Casanova Club: A nightclub owned by Alex Logue in
Newcastle, England. It was there that a demon was summoned and
John Constantine failed to save a young girl who was taken to Hell.
Crime Alley: The most dangerous area of Gotham City, where
Thomas and
Martha Wayne were killed by
Joe Chill during a mugging.
Hall of Justice: The one-time home base of the Justice League. A version of this is the headquarters of the Justice League in the animated series Super Friends. Another version of this appears in both Justice League Unlimited, and Young Justice, with the latter version acting as a public tourist spot and decoy to hide the existence of the Watchtower.
Justice Society Headquarters: Current version built on the foundation of the former
brownstone headquarters and museum. The former headquarters in Gotham City, the latter in Manhattan. Sometimes called Dodds Mansion.
LexCorp Towers complex: The former headquarters of
Lex Luthor. Located in Metropolis.
Titans Tower: The headquarters of the
Teen Titans, originally located in New York City. Currently located in San Francisco.
Underworld: A place in Metropolis's sewers which is rejected by society and where the Warworlders took control.
Valhalla Cemetery: A burial ground located in
Metropolis for superheroes who have died in the line of duty.
Wayne Manor: The ancestral home of
Batman. Located outside Gotham City.
Wayne Tower: The location of the main offices of Wayne Enterprises, located in downtown Gotham City.
Correctional facilities
Arkham Asylum: An asylum in Gotham City that houses criminally insane convicts.
Belle Reve: A high security
metahuman prison located in St. Roch,
Louisiana and the headquarters of the
Suicide Squad. In Smallville, Belle Reve Sanitarium is a prison for "meteor freaks" (
metahumans), and the mentally ill located near
Kansas. Belle Reve Special Security Barracks appears in the DC Extended Universe, as the location where
Lex Luthor was sent at the end of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice[2] and in Suicide Squad where it is revealed to be a
Black Site where the Suicide Squad is recruited. In The Suicide Squad the location has been renamed Belle Reve Correctional Center (and is also referred to in some paperwork as Belle Reve Penitentiary), and is implied to be under the authority of both A.R.G.U.S and US Department of Corrections (a fictional version of the
US Bureau of Prisons).
Gotham State Penitentiary: A prison located in the Sommerset neighborhood,[4] which is 12 miles from Arkham Asylum. It housed inmates like the Penguin,
Catman,
Deadshot,
Tony Zucco, Mortimer Kadavar and the
Cavalier, but shortly after Crisis on Infinite Earths, it was the site of a breakout by
Ra's al Ghul.[5] It appears in several episodes of Batman.
Iron Heights Penitentiary: A high security prison devised for many of the foes of either version of the
Flash. Located near
Keystone City.
Peña Duro: Also called Hard Rock in English, it is the former prison of the villain
Bane that is located in
Santa Prisca.[6] Alluded to in the final season of Gotham, where Bane was previously held prisoner but rescued by
Nyssa al Ghul.[7]
Rock Falls Penitentiary: A prison in
Rock Falls, Iowa where
Dr. Sivana is imprisoned after the events of Shazam!. It later appeared in the comics, where a special wing was built to house the magic-based enemies of the
Shazam Family.
Ravenscar Secure Facility: A mental asylum in
Yorkshire where
John Constantine was committed after the Newcastle Incident.
Slabside Island: Also called the Slab and Slabside Penitentiary, it is a high security metahuman prison. Originally in New Jersey, it was later transported to Antarctica after the Joker's "
Last Laugh" riot.
Shilo Norman was the original warden of Slabside Penitentiary. A version of it appears in Arrow called Slabside Maximum Security Prison where
Oliver Queen is sent to for crimes as the Green Arrow.[8]
AmerTek Industries: A military arms dealer previously in Washington, D.C.
John Henry Irons worked there until he discovered his inventions were being used for evil purposes. The company appears in a Season 5 episode of Arrow and alluded to in the Batman: Arkham series.
Steelworks: Located in Metropolis, founded and owned by
John Henry Irons.
