Table of Contents

The Batman Who Laughs: An Out-of-Universe Intelligence Briefing

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The Batman Who Laughs is a relatively recent but incredibly impactful addition to comic book lore. He was created by the acclaimed creative team of writer Scott Snyder and artist Greg Capullo. His first full appearance was in Dark Nights: Metal #2, published by DC Comics in September 2017, although he was teased and first named in Dark Days: The Casting #1. The character's creation was rooted in Snyder and Capullo's desire to craft the ultimate nightmare version of Batman for their large-scale event, Dark Nights: Metal. The core concept was to answer the question: “What is Batman's greatest fear?” The answer was not a specific villain, but the fear of becoming what he fights against—specifically, a fusion with his greatest nemesis, The Joker. The character's striking visual design, with his emaciated frame, spiked visor, and wide, sharp-toothed grin, instantly captured the imagination of the fanbase. His design evokes elements of both Batman and the Joker, but also incorporates imagery from Cenobites of the Hellraiser franchise, creating a figure of pure gothic horror. He rapidly became a breakout character, earning his own spin-off series and a central role in subsequent DC universe-spanning events, a testament to his immediate and widespread popularity.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of The Batman Who Laughs is a tragic and horrifying tale of a hero's absolute fall from grace. It is crucial to reiterate that this narrative takes place within the DC Comics continuity, specifically within a pocket of creation known as the Dark Multiverse.

Earth-22 (DC Dark Multiverse)

The Batman Who Laughs originates from Earth-22, a universe within the Dark Multiverse. The Dark Multiverse is a shadow reflection of the main DC Multiverse, a roiling ocean of possibility where worlds born from fear and failure are destined to live, die, and decay. On Earth-22, Bruce Wayne's journey mirrored that of the primary Batman for years. He was a master detective, a brilliant strategist, and the protector of Gotham City. The breaking point came when The Joker of his world went on a rampage far more horrific than any before. He murdered Gotham's other Rogues and systematically slaughtered the parents of countless children in front of them, dousing them with Joker Toxin to create an army of new, mini-Jokers. He culminated this by luring Batman to a final confrontation where he revealed he had also murdered Commissioner Gordon and subjected Superman's family to an unspeakable fate. Pushed beyond his absolute limit, this Batman broke his one rule: he killed the Joker, snapping his neck. However, this was the Joker's final, ultimate punchline. Upon his death, a super-concentrated, purified form of Joker Toxin was released from his heart, which Batman inhaled directly. Days later, Bruce began to change. He tried to fight it, but the toxin was rewriting his very being. The Bat-Family—Nightwing, Batgirl, Red Hood, and Robin (Tim Drake)—noticed the subtle shifts in his personality. He gathered them in the Batcave, ostensibly to confess what had happened. It was a trap. With his morality gone but his genius intact, he revealed his transformation by slaughtering his entire family with a hidden arsenal of weapons. He had become a perfect fusion of Batman's methodical brilliance and the Joker's nihilistic sadism. He then proceeded to systematically eliminate every hero on his planet, including a horrific encounter where he used a piece of Black Kryptonite to force Superman to kill his own family before dying himself. Having conquered his world and plunged it into darkness, he was recruited by the dark god Barbatos to lead an invasion of the core DC Multiverse alongside other nightmare Batmen.

Absence from the Marvel Universe (MCU and Earth-616)

As a proprietary intellectual property of DC Comics, The Batman Who Laughs has never appeared, and will never appear, in Marvel Comics' Earth-616 or the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He is fundamentally incompatible with the Marvel canon. However, the concept of a corrupted hero is a powerful archetype that Marvel has explored many times, providing useful points of comparison.

Analyzing these Marvel analogues helps to understand the narrative space a character like The Batman Who Laughs would occupy if he were a Marvel creation: a top-tier, universe-level threat born from the corruption of a core hero.

Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality

The Batman Who Laughs is one of the most dangerous beings to ever emerge from the DC Multiverse. His threat level is not derived from superhuman powers in the traditional sense, but from the terrifyingly effective combination of his mind, skills, and absolute lack of restraint.

