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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/image_002.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:An Epic for Our Times!]]
3
4->''"'''There came a time when the Old Gods died!''' The brave died with the cunning! The noble perished, locked in battle with the unleashed evil! It was the '''last''' day for them! An ancient era was '''passing''' in '''fiery''' holocaust! The '''final''' moment came with the '''fatal''' release of the '''indescribable power''' -- which '''tore''' the home of the Old Gods asunder -- '''split''' it in great '''halves''' -- and filled the universe with the '''blinding''' death-flash of its '''destruction'''! In the '''end''' there were '''two''' giant '''molten''' bodies, spinning slow and '''barren''' -- clean of '''all''' that had gone '''before''' -- adrift in the '''fading''' sounds of '''cosmic''' thunder... '''Silence''' closed upon what had happened -- a '''long, deep''' silence -- wrapped in massive '''darkness'''... '''it was this way for an age...''''' '''THEN--THERE WAS NEW LIGHT!'''"
5-->-- The [[TheEndOfTheBeginning epilogue]] at the beginning of the first issue of ''New Gods''
6
7Creator/JackKirby's meta-series where he developed an entire cosmic mythology involving the New Gods of the utopia of [[CrystalSpiresAndTogas New Genesis]] and the dystopia of [[PollutedWasteland Apokolips]]. Collectively, they were called ''The Fourth World''.
8
9New Genesis and Apokolips were once one planet, but were split apart during the Old Gods' [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt Ragnarok]]. New Genesis is ruled by the benevolent [[OldMaster Highfather]], while Apokolips is kept in the rocky fist of [[OmnicidalManiac Darkseid]]. Before the beginning of the series, there was "[[EnforcedColdWar The Pact]]," where to keep the peace between Apokolips and New Genesis, Highfather and {{ComicBook/Darkseid}} trade sons. Darkseid's son, Orion (the one on the left in the page image), grows up to wield the "Astro-Force" and knows that he is destined to kill Darkseid in battle. Darkseid, in turn, raises Scott Free, who rebels against him and becomes Mister Miracle (and ends up marrying Big Barda, a reformed former member of Darkseid's Female Furies).
10
11Other characters on New Genesis include: Lightray, Orion's cheerful and optimistic friend; Forager, one of the evolved bug people of New Genesis[[note]]who is secretly a New God himself in disguise[[/note]]; and the Forever People, essentially hippies [[JustForFun/RecycledINSPACE FROM SPACE]].
12
13Other characters on Apokolips include: Desaad, Darkseid's chief TortureTechnician and dirty old man; Granny Goodness, who specializes in [[BrainwashedAndCrazy brainwashing]] people and having the evil Female Furies; Kalibak, Darkseid's other son and [[TheDragon second-in-command]]; and [[{{Mooks}} Parademons]].
14
15Then there are [[TheWatcher Metron]], a neutral figure if there ever was one, and [[TheGrimReaper the Black Racer]], Death on skis.
16
17Other concepts of note include [[AppliedPhlebotinum the Source]], an ancient metaphysical [[BuffySpeak energy-thingy]] that's connected to the Source Wall; Mother Boxes, living {{magical computer}}s that some of the New Gods have; Boom Tubes, teleportation tunnels by which the New Gods travel through [[SubspaceOrHyperspace space]] in a degree of seconds; and [[MacGuffin the Anti-Life Equation]], which Darkseid is forever seeking.
18
19The original Fourth World books were:
20* ''New Gods''
21* ''Mister Miracle''
22* ''The Forever People''
23* ''[[ComicBook/SupermansPalJimmyOlsen Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen]]'' ([[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking yes, really]]).
24
25It may be also important to note that the New Gods was abruptly canceled before Kirby could finish it, in part because only Mister Miracle caught on with readers (and even then got canceled several issues later). The New Gods and Mr Miracle were revived in the late '70s by DC, minus Kirby's involvement, and continued the original numbering but were cancelled in the "Great DC Implosion", with New Gods' last issues being published in "Adventure Comics" (as well as an arc on "Justice League of America" designed to bring Darkseid back).
26
27Kirby was brought back to give his own official ending to the franchise, as part of a deluxe format reprinting of the eleven issues of New Gods that Kirby produced, but the whole thing fell apart due to [[ExecutiveMeddling editorial interference]] (Kirby was forbidden from killing Darkseid and Orion off as he had originially intended). What ultimately came about was a new story called "Even Gods Must Die", which was a lead-in to the graphic novel "The Hunger Dogs", in which Kirby (per DC's demands) ended his story by having Darkseid's slaves rebel against their master, and although they fail to depose the evil god, Apokolips is turned into Darkseid's self-made prison of suspicion and hatred.
