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Peacemaker S2 Reveals Major Superman Character’s Fate and Sets Up Man of Tomorrow

George SerranoComment

So THAT’s why Superman went to streaming so fast.!

The incredible reveal in Peacemaker Season 2, Episode 6, titled "Ignorance Is Chris," has done exactly what James Gunn hinted it would: it clarified a major Superman character's post-Superman status and kick-started the plot for the next film, Man of Tomorrow. This isn't just a simple guest appearance. It’s a foundational piece of DC Universe lore, and it reveals why the Superman film was rushed onto digital platforms to beat the TV show's massive spoiler.

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The Ultimate Spoiler: Luthor is Open for Business.

In the episode, we find a character whose fate was decided in the Superman climax. This character, whom we know to be Nicholas Hoult's Lex Luthor, is imprisoned at Belle Reve, confirming that his world-threatening actions involving his dimensional technology—the notorious "Luthor Incident"—led directly to his incarceration.

Now, A.R.G.U.S. Director Rick Flag Sr. (Frank Grillo) is desperate. Peacemaker has escaped to a Nazi-tinged alternate dimension, and Flag needs the world’s foremost and most dangerous expert on unstable dimensional portals. That expert is Lex.

Flag offers Luthor the ultimate prize for his help: a transfer out of Belle Reve and into the much softer, non-metahuman prison of Van Kull, calling it an "opportunity for redemption." The deal? Lex has to lend his genius to tracking down Peacemaker's dimensional portal technology, which is throwing dangerous energy readings across their universe.


The Multiversal Path to Man of Tomorrow

This scene is the trigger for the entire next phase of the DCU. As James Gunn has emphatically stated, Peacemaker Season 2 is a "prequel" to Man of Tomorrow.

The Luthor scene is the moment the villain gains crucial leverage to escape the metahuman prison system. By forcing him to "collaborate" with the government, Flag is unknowingly putting Luthor on the path to freedom, a path that will inevitably lead to him regaining his power and influence. It’s a classic supervillain move executed with modern DCU precision!

The dimensional chaos created by Peacemaker’s Quantum Unfolding Chamber inadvertently gives Lex Luthor the perfect excuse to re-enter the main stage. The multiversal threat that Peacemaker unleashed is exactly the kind of massive, shared foe that Gunn has teased will force an unlikely alliance between Superman and a newly "heroic" Lex Luthor in Man of Tomorrow.


Don't Miss the Finale Setup

There are still two high-stakes episodes left in Peacemaker Season 2, which James Gunn has kept under tight wraps because they contain major spoilers for the wider DCU!

The season finale, which airs October 9th, is expected to be the most crucial episode in setting up the Man of Tomorrow conflict. You won't want to miss a moment of the final push.

Catch all new episodes of Peacemaker Season 2 streaming exclusively on Max every Thursday! The fate of a major Superman villain—and the plot of the next big film—is being decided right now on your TV screen!

Meet Sasha Bordeaux: Your Guide to the New Hero (or Villain?) of Peacemaker Season 2

George SerranoComment

Peacemaker Season 2 will introduce a fascinating new character, Sasha Bordeaux, and her comic book history is packed with a lot of interesting developments. While the show's version, played by Sol Rodríguez, will likely have its own unique path, knowing her background provides some great clues about what to expect.

In the comics, Sasha starts out as a no-nonsense Secret Service agent who takes a job as a private bodyguard for Bruce Wayne. She's so good at her job that she figures out his biggest secret, becoming one of the few people to know that he's Batman. This kicks off a major arc where she becomes his partner, fighting alongside him in a protective suit. She is incredibly loyal, even to the point of being framed for murder and going to prison to protect his secret identity.


From Bodyguard to Black Queen

Her story gets even more complex from there. After her apparent death is faked, she's recruited by the shadowy spy organization Checkmate. She undergoes a complete transformation, getting plastic surgery and becoming a high-ranking operative known as the Black Queen. This is a huge shift, taking her from a grounded, loyal bodyguard to a master spy with her own agenda. Her journey culminates in a wild sci-fi twist during the Infinite Crisis event, where she is turned into a cyborg known as an OMAC, with a mind of her own. Later on, she's reintroduced as a key A.R.G.U.S. agent, which seems to be the version Peacemaker is drawing from.


What to Expect in Peacemaker Season 2

What can we infer about her role in Peacemaker? It has been confirmed that she'll be a high-ranking A.R.G.U.S. agent, which fits her more recent comic book history. Actress Sol Rodríguez has mentioned in interviews that her character has no connection to Batman "yet," which suggests that while the show is establishing its own continuity, it is not ruling out a future tie-in to the larger DC Universe. Given her comic history of being a serious and highly skilled operative, it is very likely that Sasha will be a foil to Peacemaker's more chaotic and unpredictable personality, bringing a professional dynamic to the A.R.G.U.S. team. Her past in the comics, where her allegiance shifted from protecting a hero to joining a clandestine spy group, hints at a complex and perhaps morally ambiguous character whose motivations will be a key part of her arc.

You're Wrong About the Superman Post-Credit Scene

George SerranoComment

The new Superman film is out on digital, and like with most big superhero movies, the post-credit scene is a major topic of conversation. A lot of people are calling the scene with Superman and Mister Terrific useless, claiming it's a quick joke about Superman being a perfectionist. I think that take is completely wrong. This scene has two important utilities, and anyone who thinks it's meaningless is arguing in bad faith.


What the Scene Tells Us About the Universe

In the movie, Lex Luthor tears the city in half by opening a dangerous gate between worlds. The damage is catastrophic, but Superman and Mister Terrific manage to put it back together. When they survey the reassembled city, the building they look at still has a crooked seam—it's not perfect.

The scene's purpose is to make a statement. It tells us that when things are broken, they don't always come back together perfectly. That lingering crack could be a problem later, allowing other dangerous things to get into Metropolis. The scene is a perfect metaphor for the new DC Universe; it's not a complete reset, but a patched-up continuation where the scars from the past still show. It sets a new tone where heroism has consequences, and the world is always a little bit broken.


What the Scene Tells Us About Superman

More importantly, this scene also gives us a clear look at who this new Superman is. He's not happy getting things "kind of" right. Mister Terrific, the logical and pragmatic genius, is satisfied they did as good a job as they could have, given how enormous the catastrophe was. But Superman, ever the optimist and boy scout, thinks it can always be improved.

He's a hero who saves the day; he's a perfectionist who wants to fix every last detail. The scene shows his unwavering belief that the world can always be made better, even when others would settle for good enough. It's a key piece of character development that gives us insight into the man behind the cape.

Check out our review of the film here!


What The Bad Faith Fans Tell Us About The Success of The DCU

When fans dismiss this scene as a simple joke or a waste of time, they are revealing their own biases. They are grasping at straws in an attempt to find fault with a film that is, honestly, a good Superman story. It's a cheap way to criticize a movie that they already had their minds made up about. These are the same people who complain that nothing ever matters in comic book films, and then they completely ignore a scene that clearly establishes a new reality with real consequences. They're looking for any excuse to call the film a failure and a sign that the DCU is already doomed.

But the scene stands on its own. It's a piece of honest-to-God filmmaking that tells us about both the hero and his world. To pretend it's meaningless is to either not be paying attention or to be engaging in a bad-faith argument in an attempt to sink a film that deserves to succeed.


What do you think? Have you seen the new Superman film? Share your thoughts on the post-credit scene in the comments below!