Kord Industries: An industrial firm founded and owned by
Ted Kord. Kord Industries is mentioned in several episodes of Arrow and seen in Smallville episode "Booster".
LexCorp: An international multi-corporation founded and owned by
Lex Luthor.
Lord Technologies: Founded and owned by
Maxwell Lord in the Arrowverse. In Wonder Woman 1984, Black Gold Cooperative, also known as simply Black Gold, was an oil cooperative founded by Max Lord during the Cold War with
Simon Stagg.
Rathaway Industries: Founded by Osgood Rathaway, father of the
Pied Piper.
Stagg Enterprises: A research and development firm in genetics research founded by
Simon Stagg.
S.T.A.R. Labs: Brief for Scientific and Technological Advanced Research Laboratories, a place of scientific research on
metahuman studies located in various facilities. It "quickly became a mainstay of the pre-Flashpoint DC universe, acting as a prison for metahuman menaces and a medical resource for injured or mysteriously afflicted Super Heroes."[18] In The Flash TV series the S.T.A.R. Labs facility of Central City functions as the headquarter for the team around the titular hero. Perry Dantzler compares it to the Arrow Cave from the Arrow TV series, where a "dark, secretive atmosphere" with "solid walls and dim lighting" fits the focus on crime fighting. S.T.A.R. Labs, in contrast, is a bright space illuminated by natural light, with "white walls and gleaming equipment" designed to "remind viewers that the characters in the lab [...] are primarily scientists first and superhero teammates second." This emphasis on science influences the direction of the show: "The entirety of S.T.A.R. Labs reflects a need for uncovering the truth". S.T.A.R. Labs is a "high-tech space" which through the combination and application of knowledge empowers "the abilities of superheroes to flourish and improve", a "material space" where "superheroes' identities and abilities are shaped" through technology.[19]
Justice League Satellite: The headquarters of the
Justice League of America, located in orbit 22,300 miles above the surface of the Earth. It is destroyed during the
Crisis on Infinite Earths but rebuilt in Justice League of America Vol. 2 #7 after Infinite Crisis, later destroyed in Forever Evil.[20] A third one was gifted by
LexCorp under the title "Watchtower".[21]
Justice League Watchtower: Originally a
White Martian base located on the Moon, it is later used as the headquarters of the JLA during the run of JLA equipping with advanced technology from races like
New Genesis/
Apokalitian, and
Kryptonian.[22] In the
DC Animated Universe, it is depicted as having been built by Batman,[23] while in Justice League Action, it was built on a volcano in the waters around Metropolis that was created by the
Brothers Djinn and became dormant after their defeat.[24]
Portworld: An intergalactic spaceport and home of
Green Lanterns Wyxla and Tahr.[25]
Starlag: A prison station used by the Alien Alliance. First appeared in Invasion! #1 (January 1989).
Ranx the Sentient City: A sentient city and member of the
Sinestro Corps. It was first mentioned in the story "Tygers", in Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #2 (1986). It was destroyed by Green Lantern
Sodam Yat.[26]
Warworld: An artificial planet used by
Mongul and
Brainiac.
Schools and universities
Burnside College: The private college that Batgirl (Barbara Gordon) attends in the New 52 universe.
Gotham Academy: As of DC Rebirth continuity, it is a prestigious private boarding school that many of Gotham City's elite have attended. Previous incarnations of institutes with the name "Gotham Academy" includes The Batman and Young Justice television series, where it was the school of
Dick Grayson,
Artemis Crock,
Barbara Gordon, and others.
Gotham Military Academy: A military academy located in Gotham City. Colonel
Sophie Moore, a former classmate and girlfriend of
Kate Kane when the two attended
West Point, is an instructor there.[27]
Gotham University: Also called Gotham State University, it is located in Gotham City. In the Golden Age story "
The Man Behind the Red Hood!",
Batman and Robin, while teaching a criminology class, discovered that the
Joker was the criminal formerly known as the
Red Hood. Other staff and students include
Jonathan Crane[28] and
Stephanie Brown.
Holliday College: The main university in Gateway City.
Wonder Woman met the Beeta Lambda sorority members the Holliday Girls and
Etta Candy there.