28
29Later writers revived the characters and concepts, though with a great deal of decay in concept as only Darkseid and Mister Miracle caught on with fans (with Orion and Big Barda tagging along). These stories included the original 1970's ''Secret Society of Super-Villains'', ''ComicBook/TheGreatDarknessSaga'', ''[[ComicBook/JusticeLeague Rock of Ages]]'', ''ComicBook/{{Legends|DCComics}}'', ''[[CrisisCrossover Cosmic Odyssey, Genesis]]'', ''ComicBook/SevenSoldiersOfVictory2005'', ''The Death of the New Gods'', ''ComicBook/CountdownToFinalCrisis'', and finally ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis'', which slammed the door on the New Gods once and for all, while giving Darkseid a definitive send-off. However, after the ''ComicBook/{{New 52}}'', they were all brought back to life thanks to CosmicRetcon. Darkseid serves as, of all things, the StarterVillain for the Justice League, and his invasion of Earth is what leads to their formation.
30
31Before that though, when Creator/{{Kenner}} Toys had the ''Super Powers'' toyline in the 1980s, they used a number of Kirby's ''New Gods'' characters as action figures and Kirby finally got some sort of a direct payoff for his creativity. He also contributed to the tie-in comic, and it [[BroadStrokes even seems roughly in continuity with his original stories.]]
32
33Some of the characters (Orion, Scott Free, Big Barda) were brought in for the ''ComicBook/KingdomCome'' story (after all, who wasn't?).
34
35Mister Miracle, Barda, Oberon, Lightray, and Orion have all served in the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica at various times.
36
37Mister Miracle starred in [[ComicBook/MisterMiracle2017 his own minisseries]] in 2017.
38
39Because ''Jimmy Olsen'' was one of the original Fourth World books, and Superman guest stars in the first issue of ''The Forever People,'' the whole New Gods saga has had close ties to Superman since the beginning, and the 1990's ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' firmly cemented the two mythoi together. These days, Darkseid tends to be depicted fighting Superman and/or the Justice League more often than he is shown fighting Orion.
40
41Characters from the Fourth World have been featured in several DC adaptations; usually those involving Franchise/{{Superman}}.
42
43* ''WesternAnimation/SuperFriends'' - The final two seasons had Darkseid, along with several of his usual underlings, as major recurring villains. [[AdaptedOut Nobody from New Genesis ever appears, though]] (especially odd since New Genesis characters like Orion and Mr. Miracle appeared in the ''Super Powers'' toyline the show was supposed to be [[MerchandiseDriven tying in with]]).
44* Franchise/DCAnimatedUniverse:
45** ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' - Superman's dealings with Apokolips and New Genesis forms the major MythArc of the show.
46** ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' and ''Justice League Unlimited'' - Continuing from ''Superman: The Animated Series'', characters from the comics appear scattered across various episodes, proving to be among the most difficult for the characters to deal with.
47* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold''
48* ''Series/{{Smallville}}'' - Forms the MythArc of season 10, though with much alteration in concept.
49* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeagueWar'' - An Origin Story for the Justice League as they have to deal with an invasion from Apokolips. Like the comics, it connects the origin of ComicBook/{{Cyborg}} to Mother Box technology along with a mixture of other advanced technology.
50* ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010'' - Features sporadic appearances by New Genesis and Apokolips residents and technology, beginning with an episode dedicated to the Forever People. Darkseid is eventually revealed as the overarching villain in the second season. The third delves into Mother Box and Father Box technology, while the fourth fully introduces New Genesis.
51* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeagueAction'' - The Justice League confront Apokoliptians in several episodes, and Mister Miracle and Big Barda play a central role in one episode.
52* Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse:
53** ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'' - Darkseid's omega symbol is seen in Batman's BadFuture nightmare, a Mother Box rebuilds a crippled Victor Stone into ComicBook/{{Cyborg}}, and a hologram of Steppenwolf is seen in the Ultimate Edition.
54** ''Film/{{Wonder Woman|2017}}'' - In a home video-only [[TheStinger post-credits scene]], Etta Candy gathers Steve Trevor's teammates to go on a secret mission to obtain a Mother Box (the one that would create Cyborg one century later).
55** ''Film/{{Justice League|2017}}'' - Steppenwolf (voiced by Creator/CiaranHinds) is the BigBad. His scheme is to find the three Mother Boxes scattered around the Earth to perform HostileTerraforming on the planet, and the Justice League gathers to stop him. Darkseid is mentioned and it's presumably him who beams Steppenwolf back on Apokolips with a Boom Tube.
56*** ''[[Film/ZackSnydersJusticeLeague Zack Snyder's Justice League]]'', a restoration of the original film, features Darkseid (voiced by Creator/RayPorter) as well as several of the Apokoliptians in addition to Steppenwolf (whose design is revamped) including [=DeSaad=] (voiced by Creator/PeterGuinness), expanding their lore in the DCEU. The BadFuture from ''Batman v Superman'' is also shown once again.
