With their official solicitations for product being released in January 2017 coming out on Monday, DC has provided ComicBook.com with an exclusive first look at three key solicitations, along with the covers to Superman, Supergirl, and Titans issues due in stores that month. You can check them out in the attached gallery, along with some notes on what makes us so excited about the issues and what we're predicting the ever-cryptic solicitation text might mean. (Photo: DC Entertainment) Thus far, Superman and Titans have been among DC's best-reviewed and best-selling series since the Rebirth relaunch at the end of May. Supergirl has only released two issues thus far, but continues to excite fans by blending sensibilities from throughout the character's history, including elements of The CW's Supergirl, which recently debuted its second season to more than 3 million viewers -- an 8-year high for the time slot. So check out what we think we've figured out based on the official information contained here, and let us know in the comments if you think we missed something or are way off-base.

SUPERMAN #14 (Photo: DC Entertainment) Written by PETER J. TOMASI and PATRICK GLEASON

Art by IVAN REIS and JOE PRADO

Covers by PATRICK GLEASON and MICK GRAY

Variant cover by ANDREW ROBINSON “MULTIPLICITY” part one! The New Super-Man of China has been taken! The Red Son Superman of Earth-30 has been beaten! And who knows what’s happened to Sunshine Superman! Someone is collecting Supermen across the Multiverse—this looks like a job for our Kal-El as he is joined by Justice Incarnate in this multi-Earth epic! On sale JANUARY 4 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T This is hardly the first time we've seen Superman team up with alternate-universe versions of himself, so what makes this one special? Well, for starters, Justice Incarnate, which is the team assembled during Grant Morrison's continuity-shaking The Multiversity. The scope of that series was pretty massive, and it seems to suggest that Superman, which is currently taking place on Dinosaur Island and interacting with events and imagery from Darwyn Cooke's DC: The New Frontier, is a book where they can go anywhere and do anything. It's also interesting to note that the Superman currently appearing in the DC Universe is in fact the same one who was part of Convergence, so some of these Supermen might be very familiar to him. Whether any of that history will come back to bite the operation is anybody's guess, especially since the last time the various Supermen were all in one place it was on Telos and they weren't working very well together. prevnext

SUPERGIRL #5 (Photo: DC Entertainment) Written by STEVE ORLANDO

Art and cover by BRIAN CHING

Variant cover by BENGAL “REIGN OF THE CYBORG SUPERMEN” part five! As National City becomes a war zone, Cyborg Superman’s plan to resurrect Argo City reaches its deadly final phase: rain Argo City itself down upon the earth! Supergirl is all that stands in the way of total destruction—but with the clock ticking and the stakes rising she’ll need more than just brute force. She’ll need the help of…Cat Grant? On sale JANUARY 11 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T There's a bit less to say about this one. Certainly the fact that Steve Orlando's take on Cat Grant will get to take center stage just as the TV version is taking a reduced role is an interesting move. At the same time, we have to say something about the decision to bring Argo City back by "raining [it] down upon the earth." There's a lot of things to think about there, from the fact that a Kryptonian city would likely be chock full of Kryptonite to the fact that this whole obsession with creating a new Krypton has happened over and over again, from The Eradicator and the Krypton Man to Zod and the Kryptonians in the "War of the Supermen." prevnext