Metropolis University: The main university in Metropolis. Clark Kent is an alumnus of MU.
Midwestern University: Located in Keystone City, this university is the alma mater of
Jay Garrick. In some stories, the school is called Western State University.[35]
Sanford Military Academy: An international boarding school with a reputation as a "dumping ground" for problem children from wealthy families.[36]
Stanhope College: A college located just outside Metropolis. Linda Lee, the
Silver Age Supergirl, was a former student.[37] Post-Crisis, the school, now located in Leesburg, Virginia, is renamed Stanhope University;
Linda Danvers is enrolled here.
Université Notre Dame des Ombres (Our Lady of the Shadows University): A college in France for the training of spies and super-enhanced humans. The headmistress is the former
Phantom Lady Sandra Knight. Graduates include the future Phantom Lady Dee Tyler, and
Vivian and Constance D'Aramis.
Codsville: A small fishing village in
Maine[46][47] for which the original
Doom Patrol gave their lives.[48] Renamed "Four Heroes City" after the death of the team.
Feithera: A hidden city of bird-people. The home of
Northwind. Located in Greenland (destroyed).
Freeland: Originally depicted as a neighborhood in the city of Metropolis. Reinvented for the Black Lightning TV show as a large city in Georgia. Home to Black Lightning and filled with metas (people with powers).
Keystone City: The home of both the first and third Flashes:
Jay Garrick and
Wally West, as well as
Jakeem Thunder. In post-Crisis stories, it is located across a river from Central City, located in
Kansas.[60] The city appears in several episodes of The Flash.
Metropolis: The home of
Superman. Metropolis is speculated to be located in the city of
Cleveland, Ohio or in a region of New York/New Jersey, although the vast majority of sources within DC have placed
Metropolis in Delaware, on the opposite side of the Delaware Bay from
Gotham City in New Jersey (in the
"Bronze Age" continuity, these two cities were considered "twin cities" and were connected by the "Metro-Narrows Bridge", stated to be the longest suspension bridge on Earth-One).[66]
Monument Point: The home to the Justice Society of America as they try to rebuild the city after they failed to save it from destruction.
Nanda Parbat: A mystical city hidden in the mountains of Tibet, primarily associated with the hero
Deadman. Depicted as the home of the
League of Assassins in the TV series Arrow.
National City: The home of
Supergirl. Originally created for
her eponymous TV series, but was later adapted into the comics,[71] and then used as Supergirl's home starting from DC Rebirth.[72] Located in southern California.
Santa Marta: This city served the Flash briefly as a base of operations. It was all but destroyed by
Major Disaster. Located in California.[79]
Science City: The home of the Titan
Red Star. Located in Russia.
Slaughter Swamp: A paranormal wetland region found on the outskirts of Gotham City and birthplace of
Solomon Grundy.[80] Featured in Super Friends as the site of the
Legion of Doom's headquarters, and briefly in Gotham.[81] It additionally appears as a stage in Injustice 2.
Solar City, Florida: The home of Bruce Gordon/
Eclipso.
Star City: The home of the
Green Arrow. Location has varied over the years; however, the DC Rebirth Green Arrow series specifically states it was originally
Seattle, only later being renamed Star City. In the Arrowverse, it was originally named Starling City before it was rebranded as Star City by Ray Palmer/Atom.
Sub Diego: A submerged part of San Diego located off the coast of California. It is the home of
Aquagirl and served as a base of operations for
Aquaman for a time. Run by Mayor
Cal Durham.
Superbia: The home base of the
Ultramarine Corps. Floated over the radioactive remains of
Montevideo, it was later floated and smashed into
Kinshasa.
New York City: The home base to many superheroes over the years, including the current incarnation of the
Teen Titans. Nicknamed "the Cinderella City" in the DC Universe.
Seattle: The current home base of the
Green Arrow and his company,
Q-Core and the former home city of the
Black Canary, where she owned and operated Sherwood Florist, a flower shop.