57----
58!!This meta-series includes:
59
60* AboveGoodAndEvil: Metron doesn't take any side, though it doesn't stop him from aiding the good guys against Darkseid any chance he gets. The main reason he's considered neutral is because [[spoiler:in the early days of the war, he helped Darkseid develop boom tube technology, in exchange for the raw materials he needed for his Moebius Chair.]] Since then, he's mainly been aiding the good guys, though he's worked with Darkseid on occasion as well, despite Darkseid never making any secret of what fate he intends for Metron. It's partly that Metron's primary motivation is ForScience, and partly because Darkseid and Metron have few intellectual equals who can stand them for long.
61* AboveTheGods: The Source. The New Gods may be a race of literal gods, but the Source created the New Gods and the universe itself, and remains virtually inaccessible beyond the Source Wall.
62* AfterTheEnd: Literally since the prologue is Ragnarok and the New Gods are what came after the Old. Apokolips in particular looks like a Post-Apocalyptic dystopia, being a polluted nightmare filled with machinery and fire pits and is ruled by an absolute tyrant, whose rule is the only thing preventing it from being in a constant state of chaos (in non-Kirby works at least.)
63* AlwaysChaoticEvil: DependingOnTheWriter, the population of Apokolips is born evil. This is implicitly ''not'' the case in Kirby's original conception, though - rather they're almost hopelessly brainwashed by the brutality of Darkseid's regime. Much like [[Creator/JRRTolkien Tolkien]], it seems Kirby was uncomfortable with the idea of an irretrievably AlwaysChaoticEvil people, and so ThePowerOfLove trumps Darkseid's conditioning every time.
64* AmazonBrigade: The Female Furies are women who were trained by Granny Goodness to be Apokolips' elite strike force.
65* AmazonianBeauty:
66** Big Barda is a tall, muscular woman whose good looks are noted by many men.
67** Lampshaded in the Secret Six Mini-series, where Darkseid's Furies are genetically engineered to heal from even the most grievous wounds and stay presentable after battles for his own leisure.
68* AnthropomorphicPersonification: All the characters are, after all, ''gods''. Explicitly confirmed in ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis'', where Batman states the New Gods are Platonic Ideals.
69** Darkseid is the personification of Tyranny.
70** Granny Goodness is the personification of Abuse towards Youth and the Subjugation of Youthful Spirit.
71** Mister Miracle is the Embodiment of Freedom. [[spoiler:When he gets shot, it signals the Victory of Evil]].
72** Orion is war. His struggle with his violent nature makes him a personification of a ''just war'', fought only when necessary but regretful of its effects. His brother Kalibak is savage war, fought for the sake and indulgence of violence.
73** Lightray is the personification of joy and charisma, the Forever People are the spirit of youth, Glorious Godfrey is propaganda, Desaad is sadism, Metron is knowledge, Highfather is wisdom, the Black Racer is death, Kanto is Machiavellianism and so on.
74* ArmedLegs: Stompa fights by kicking her targets with anti-matter boots.
75* AthensAndSparta: The proto-planet divides into a warlike {{Mordor}} run by Darkseid called Apokolips and a verdant green planet called New Genesis.
76* BadAssNormal: Dan Turpin is a regular man who assists Orion and Lightray in the battle against Kalibak. Despite lacking powers of his own and suffering severe injuries, his assistance proves vital, as he devises a plan to channel the entire energy of Metropolis at the villain, successfully incapacitating him.
77* BeautyEqualsGoodness: Most of New Genesis is an unspoiled paradise, and the one major city, Supertown, is sleek and futuristic with abundant gardens and parks. In contrast, Apokolips is an industrial wasteland with multiple fire-spouting craters that are each a significant portion of the planet's radius. The trope ''generally'' applies to the characters as well, with the good New Genesites being handsome/beautiful and the evil Apokaliptians being mostly ugly or deformed. There are some notable exceptions:
78** ''Some'' of the (evil) Female Furies are buff but attractive due to their side purpose as concubines to Darkseid when needed.
79** Orion (a good guy with ''severe'' anger management issues) is ugly and wears a half-mask to conceal his face. He is of Apokoliptian origin, being the son of Darkseid himself; but his goodness is due to him being raised on New Genesis by Highfather Izaya from a fairly young age.
80** Glorious Godfrey is universally considered in-story to be extremely handsome and charismatic but is thoroughly evil. His sister Amazing Grace is also evil but beautiful.
81** In the hands of a ''kind'' artist, Dan "Terrible" Turpin looks like the sort of guy you'd cast Creator/DannyDevito to play; in Kirby's original art, you might be excused for thinking he was a shaved gorilla in a suit. He's very definitely a good guy.
82** Darkseid's uncle Steppenwolf is usually depicted as reasonably handsome (but with a BeardOfEvil). The same applies to Kanto, Darkseid’s most efficient assassin.
83* BedlamHouse: In the DC Verse, even a GodOfGood can go insane. New Genesis has the aptly named "Asylum of the Gods", built for New Gods who had gone insane and needed to be confined and was actually inspired in design after Highfather paid a visit to Arkham Asylum. Fittingly he became its first patient confront his inner demons.