Intellect and Psychology

Physical Abilities and Skills

Equipment and Weaponry

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

True “allies” are a foreign concept to The Batman Who Laughs, as he sees everyone as a tool or a toy. However, he has formed temporary and manipulative alliances to achieve his goals.

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

Dark Nights: Metal (2017-2018)

This is the character's debut storyline. The Batman Who Laughs serves as the field commander for Barbatos's invasion. He orchestrates the capture of the prime Batman and the placement of cosmic tuning forks across the globe to drag Earth into the Dark Multiverse. He is portrayed as an unstoppable force of nature, out-thinking and brutalizing the heroes at every turn. His role in this event solidified him as a major threat, and his final confrontation with a Joker-allied Batman is a highlight. He is seemingly defeated at the end, but it is later revealed he was imprisoned in secret by the prime Batman.

The Batman Who Laughs (Miniseries, 2018-2019)

Freed from his prison, The Batman Who Laughs launches a direct, personal assault on the prime Bruce Wayne. His plan is to use a serum to transform another version of Bruce Wayne (a young, happy, gun-eschewing version from an alternate reality) into another version of himself. He also infects the prime Batman with a Joker Toxin, forcing Batman to race against time to stop him before he succumbs and becomes the very thing he's fighting. This series is a deep psychological dive into the character, showcasing his methods of mental and emotional warfare.

Dark Nights: Death Metal (2020-2021)

In this massive-scale sequel, The Batman Who Laughs has achieved near-total victory. Serving Perpetua, he has remade Earth into a hellish landscape of his own design, known as the “Metalverse.” The remaining heroes are scattered and broken. Halfway through the event, he is killed by Wonder Woman, but his followers enact a contingency plan, transplanting his brain into the body of a “Batmanhattan” (a Bruce Wayne who gained the powers of Dr. Manhattan). This transforms him into The Darkest Knight, a near-omnipotent being of pure evil. As The Darkest Knight, he kills Perpetua and sets out to destroy the multiverse and remake it in his own laughing image, becoming the ultimate final boss of the entire Snyder/Capullo DC saga.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

The Darkest Knight

This is less a variant and more of an evolution or final form. After having his brain transplanted into the body of a Bruce Wayne who had replicated the accident that created DC's Dr. Manhattan, The Batman Who Laughs ascended to godhood. As The Darkest Knight, he possessed nigh-omnipotence, including quantum awareness, reality manipulation on a multiversal scale, and the ability to exist across all timelines simultaneously. His goal shifted from simply spreading chaos to utterly annihilating all of existence and rebuilding it from scratch as a “Multiverse of 52 Planets of Nightmares.” This form represents the character taken to his absolute logical extreme: a being of pure, unadulterated evil with the power to enforce his will on all of reality. He was only defeated by the combined power of the entire DC Universe, led by a cosmically-empowered Wonder Woman.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6)

1)
The Batman Who Laughs is considered by many to be the most popular and successful new comic book villain of the 2010s.
2)
His design, particularly the spiked visor, was a key element from Greg Capullo. The idea was that he wears it because his eyes, now altered by the Joker Toxin, can perceive all realities and possibilities at once, and the visor helps him focus on his chosen path of destruction.
3)
The chant of his Rabid Robins, “Crow… Bar…”, is a direct and sadistic reference to the 1988 storyline A Death in the Family, where the second Robin, Jason Todd, was beaten with a crowbar by the Joker before being killed in an explosion.
4)
The character's immense popularity has led to a large amount of merchandise, including high-end statues, action figures, and Funko Pops, a rarity for such a new character.
5)
Source Material: Dark Nights: Metal, The Batman Who Laughs, Dark Nights: Death Metal. All published by DC Comics.
6)
While being a DC character, his thematic similarities to Marvel's Carnage have been noted by fans—both are chaotic, nihilistic killers who represent a darker, more extreme version of their heroic counterpart's primary nemesis (Venom for Carnage, Joker for The Batman Who Laughs).