Cast your mind back to 2022 β a year bursting with superhero swagger, when we all genuinely believed we'd be juggling a dozen DC games by Christmas. Spoiler: we weren't. Now, in 2026, I'm here to take you on a nostalgia-soaked tour of that chaotic hype cycle. Some titles soared, others crash-landed, and a few are still teasing us like a cat with a laser pointer. Let's dissect the whole glorious mess, starting with the loudest bang.
Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League β The King of Delays Finally Crowned

Oh, Rocksteady, you magnificent tease. After Arkham Knight in 2015, the studio went radio-silent, leaving us to imagine everything from a Superman simulator to a Green Lantern knitting circle. When Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League was formally revealed at DC FanDome 2020, I nearly choked on my popcorn. A co-op romp through Metropolis, taking on a brainwashed Justice League while cackling as Harley Quinn? Sign me up.
Two years later, the game still hadn't materialised. Then three. It finally landed in February 2024, proving that COVID delays and the shift to remote work had turned development into a slow-motion heist. Today, in 2026, I'm still dipping in and out. The live-service bones have been fleshed out with new characters like Deathstroke and Katana, and the open-world chaos is as gleeful as ever β though some missions feel like they were written by Brainiac himself. The biggest surprise? The game actually found its stride, even if it took longer than a Flash marathon to get there.
Gotham Knights β The Bat-Family That Couldn't Quite Fly

WB Games MontrΓ©al gave us Gotham Knights in October 2022, an original story entirely separate from the Arkhamverse. With Batman and Jim Gordon dead, the Court of Owls pulling strings, and the bat-kids picking up the pieces, it sounded like a gritty coming-of-age romp. I jumped in as Nightwing and immediately felt a tingle of nostalgia β but that tingle faded fast. The combat felt sluggish compared to the Arkham freeflow, and the enemy level scaling turned every street thug into a damage sponge.
Fast-forward to 2026, and Gotham Knights is mostly remembered as a brave experiment that didn't quite stick. Its two-player drop-in co-op was fun for a weekend, but the endgame loop never evolved enough to keep my crew engaged. Still, the art direction and the Court of Owls storyline were deliciously creepy, and I'll always treasure the hilariously awkward bike physics. It's a curio in the DC gaming museum β worth a visit, but you won't move in.
MultiVersus β From Open Beta to Platform Fighter Royalty

When MultiVersus exploded into open beta in July 2022, I was instantly hooked. A Warner Bros. free-for-all where Shaggy goes Super Saiyan and Batman clobbers Bugs Bunny? Pure madness. The 2v2 format, the rollback netcode, the glorious voice acting β it felt like a party I never wanted to leave. Then, suddenly, the game went offline in 2023 to "re-tool," which sent the community into a frenzy.
Thankfully, it relaunched in 2024 with a full roster, better progression, and a never-ending stream of new fighters. Now in 2026, I'm still grinding ranked matches, and the DC corner has expanded into a mini Justice League. Wonder Woman, Superman, Harley Quinn, and the Joker are staples, but we've also got the Flash, Green Lantern, and even Lobo. The recent Mortal Kombat crossover event was bonkers β Sub-Zero vs. Batman is a matchup I never knew I needed. MultiVersus is living proof that if you throw enough IP at a wall, sometimes it sticks in the most beautiful way.
DC League of Super-Pets: The Adventures of Krypto and Ace β A Tail That Wagged Briefly

Remember when The Rock voiced Krypto and Kevin Hart voiced Ace? The movie tie-in game launched in May 2022, published by Outright Games, and it was exactly what you'd expect: an on-rails, family-friendly button-masher. My niece adored it for about three hours, then moved on to PAW Patrol. As a seasoned gamer, I found the gameplay shallower than a puddle in Metropolis, but the charm was undeniable. In 2026, it's a dusty cartridge at the bottom of a drawer, yet I still smile when I see a super-dog sticker. Not every game needs to be a blockbuster, and this one wagged its little heart out before being put out to pasture.
Wonder Woman β The Legendary No-Show

Monolith Productions β the studio behind Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor and F.E.A.R. β dropped the Wonder Woman bomb at The Game Awards 2021, and my jaw hit the floor. A triple-A open-world game featuring the Amazon princess, complete with the Nemesis System? I was already polishing my Lasso of Truth. But as 2022 came and went, the silence grew deafening.
Now, in 2026, we've had a couple of cinematic teasers and a "development is progressing well" update that makes me want to pull my hair out. Rumour has it the game has been rebooted twice, with Monolith struggling to balance narrative depth with the systemic chaos fans expect. I'm convinced it'll launch eventually β probably alongside The Winds of Winter. At this point, I've set my expectations on a 2027 or bust window, but I'll still weep with joy when it finally drops.
The Wolf Among Us 2 β The Fairy Tale That Might Finally Have a Happy Ending

The journey of The Wolf Among Us 2 has been wilder than Bigby's temper. Telltale's collapse in 2018 seemed to bury the sequel forever. Then LCG Entertainment resurrected the studio, confirmed the game was back on, and teased a 2023 launch. Spoiler: it didn't happen. We got a gorgeous trailer, the return of the iconic voice cast, and the news that all episodes are being built simultaneously in Unreal Engine β a far cry from the old episodic grind.
I've been checking my calendar like a paranoid fairy tale detective, and it seems 2026 might finally be the year chapter one sees the light of day. Insider whispers suggest a late summer release, and I'm cautiously optimistic. The Vertigo/DC connection means we're getting more Fables noir, more difficult choices, and hopefully fewer studio implosions. Fingers crossed that by Christmas I'll be chain-smoking along with Bigby once more.
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So there you have it β the 2022 hype tsunami as viewed from the calmer shores of 2026. Some games delivered, others taught us patience, and Wonder Woman has become my personal white whale. But the DC gaming universe keeps spinning, with whispers of a new Superman title and a Justice League Dark collaboration. I'll be here, controller in hand, ready to punch Brainiac or weep over delays. Come join me, won't you?
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