84* BedsheetLadder: Issue 15 of ''Mister Miracle'' has Shilo tie together a ladder of bedsheets to climb out the window and escape from Scott Free, Big Barda and Oberon.
85* BeepingComputers: The Mother Box is a sentient computer that communicates through "ping!" noises.
86* BigBad: Darkseid is an EvilGod who wants to destroy the benevolent planet New Genesis and enslave the entire cosmos with the Anti-Life Equation, a mathematical formula capable of depriving any listener of their free will. This makes him not only the biggest threat to the New Gods, but to the rest of the universe as well.
87* BigGood:
88** The Highfather is the benevolent ruler of New Genesis, and therefore the good counterpart to the villainous Darkseid. After his death, this position is taken over by Takion.
89** The Source is the ultimate universe-creating good of the series. At least until the ''Death of the New Gods'' arc.
90* BittersweetEnding: How ''The Hunger Dogs'' turns out. New Genesis is destroyed, but the floating city of the New Gods escapes in time and is moving through space to spread the New Genesis message across the cosmos. Metron is shown following it while carrying an uninhabited planet with his chair's tractor beam, implying that the heroes will soon have a new place to call home. Meanwhile, Darkseid succeeds in killing Himon but Orion escapes with his mother Tiggra and betrothed Bekka with him. Darkseid has resurrected his inner circle but they are all pale reflections of their former selves, hollowed out by the very dark power he wields. Apokolips is on the brink of revolution and, though Darkseid will eventually stomp it out, he lives on as a sad despot alone and unloved without New Genesis to direct his loathing towards anymore.
91* BlackAndWhiteMorality: New Genesis is [[{{Heaven}} unambiguously good]] while Apokolips is [[{{Hell}} totally evil.]]
92* BoldInflation: Emphasizing important words in characters' speech bubbles through bold text is one of Kirby's trademarks.
93* BornInTheWrongCentury: Sonny Sumo, aka that guy who had the Anti-Life equation in his head, wished to live in the times of feudal Japan in spite of living in the present. [[TimeTravel Darkseid ironically rectifies this by sending him to that exact era.]]
94* BrawnHilda: Stompa is the most mannish of the Female Furies. This highlights her brutish fighting style, which consists of stomping on her foes repeatedly.
95%%* BrownNote: The Anti-Life Equation turns out to be this crossed with TheVirus.
96* ButNowIMustGo: Mister Miracle and Big Barda leave for New Genesis when the original Kirby series was cancelled. Before they go, they sadly bid farewell to Oberon and Shilo.
97* CameBackWrong: In "Even Gods Must Die", Darkseid uses technology to revive some of his inner circle, including Desaad, Steppenwolf, Mantis, and Kalibak. However, the resurrection is far from perfect, and they end up being little more than caricatures of their former selves. One of his subordinates suggests that their true personalities have returned to the Source.
98* CompellingVoice: Billion Dollar Bates had the power to make people do whatever he told them to.
99* CutShort: Kirby's original runs on ''New Gods'' and ''Forever People'' were cancelled prematurely and ended on cliffhangers. Even ''Mister Miracle'', which wasn't cancelled, still got a heavy ReTool that divorced it from the New Gods mythos (until the final issue of Kirby's run, where all of the villains from Apokolips return for one final showdown. Steve Gerber's run on the subsequent renewal ended at issue 25 with the storyline left on an obvious cliffhanger).
100* DarkerAndEdgier: Our hero enters the scene, confesses to (presumably mild) off-screen torture, then gloats over his fallen enemy as he slowly and deliberately batters him to death on screen, pausing only to angst about the horror of war and his own hidden inner darkness. Pretty dark and edgy for a DC comic by Jack Kirby ("Spawn") from 1971 (in the original *New Gods* run). The next comic, "The Glory Boat", underlines the idea that while New Genesis gods like Lightray are powerful, only savage fighters like the Apokolips-born Orion are truly effective warriors. Then "The Pact" shows the war between Apokolips and New Genesis escalating to the point where both sides are fighting on a planet-destroying scale.
101* DarkestHour: ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis''. Not only for the New Gods, but for all of the DCU, as Darkseid at that point fully mastered the Anti-Life Equation and was close to subjugating everyone.
102* DeathByOriginStory: ''Mister Miracle'' begins with Scott Free becoming Thaddeus Brown's successor as an escape artist after the latter is killed by Steel Hand.
103* DefectorFromDecadence: By the 12th issue of Jack Kirby's ''New Gods'', the Apokoliptian war machines have evolved to the point of rendering the Female Furies largely obsolete. This results in said squad being demoted to computer operators, much to their disgust. When Orion launches his assault against Apokolips, the Furies revolt, first by triggering a trap to save Orion from one of Darkseid's machines, then by directly engaging Granny Goodness' followers in battle.
