
  • Ship Tease: Fire and the new Rocket Red.
  • Shoot the Dog: The White Ring kills the Hawks, Aquaman, Martian Manhunter, and Firestorm - in order to turn them into elementals, as it turns out. It works, and all of them get better. Except for Hawkgirl.
  • Shout-Out: Deadman's living form looks suspiciously similar to a certain TV series' other blue-eyed, dark-haired, hamburger-loving, trench-coat-wearing supernatural being who came back from the dead.
  • Smug Snake: Maxwell Lord, naturally. Zardor also counts as does Reverse Flash.
  • Stalker with a Crush: D'kay D'razz is obsessed with getting J'onn to be with her.
  • Status Quo Is God: Guess what happens to Deadman?
  • Survivor's Guilt: Aquaman has a bit of this in the beginning, as he alone was revived, but Garth/Aqualad, Tula/Aquagirl, and Dolphin were not.
  • Throw the Dog a Bone: After everything they went through since Aquababy died up to Aquaman's earlier death and Mera bottoming out and going Red Lantern, Aquaman and Mera get a second chance following the former's revival at the end of Blackest Night and actually make it through the arc earn a long overdue happy ending.
  • Tonight, Someone Dies: The Flash relaunched with the arc "The Dastardly Death of the Rogues!" It's "Mirror Monarch", an alternate Mirror Master from the future.
    • Seen in Generation Lost as well, in the form of Magog's murder at the hands of Max Lord.
    • And then it did it again, inviting readers to "Witness Max Lord repeat history!" by capturing Blue Beetle and shooting him in the head. Ultimately subverted, as he got better.
  • True Final Boss: After the various heroes thwart their respective big bads, Black Lantern Swamp Thing rears his ugly head.
  • Unperson: Max Lord did this to himself. Later happens to Wonder Woman due to events in her own book; Max, who had been tracking her, notes the irony.
  • Villainous Breakdown: D'kay completely loses it when J'onn recovers from her manipulation of his mind and points out to her that she isn't really pregnant with his child because she is barren and only believes so because she was susceptible to the same lies and false memories she had used to manipulate J'onn.
  • Villainous Valor: Captain Boomerang.
  • Villain Protagonist: Lex Luthor in Action Comics, and Deathstroke's team in Titans.
  • We Will Meet Again: Black Manta's final words to Aquaman before being sealed in the Bermuda Triangle with Siren and her troops.
  • Wham Episode: In Green Lantern #60, it is revealed that Krona is the mysterious enemy who has been trying to steal the Entities. Yes, the same rogue Immortal who was inadvertantly responsible for the creation of the Multiverse, the birth of the Anti-Monitor, and the guy who tried to help Nekron out in its first attempt to force its way into existence by killing the Guardians of the Universe. And by the look of it, he's forced himself to evolve into the same type of being as the Guardians, with presumably the same type of powers they possess. Screwed doesn't even begin to describe how much everyone is right now.
    • And then, the entities (loyal to Krona from his years of taking care of them) possess the bodies of all of the remaining Guardians of the Universe, save for Parallax, who re-enters the Main Green Lantern Power Battery and takes control over 99% of the Green Lantern Corps.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?:
    • Hector Hammond's fate after joining up with Krona and his subsequent bond with Ophidian. Last we see of him, he and Krona head off to parts unknown, and in subsequent issues, Krona and the Entities (including Ophidian, who has split with Hammond) arrive on Oa. Is he back in prison? Dead? Roaming free? Who knows.
    • Also, Sayd, who was sent off on an "errand" by Larfleeze (presumably in order to avoid having to drag her all over the place in the hunt for the Entities). She & Hammond didn't reappear until the New 52 reboot, well after Brightest Day'' ended.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: After Deadman tries to get the White Ring to go to Batman, it does so... for the purpose of having White Lantern Batman chew Deadman out for half-assing the job trying to get it over with.
  • Why We're Bummed Communism Fell: Gavril Ivanovich really is. His former teammates in the Rocket Red squadron note that he sounds like their grandfathers.
  • Windmill Crusader: Galahad of the Star City Forest. It's been revealed that the death of his daughter tipped him and his obsession with Arthurian lore over the edge.
  • Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: Carrying over from developments in Blackest Night, Red Lantern leader Atrocitus.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Hila/Siren and Black Manta both try to kill Aqualad.
  • Yank the Dog's Chain: What happens when Hawkman and Hawkgirl finally throw off their curse and get the chance to grow old and die together? First, the White Ring tells them that to live their lives more strongly, they must live them apart. Then, when they reject these words, it kills them. Then they get brought back as air elementals. Then they get resurrected... or rather, Hawkman does. Whether Hawkgirl is dead or has been resurrected elsewhere is left unknown. In short, the Hawks just can't catch a break.
  • You Can't Fight Fate: Guy received a prophecy thanks to the Red Lantern influence, showing an apocalyptic vision involing the Entities, Krona, a war between different GLC members, and even himself, trying to kill Hal Jordan. With everything going on in all the other books, all signs point to this prophecy being true.

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