Capitol City: A major city near Shusterville, and the location of the office of the Bureau for Extra-Normal Matters, where Clark Kent and Lana Lang are interns. Located in Florida. (Superboy)
Dairyland: A lush farmland located in the
Heartland. (Super Friends: Season 1, Episode 7)
Edge City: The metropolitan area mentioned in various episodes of Smallville, including "Stray", "Ryan", "Power", "Doomsday", "Escape", "Prodigal", and "Sneeze".
Londinium: A fictionalized version of London, England. (Batman: Season 3, Episodes 105–107).
Steel City: The hometown of the Titans East in the Teen Titans series. Located on the East Coast.
Seaboard City: An alternate-universe city appearing in the Justice League episode "Legends". Home to the
Justice Guild of America and
Injustice Guild of America. Their exploits are viewed as fiction by the inhabitants of the main universe, who were inspired to create comics based on them.
Bana-Mighdall: A fictional Amazon nation located in the Middle East. Birthplace of
Artemis.
Bialya: A fictional Middle Eastern country and former refuge of supervillains, once ruled by the
Queen Bee. Its population was nearly wiped out by
Black Adam during 52.
Bhutran: A fictional isolated land in southern Asia surrounded by mountains. First appeared in Superman (vol. 2) #97 (February 1995).
Blackhawk Island: The former home base of the
Blackhawks.
Bulgravia: A fictional Balkan country. Setting for the first mission of the
Human Defense Corps.
Galonia: One of several minor European nations controlled by the Earth-Two
Lex Luthor.
Gotham Bay: A river which runs through Gotham City. Speculated to be the
Delaware Bay region in geography.
Hasaragua: A fictional South American country. Home of
Brutale.
Kahndaq: A fictional Middle Eastern country, home of, and formerly ruled by,
Black Adam. It is generally pictured as occupying part of the
Sinai Peninsula, the Asian portion of Egypt.
Nyasir: A fictional Eastern-African country; has strong 'Redemption' religious movement. Capital city: Buranda.
Oolong Island: A fictional location in the DC Universe and the home base of
Chang Tzu and occasionally the
Doom Patrol.
Quirian Emirates: A fictional country briefly mentioned in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "The Cape and Cowl Conspiracy", which Josiah Wormwood had a connection with (
DC Animated Universe).
Qurac: A fictional Middle Eastern country. It is located on the west side of the
Persian Gulf on the
Arabian Peninsula.
Rhapastan: A fictional Middle Eastern country said to border Turkey.
Plastic Man and
Aquaman attempt to broker a ceasefire there during the "Tower of Babel" storyline.[88]
Rheelasia: A fictional Asian country. First appeared in Birds of Prey #1 (January 1999).
San Monté: A fictional Latin American country. First appeared in "War in San Monté," Action Comics #2 (July 1938).
San Sebor: It was overthrown by the corporate-sponsored Conglomerate.
Superbia: A mobile city-state which initially floated above the radioactive ruins of
Montevideo, Uruguay.
Starfish Island: The island where billionaire Oliver Queen was stranded before becoming the
Green Arrow. In the
Arrowverse, it is known as Lian Yu and located in the
North China Sea.
Toran: One of several minor European nations controlled by the Earth-Two Lex Luthor.
Tropidor: A fictional Central American country.[89]
Tundi: A fictional West African country. After
David Zavimbe defeated its ruler, Lord Battle, the U.N. seized control to steer it toward democracy.[90]
Umec: A fictional Middle Eastern country. Its name is an acronym created by
Greg Rucka and stands for "unnamed Middle Eastern country".[91]
Khondra: The location of the secret military laboratory that created the sentient virus and
Sinestro Corps member Despotellis.
Khundia: The homeworld of the
Khunds; speculated to be near the
Great Bear constellation.
Korbal: A planetoid in the same solar system as Winath. It is here that
Garth,
Ayla, and
Mekt Ranzz obtained electrical powers after being attacked by
Lightning Beasts.[94][95]
Kreno: A planet where cyborgs are engineered. The homeworld of the cyborg mercenary B'aad.[96]
Krolotea: The homeworld of the
Krolotean Gremlins.[97]
Krypton: The homeworld of
Superman and
Supergirl (destroyed). Formerly located near
Pisces in the
Andromeda Galaxy, speculated to be pointed north towards
Libra in some modern versions. Krypton orbited the red giant
Rao within the
Pleiades in Post-Modern Age comics.