104* DependingOnTheArtist: The way Parademons look can vary wildly throughout different eras and under different artists. Sometimes, they have more human-like features. Other times, they look much more monstrous. There are also times when they can look bulky but still within the size range of a human and other times, they're absolutely massive and tower above a lot of DC heroes.
105* DependingOnTheWriter: Different artists had divergent, often contradictory interpretations on the series' mythos. This includes whether New Genesis and Apokolips in 'our' universe or another dimension entirely (This was [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] once in a CharacterBlog for the series ''Checkmate''), what is the Anti-Life equation, and whether the New Gods are [[PhysicalGod real gods]] or SufficientlyAdvancedAliens.
106* DivineConflict: The good, freedom-loving New Gods of New Genesis led by Highfather Izaya, and evil, oppressive New Gods of Apokolips led by {{ComicBook/Darkseid}} are locked in an eternal conflict with each other. It was settled through truce for a time with an exchange of Highfather's son Scott Free and Darkseid's son Orion, but when Scott escaped, Darkseid used that as a justification to restart the conflict.
107* EarlyInstallmentCharacterDesignDifference: Darkseid made his debut in issue 134 of ''ComicBook/SupermansPalJimmyOlsen'', where his face appears on a monitor used by Morgan Edge. This early depiction of Darkseid noticeably has him wearing a white helmet when he is more well-known for having blue armor in addition to having a Caucasian skin tone instead of gray. He also used to have normal-looking eyes before they were eventually changed so that they were colored red and lacked pupils.
108* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: At first Scott Free used to be at least as tall as Big Barda. That situation reversed in the 80's.
109* EarthShatteringKaboom: In ''The Hunger Dogs'', New Genesis is destroyed by Darkseid's Micro-Mark bombs, though the New Gods escape its destruction.
110* EndOfSeriesAwareness: The 18th issue of Jack Kirby's run on the original ''Mister Miracle'' series ended its final page with a message plainly stating that the comic had ended and that there wouldn't be any further issues. While the comic would be renewed for seven more issues three years later, these issues no longer had any involvement from Jack Kirby and instead had Steve Englehart and Marshall Rogers as the writer and illustrator of issues 19-22, with the last three issues written by Steve Gerber and illustrated by Michael Golden. Ironically enough, this short-lived revival abruptly ended without any indication that the 25th issue was going to be the last issue, as its last page promised a 26th issue that never saw print.
111* EvenEvilHasStandards: The Apokoliptian New God Sleez was so depraved and flat out disgusting that he repulsed even ''Darkseid'' who previously had him as an aide before growing disenchanted by Sleez's petty cruelties and permanently banished him to Earth.
112* EvilMatriarch: Granny Goodness runs the Apokolips orphanages, where children are subjected to horrible abuse as part of a training program designed to develop fanatical warriors.
113* EnforcedColdWar: The war between Apokolips and New Genesis is temporarily halted when Darkseid and Highfather forge a pact, with which they agree to exchange their respective sons. However, once the son of Highfather flees from Apokolips, the deal is considered voided and the conflict resumes.
114* EvilOrphanageLady: Granny Goodness from Apokolips could hardly be more inappropriately named, as her job is to brainwash the children in her orphanages into becoming servile, brutal slaves of Darkseid.
115* FaceHeelTurn: Esak goes from being an innocent student of Metron to a deformed EvilGenius in service to Darkseid.
116* FadSuper: All over the place; much of the story was dedicated to Kirby's views on the 1970s and the way the world was going. It's mostly managed to translate into modern times, though, as most of the issues (feminism, freedom, war versus peace, nature versus nurture, the power of authority, the goodness of youth) are still pretty relevant.
117* TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou: The fourth issue ends with the message "The Black Racer knows his next target! Who is it? He? She? You?" And yes, he's staring at the reader.
118* {{Flanderization}}:
119** Orion, as written by Kirby, was a basically noble person who was rough around the edges and frequently struggled with his darker side and his brutal nature. A good chunk of modern writers have him being a HairTriggerTemper BloodKnight.
120** Darkseid, in Kirby's take on the character, was rather more complex and well-rounded; in "the road to Armaghetto", the despot shows a somber, reflective side, wry humor and even restrained horror at the coming generation, which will be worse than he was. His 'evolution' into the most purely evil being in creation and designated villain for the universe seems degeneration into caricature.
121* FluffyTheTerrible: Granny Goodness is one of the cruelest and most sadistic members of Darkseid's forces, despite looking like an old lady and having an unintimidating name.
122* FrankensteinsMonster: The ninth issue of ''The Forever People'' had a MadScientist named "Doc" Gideon assemble a monster from stitched-together body parts and bring his creation to life using one of Serifan's cosmic cartridges.
123* FromNobodyToNightmare:
124** Granny Goodness started out as a Lowly. She became the trainer of the Female Furies and Darkseid's most effective lieutenant.
125** Esak starts of as a child in tutelage to Metron before becoming an EvilGenius that helps Darkseid blow up New Genesis.
