To reimagine the Crossverse with the gritty, cynical tone of The Boys, we have to strip away the "shining hero" veneer and look at the collateral damage, corporate greed, and psychological trauma beneath the surface. In this world, heroes aren't paragons; they are high-value assets owned by mega-conglomerates like the Atlas Corporation or Vought-style subsidiaries. The Reimagined Icons 1. The Trinity: The Face of Control Superman (The Overseer): Not a symbol of hope, but a terrifyingly calm authoritarian. He views humanity like a gardener views ants—useful until they get in the way. He doesn't save people because it’s right; he does it for the "engagement metrics." His heat vision is used more for "disappearing" whistleblowers than fighting crime. Batman (The Architect): A billionaire surveillance extremist. He has a drone over every street corner in Gotham. He isn't "brooding"; he’s a sociopath who uses "justice" as an excuse to test experimental crowd-control tech on the poor. Wonder Woman (The Zealot): A warrior-extremist who views the modern world as "weak." She doesn't use the Lasso of Truth to solve crimes—she uses it for brutal, illegal interrogations that leave victims mentally broken. The Premise: "The Cleaners" The series follows a ragtag group of "Normies"—people whose lives were ruined by superhero negligence—working to expose the truth. They don't have powers; they have blackmail, high-grade explosives, and a deep-seated hatred for the capes.
*The plot of "Crossverse: Ground Zero" follows the discovery of the "Remnant Protocol"—a corporate conspiracy to achieve immortality for the elite by harvesting the souls of the masses.
Season 1: The Remnant Protocol*
Release Date 2026.04.07 / Last Updated 2026.04.07