AT&T’s main streaming service, announced this month as HBO Max, will arrive next spring. With the superhero genre showing no signs of slowing down its blockbuster run, the addition of Batman and the rest of DC’s vault to AT&T’s new service would make sense, analysts say.

“DC has a vast library of content they can put on this platform,” said Frank Louthan, a telecommunications analyst at Raymond James. “Logically, it would make sense to put the DC Universe on the HBO Max service.”

Batman and his fellow superheroes already have a streaming home, DC Universe, a hub that includes original content and classic TV shows and movies, as well as digital comic books, merchandise and a community forum. Planning for DC Universe was well underway before AT&T’s acquisition of Time Warner went through last summer, and the service went live a few months afterward.

The competition in streaming will get tougher in the coming months as the Walt Disney Company enters the fray this fall with a new service, Disney Plus. With Pixar movies and the “Star Wars” franchise, among countless other hits, Disney’s service will certainly not lack for content — and at $7 a month, it will cost less than the typical Netflix subscription. Disney also owns DC’s main rival, Marvel Entertainment, the home of the Avengers, a team of superpowered frenemies that in recent years has generated more hit movies than its Justice League counterparts.

Unlike Marvel, DC has not created a cinematic universe dependent on interwoven, serial narratives. Its á la carte approach to superhero storytelling may have its drawbacks, but it has allowed consumers to watch movies like “Wonder Woman” and Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy, not to mention TV series like “The Flash” and “Gotham,” without feeling lost.