126** Even for a New God, Glorius Godfrey was a joke character - til ''ComicBook/{{Legends|DCComics}}'', where he managed to turn the public against the superheroes.
127* FullyAbsorbedFinale:
128** The finale of the Gerry Conway ''Return Of The New Gods'' revival was resolved in ''Adventure Comics'' after the great DC Implosion.
129** The entire New Gods mythos had one too in ''Final Crisis'' by Creator/GrantMorrison.
130* AGodAmI: Darkseid strongly believes that he is the most powerful being and that anyone who dares to question his authority must either be subjugated or obliterated.
131* GodsNeedPrayerBadly: In Walt Simonson's run on ''Orion'', he had the title character deliver a TakeThat to the concept as well as some detail into how the New Gods have taken advantage of the concept.
132-->'''Orion:''' Gods are not dependent on their worshipers; worshipers are dependent on their '''Gods.''' And the New Gods? We're as old as time, constantly remade, constantly reborn with each turning of the wheel... Each time a mortal turns on a computer, puts a piece of bread in the toaster, opens a door, strikes a match, or wonders at the stars, he worships at the altar of the New Gods!
133%%* {{Gotterdammerung}}: "There came a time when the [[{{Precursors}} Old Gods]] DIED!"
134* GrandFinale:
135** ''The Hunger Dogs'' was intended to be the finale for Jack Kirby's original story and ended with the denizens of New Genesis searching for a new home after their home planet was destroyed while Darkseid is left with his empire in ruins and scheming to slowly rebuild his hold over the inhabitants of Apokolips as soon as the resolve of his subjects to defy him wears off, though the New Gods' popularity led the story to receive follow-ups from other writers.
136** ''ComicBook/FinalCrisis'' restores many of the characters to Kirby's original vision of them, only to have all of them die, with the heroes of the DC Universe finishing off Darkseid for good after he finally mastered the Anti-Life Equation and attempted to conquer the universe. Although some of the New Gods are implied to have been reborn at the end of the last issue, it wouldn't be until the ''ComicBook/New52'' era that their storyline would be revisited.
137* TheGrimReaper: The Black Racer is an embodiment of death. He [[LegacyCharacter relinquished his role]] to a tetraplegiac Vietnam vet before [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence returning to the Source]].
138* HatePlague: The Paranoid Pill that Dr. Bedlam unleashes on an apartment building turns its inhabitants into terrified, irrational mobs that try to kill Mister Miracle because they [[InsaneTrollLogic think he's a vampire]].
139* HazyFeelTurn: The primary Female Furies are tricked by Barda into helping her and Scott take on Granny Goodness halfway through the original ''Mister Miracle'' run. They then return to Earth with Scott and Barda for a large chunk of the rest of the series and agree to assist him in his escape numbers, though are still ostensively bad guys. After the series’ end, they go back to being minions of Darkseid.
140* HeartIsAnAwesomePower. Villainous example with Glorious Godfrey, who is a goodlooking blond with tremendous powers of persuasion. ''ComicBook/{{Legends|DCComics}}'' showed just how powerful a talent like that could be.
141* HeelFaceTurn: Barda starts off as a loyal minion of Darkseid before her feelings for Scott Free and disgust at her leader's treatment of a fellow Fury cause her to reconsider her loyalties.
142* {{Homage}}:
143** Metron was based on Leonard Nimoy.
144** Big Barda was based on Lainie Kazan.
145%%* HyperlinkStory: The original Kirby series attempted to be this. It never quite got to the "one big story" part.
146* IfYoureSoEvilEatThisKitten:
147** At the end of her training, a young Granny Goodness was ordered to prove her loyalty to Darkseid by killing her longtime faithful hound or be killed herself. She killed the instructor giving the order instead, and when called before Darkseid she stated that the warhound was a far more valuable asset, as well as absolutely loyal to Darkseid. Darkseid tested that claim...by ordering the warhound to kill Goodness, forcing her to kill it in self-defense.
148** Part of Mister Miracle’s backstory as a citizen of Apokolips is that, even though he’s a capable fighter and clever strategist, his inability to eat any kittens makes him a failure.
149* IWasQuiteALooker: Granny Goodness used to be significantly prettier in her youth.
150%%* KirbyDots
151* KryptoniteFactor: New Gods are only vulnerable to "Radion", a specific radiation. [[spoiler:Darkseid eventually kills Orion with a time-traveling radion bullet in ''Final Crisis'', and Darkseid is shot [[HoistByHisOwnPetard with that same bullet]] by Franchise/{{Batman}}.]]
152* LaughingMad: Mad Harriet is insane and prone to constant cackling.
153* LightningLash: Lashina of the Female Furies has electrically charged steel whips that can extend, retract, and wrap around targets.
154* LotusEaterMachine: The Lump is a catatonic creature that can MindRape you with scenarios and mental images once you're connected to it.
155* LukeIAmYourFather: Subverted; Orion already knows he's Darkseid's son. He does have trouble resisting his [[InTheBlood inner violence]] though. However, Scott Free spends much of the original run unaware he’s the son of Highfather.
156* TheMeaningOfLife: Inverted by the Anti-Life equation, which (DependingOnTheWriter) basically proves that life ''has'' no meaning, but played straight with the Life equation, which instead proves that life ''does'' have meaning.
157* MindControl: The Anti-Life Equation is one of the worst versions of mind control as it works by proving to those subjected to it that there is no purpose to living and no reason to go on, so they willingly give up their free will and selves to become nothing more than extensions of the will of the one controlling the equation. It's implied that even if you couldn't get infected by the equation via MindReading (trying to read the mind of someone infected by the anti-life equation just lets in into your mind) you wouldn't be able to read any thoughts or see any memories because those under its control have no minds, identities, or even a self until they are freed from the equation.
158-->'''Anti-life justifies my hate! Anti-life justifies my despair! Anti-life justifies my fear! Submit! DARKSEID is my will!'''
159* MobileSuitHuman: One-shot Mister Miracle villain Mystivac was revealed to be a robot controlled from within by a tiny alien.
160* TheModernGods: Their whole thing is that they are "New Gods" that are reborn from the ashes of the DeathOfTheOldGods, making them look more like SuperheroesInSpace than a more classic pantheon.
161* MortalityGreyArea: Anything bonded to the Source Wall is as good as dead, but not quite dead nor really alive; more in a sort of [[AndIMustScream conscious limbo]] being TakenForGranite.
162* NonIndicativeName: Darkseid's ideal of Anti-Life might be better termed Anti-Freedom (he doesn't want to [[OmnicidalManiac kill everyone,]] he wants [[TheEvilsOfFreeWill ultimate power over everyone]]). At one point, the heroes explain it as Anti-Life representing the loss of everything that makes life valuable and worth living.
163* NurtureOverNature: Orion's dilemma. He is the son of Darkseid, and thus naturally prone to violent impulses. However, being raised by the Highfather compelled him to try and control the darker aspects of his psyche.
164* OmnicidalManiac: Darkseid wants to enslave the universe or, if he can't, destroy it.
165* OrcRaisedByElves: Scott Free is the son of one of the benevolent deities and was given to be raised by the EvilOverlord Darkseid. Darkseid's son, Orion, was raised by the good god in his place. Both children grow up to be heroes.
166* OrderVersusChaos: DependingOnTheWriter. In Jack Kirby’s original run, Apokolips represented Order and New Genesis Chaos. But other writers have sometimes switched it around.
167* PitifulWorms:
168** In issue eight of ''Mister Miracle'', the Lump at one point calls Scott Free a gnat.
169** The eleventh issue of ''Mister Miracle'' has one of Dr. Bedlam's animates refer to Oberon as a "defiant flea".
170** Kalibak is fond of calling people "earth-worms".
171* PlanetBaron: Darkseid is the undisputed master of Apokalips, and seeks to extend his control over all of creation.
172* PollutedWasteland: Apokolips consists of "fire pits" continually fueled by slaves.
173* PoorlyDisguisedPilot: Jack Kirby's run on ''Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen'' was in part to serve as a starting point to this series, particularly featuring Darkseid's debut in issue 134.
174* PunnyName: Scott Free is an escape artist. It was originally given to him ironically by Granny Goodness, to remind him that he'll never be free. The lesson didn't take.
175* PurpleProse: John Byrne's ''Darkseid / Galactus'' crossover was a tribute to Jack Kirby, and was stuffed full of Purple Prose HamToHamCombat.
176* PutOnABus:
177** The Forever People are left stranded on a deserted planet at the end of Kirby's series.
178** Mister Miracle and Big Barda go to New Genesis at the end of Kirby's run and don't get to assist Orion during the final battle against Darkseid.
179* RaisedByRival: An uneasy peace between New Genesis' Highfather and Apokolips' Darkseid is cemented by the two trading sons to be raised by the other. Darkseid's cruel parenting resulted in both sons hating him.
180* RoguesGalleryTransplant: Darkseid started off as a New Gods villain. Though he canonically still is, he also went on to become a recurring Superman foe, before his role was expanded and he became a villain for the entire Justice League and the DCU as a whole.
181* RousseauWasRight: Kirby's grand statement on morality in the series. Darkseid and his court may be irrevocably evil, but they did not have to be. [[NurtureOverNature Orion is the son of the personification of tyranny itself, but was raised by a loving father and is a hero.]] Scott Free was raised to be a mindless soldier of Darkseid, but maintained his free spirit and escaped, and Big Barda was a soldier who [[HeelFaceTurn changed sides]] when redeemed by [[ThePowerOfLove the power of Love.]] Ultimately, evil always loses, in the short run or the long.
182* SceneryPorn: It was drawn by Creator/JackKirby, after all, so beautifully detailed backgrounds were inevitable.
183%%* ScienceFantasy: The best description of the series's genre.
184* SentientCosmicForce: The Source. The Gods originate from it and will return to it upon death. It emanates from beyond a galaxy-sized wall, which it would be a very bad idea to try and breach. New Genesis natives can draw on it to power some of their tech, like Mother Boxes.
185* {{Sidekick}}:
186** Mister Miracle has his manager, Oberon, who also acts as his assistant during his escape acts.
187** Orion has his foil and best friend Lightray.
188* SkySurfing:
189** Mister Miracle can fly by riding his aero-discs, small platforms that are attached to his soles.
190** The Black Racer flies with his skis.
191* SplashPanel: Kirby ''loved'' using these. The opening of "New Gods" is one of the most famous double-page splashes.
192* StatuesqueStunner: Big Barda is very tall and very beautiful.
193* StealthSequel:
194** There's a significant implication that ''New Gods'' is a DistantSequel to Kirby's run on ''ComicBook/TheMightyThor''. The first comic opens with the death of the "Old Gods", which includes a very familiar silhouette of a certain Thunderer.
195** ''ComicBook/CaptainVictoryAndTheGalacticRangers'', the creator-owned Kirby series published by Pacific in 1981, was itself hinted to be a sequel to this DC series. As the series goes on, it slowly becomes apparent that Captain Victory is [[LawyerFriendlyCameo Orion's son. He even inherits the Astro-Harness, and Victory's grandfather and greatest enemy, Blackmass of the planet Hellikost, is a disembodied Darkseid.]] A limited-series revival in 2014 by Creator/JoeCasey finally made this all but explicitly the case.
196* SuperheroesInSpace: The New Gods are essentially an alien race of superhero gods.
197* TakeThat:
198** Creator/StanLee is turned into a character called "Funky Flashman", a toady conman who lives in a [[Creator/MarvelComics crumbling house]] with a sycophantic manservant -- "Houseroy" -- based on Roy Thomas, gets his meagre cash by rooting around in a container shaped like Jack's head and isn't [[SmallNameBigEgo half as talented as he thinks he is]]. Jack was ''not'' happy with Stan at the time.[[note]]Stan, as Roy Thomas himself [[http://twomorrows.com/kirby/articles/18thomas.html later recounted]], was a bit hurt by how ''venomous'' it all was, and though there was still no love lost between them. Even Kirby himself seemed to regret it later. (Roy, for his part, didn't necessarily mind and considered a lot of the jokes at ''his'' expense to be ActuallyPrettyFunny, but felt a talented man like Jack could've vented in a more subtle or creative way.)[[/note]]
199** In the ''ComicBook/{{Legends|DCComics}}'' crossover, Glorious Godfrey used the alias "G. Gordon Godfrey", a joint parody of [[UsefulNotes/RichardNixon Watergate]] participant (and later radio demagogue) G. Gordon Liddy and [[ComicBook/SpiderMan J. Jonah Jameson]].
200** During ''Final Crisis'', Godfrey takes the form of Reverend Goode, a clear parody of greedy televangelists.
201* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaMan: The Newsboy Legion runs into a surprising number of water-related problems that can only be handled by Flippa Dippa the diver. Amusingly, this actually makes him the most indispensable member of the Legion, since the others are rarely called upon to do anything that calls for their own areas of expertise.
202* TranslationWithAnAgenda: The Mexican publisher Novaro translated the New Gods in Spanish as the "Nuevos Ídolos", or "New Idols". A correct translation would have been "Nuevos Dioses". The publisher was run by religious conservatives, who would not accept any fictional character to be described as "Gods".
203* WarriorPoet: In the original comics several characters have elements of this, [[WorldOfHam mostly because of the way it's written]], but Orion and even Darkseid are known to have talked to themselves about philosophical concepts.
204* VillainousBadlandHeroicArcadia: The heroic gods live in New Genesis, a beautiful paradise world led by the wise and benevolent Highfather; the villains lurk in Apokolips, a grim, dystopian planet led by the tyrannical Darkseid.
205* VillainsOutShopping: Getting mugged and just analyzing the experience, or working the register at BurgerFool... Darkseid had a ''lot'' of free time. In the original comics, he tours an ''amusement park''. Granted, it was one [[CircusOfFear controlled by Apokolips]] but he seems genuinely amused when a pair of people mistake him for a guy in costume. And then there was that time Darkseid wore a costume... of course, that was part of a plan to get close to a human whose mind contained the Anti-Life Equation.
206* WitchWithACapitalB: Issue 19 of ''Mister Miracle'' has Barda punch Granny Goodness while exclaiming "Back off, witch!"
207* XtremeKoolLetterz: An UrExample in comics. Many of the characters and places have very Earth-based names (usually tied to Judeo-Christian myth) but are spelled phonetically (Isaiah = Izaya, Apocalypse = Apokolips, etc) to make it less terrestrial looking.

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