Follow

    Convergence #0

    Convergence » Convergence #0 - The God Machine released by DC Comics on June 2015.

    Short summary describing this issue.

    The God Machine last edited by pikahyper on 04/04/22 11:21PM View full history

    Where do worlds go when they die?

    The Earthquakes felt round the Multiverse, Superman’s lost days after “Doomed,” the World’s End – all these points will converge as the history of the DCU is spun from a new perspective, the perspective of a mad god and his arrogant child. The biggest story in DC history ties into literally every DC story ever told – and it all begins here.

    Kingdom Come, Red Son, Wild West Justice League, Captain Carrot and the Zoo Crew – all the worlds you remember can still be found on Telos. Everything matters. Every story matters.

    Don’t miss the start of DC’s April/May 2015 event with this special issue!

    Note: Most characters appear in the "Who's Who in Convergence" backmatter or on variant covers.

    sizepositionchange
    sizepositionchange
    positionchange
    positionchange
    positionchange
    bordersheaderpositiontable
    positionchange

    Creators

    none of this issue.

    Locations

    none of this issue.

    Objects

    none of this issue.

    Story Arcs

    none of this issue.

    User reviews Add new review

    5 (0)
    4 (2)
    3 (1)
    2 (0)
    1 (0)
    3.7 stars

    Average score of 3 user reviews

    I am Who? 0

    Written by Dan Jurgens Pencils Ethan Van Sciver Inks Ethan Van Sciver Colored by Marcelo Maiolo Written by Dan Jurgens, Convergence #0 “The God Machine” doses the requisite setup for the event to really begin next with issue #1. Jurgens and artist Ethan Van Sciver deliver a disorienting book that tells the origin of the Planet Incarnate, Telos by what is essentially one big villain monologue, in a story powered by dream logic. Set outside the confines of time and space, “The G...

    2 out of 3 found this review helpful.

    Back to the past/present/future 0

    Im not very sure of what does this issue tries to accomplish. It surely introduces Telos albeit in a very confusing way but I see little elseWe follow Superman moments after the ending of the Doomed storyline as he is being tortured/tested by Brainiac, but not any Brainiac, ULTIMATE BRAINIAC!!! who tells Superman about theMultiverse and hao he is his biggest threat; and while Brainiac is away bottling Futures End Metropolis, Superman escapes and after battling Brainiac's personality disordered h...

    1 out of 1 found this review helpful.

    Brains over Brawn... 0

    DC comics is moving their offices across the country, and in the interim of that move, we get a major (hopefully) event from DC comics that spans the entire universe, supplanting your regularly scheduled monthly titles with an eight-issue (nine, if you count this “zero issue”) and a bevvy of two-issue miniseries tie-ins. I have been very vocal in the past about my dislike of the way DC comics goes tie-in heavy with their event books, and that I have even suffered from “event fa...

    1 out of 1 found this review helpful.
    See all user reviews

    This edit will also create new pages on Comic Vine for:

    Beware, you are proposing to add brand new pages to the wiki along with your edits. Make sure this is what you intended. This will likely increase the time it takes for your changes to go live.

    Comment and Save

    Until you earn 1000 points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Comic Vine users. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved.