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1* CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Krona]] is a former Oan [[MadScientist scientist]] and [[ItsAllAboutMe callous egomaniac]] who desires to learn the secrets of the universe, and later goes on to destroy countless universes to discover their creation. Arriving in the Marvel Universe, he makes a bet with the Grandmaster, to put the heroes from their universes against each other to collect a dozen cosmic items. When Krona loses, he reacts by fatally torturing the Grandmaster, before summoning ComicBook/{{Galactus}} and killing him in a fit of rage. Using Galactus's corpse as a new base of operations, Krona learns of the sapience of the two worlds--Eternity and Kismet--trapping the two beings together to learn their secrets. When Metron calls out Krona for caring about conquest as opposed to knowledge, Krona eventually admits to this. Hoping to recreate Galactus's origins with himself in his stead, Krona plans on forcing the Marvel and DC Universes together to [[OmnicidalManiac destroy them both]] and start a new Big Bang.
2* CrackPairing:
3** Eternity and Kismet fall in love over the course of the story. Seriously. They are the living embodiments of the Marvel and DC universes, respectively. Incredibly, their embrace as Krona tortures them and their visible sadness when they are finally separated are actually pretty moving. Note that pairing them with ''anyone else but each other'' would be even more of a CrackPairing.
4** Hawkeye and Black Canary are an item together briefly while the universes start to collapse on each other.
5* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: In Issue #2, during the final battle between both teams, it probably isn't an accident that in one panel, Hank Pym is depicted punching Wonder Woman across the face with a closed fist, especially considering that Hank's infamous striking of Jan would be revisited in both Issue #3 (see: [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/NeverLiveItDown_504.JPG Never Live It Down]]) and Issue #4 (in which Hank directly apologizes to her for having hit her). That being said, unlike Jan, Diana is more than capable of winding up and slugging him back twice as hard, as is shown in a later panel.
6* FanficFuel: The Justice League and the Avengers having frequent cross-dimensional visits, similar to the pre-Crisis JLA/JSA team-ups.
7* GeniusBonus: There's a page where a bunch of DC characters are stacked up against their Marvel characters on various chessboards. If you squint real hard, you can see Death of the Endless face to face with Marvel's Death.
8* HarsherInHindsight: Barry saying that he didn't mind dying because Wally West was holding up the Flash legacy. Then came the ''ComicBook/New52'', where one of the most notorious developments consisted of Barry being the main Flash and being shilled up the wazoo while Wally was ignored with a younger, [[RaceLift African-American]] incarnation taking his place and not being restored to continuity until DC's Rebirth era.
9* HilariousInHindsight:
10** And HarsherInHindsight InUniverse -- Hal Jordan says that the JLA and the Avengers shouldn't try to "play God" with their realities and try to make them the ones they ''want''. Cue ''ComicBook/DCRebirth'', when [[spoiler: a [[ComicBook/{{Watchmen}} Godlike character]]]] has been revealed responsible for doing ''just that'' in creating the ''ComicBook/New52''.
11** When the Scarlet Witch is transported to the DC universe, the location's magical properties provide a surprising boost to her powers, allowing her to unleash extremely destructive energy waves and modify reality in a larger scale, albeit at the cost of her physical health and mental stability. Later on, the Grandmaster awakens the Witch's memories of her lost children, which triggers yet another psychological meltdown. These plotlines, while fairly minor given the series' scope, became much more amusing after the release of ''ComicBook/AvengersDisassembled'' and ''ComicBook/HouseOfM'', which took both premises and used them to radically reshape the Marvel universe.
12* MoralEventHorizon: Most of the villains Krona summons to battle the heroes are a bunch of dumb thugs. But Dreamslayer decides that Hawkeye and Flash are inspiring their friends with their good humor, and coldly disintegrates them with a magical blast. Don't worry, though. Dreamslayer and his associate Doctor Diehard get some LaserGuidedKarma courtesy of cosmic-powered Kyle Rayner. Theirs are the only graphic deaths in the story. It helps that Dreamslayer is a being of pure magic, and that Doctor Diehard is a robot.
13* NeverLiveItDown: Grandmaster shows the heroes the hardships they will endure if they restore reality to its proper state. Take a wild guess at [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/NeverLiveItDown_504.JPG what Hank Pym sees.]]
14* OneSceneWonder:
15** The Thing only appears for two pages, but absolutely steals the show by just being his ever-lovin' self, rendering Batman speechless until he leaves. After this the stunned Dark Knight has to admit that Grimm has a "rough-edged charm" all his own.
16** Despite the high stakes nature of the crossover, the Hulk only makes a pair of brief cameos: once early on while the Justice League are observing Marvel's Earth and again later on in the final battle.
17* ShockingMoments: This whole series is made of these.
18** Thor hits Superman with his hammer, Supes ''catches'' it.
19** Krona defeats Galactus... And then ''builds a house out of him.''
20** The Epic Battle scenes are pretty incredible too, especially for hardcore fans (one panel shows Superman going one-on-one with Count Nefaria)
21** Parallax briefly returns, and thankfully, he's not around long enough to do his unique brand of damage.
22** [[spoiler: Darkseid wearing the Infinity Gauntlet... fortunately, it doesn't work in the DCU.]]
23* TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot:
24** An intentional example, with the various Marvel vs. DC crossovers shown in one panel (like Lobo vs. the Shi'ar Imperial Guard) or only alluded to.
25** Darkseid with the Infinity Gauntlet alone would've had limitless possibilities.
26** As great as the miniseries was, the fact it was about specifically those groups meant that other major characters from those universes (such as the JSA, X-Men, Spidey, Daredevil, ComicBook/TeenTitans, New Gods and Fantastic Four) only appeared briefly. Thankfully, those appearances were usually quite awesome. Batman fighting ComicBook/ThePunisher (off-panel) ''and'' the drug dealers he was shooting up, anyone?

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