M'brai: A planet with a unique evolutionary system.[98]
Maag: The homeworld of the
Green Lantern Volk of Maag.
Muscaria: A planet primary inhabited by sentient fungi. The homeworld of
Green Lantern Amanita.[99]
Myrg: A planet ruled by Princess Ramia and her Terran consort/husband
Doiby Dickles.
Naftali: A planet that the
Martian Manhunter visited to meet an ancient holy man named K'rkzar; located in the galaxy
MACS0647-JD.
Oa: The homeworld of the
Guardians of the Universe, speculated to be near the center of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Mosaic World: A chaotic place on Oa where
Appa Ali Apsa transported various cities from different galaxies.
Odym: A Paradise-like planet, location of the
Blue Lantern Corps Power Battery.
The Obsidian Deeps: A Green Lantern Sector in deep space.
Orinda: A secret base of operations for the
Manhunters.
Ovacron Six: The homeworld of
Green LanternHannu. Its inhabitants disdain the use of weapons and rely on their own strength.[100]
Pandina: The homeworld of
Star Sapphire Remoni-Notra.
Puppet Planetoid: A planet in the
DC Universe in the 30th century. According to legend, a race of giants created playthings on this world long ago. It is now mostly uninhabited. A number of notable events took place here for the
Legion of Super-Heroes. When under attack from
Satan Girl,
Supergirl hid the Legion here.
Ultra Boy once saved
Sun Boy's life here. Former Legionnaire
Blok eventually found his way to this world and lived in seclusion for many years, until tracked down by the space pirate Roxxas, who used advanced Dominator weapons to kill him as a kind of "demonstration" for the
Dominators of his abilities.
Qualar IV: A planet primarily inhabited by humanoid chicken-like aliens. The homeworld of
Green Lantern Perdoo.
Rann: The adopted homeworld of
Adam Strange located in the Polara star system.
Saturn: It is orbited by the lunar homeworlds of the
Faceless Hunter,
Jemm, and the Red and White Saturnian races.
Kalamar: A subatomic lunar world.
Sol: The native white-yellow star and the source of Kryptonian superpowers on Earth.
Southern Goldstar: The homeworld of Green Lantern
Olapet.
Sputa: The bacterial homeworld of the Green Lantern
Larvox.
Takron-Galtos: A prison planet existing in the 30th and 31st centuries that houses high-profile inmates from around the galaxy. Destroyed during Crisis on Infinite Earths.[95]
Talok III: The homeworld of former
Starman Mikaal Tomas.
Thordia: A planet located near Cetus. The homeworld to
Darkstar's enemy Pay-Back.
Thoron: A planet in the same solar system as
Krypton. Its inhabitants gain superpowers under a yellow sun, but are not as strong as Kryptonians. The homeworld of Halk Kar.[101]
Throneworld: The capital of a galactic empire. Ruled by former
Starman Prince Gavyn.
Thronn: The homeworld of the
Thronnians and the Honor Team of Thronn.
Transilvane: An artificial planet created by
NASA to simulate extraterrestrial environments. Notable for having two large horn-like protuberances.[102]
Ydoc: A gladiatorial planet. The homeworld of
Green Lantern Vandor.
Ysmault: The
Guardians-sealed homeworld of the Empire of Tears and the location of the
Red Lantern Corps Power Battery.
Zakkaria: The homeworld of the Crimson Star Mob.
Zamaron: The homeworld of the Zamarons and the
Violet Lantern Corps. Speculated to be near
Sirius. Feminine intelligent Nordic or reptilian species can range anywhere to Virgo-Libra North and from Cetus, in the vicinity of Aquarius.
Zebron: A planet of plant-like people threatened by the Ravagers from Olys.
Bgztl: The homeworld of
Phantom Girl, where the natives have the power of intangibility. It is located parallel to Earth in another dimension.
Bismoll: The homeworld of Tenzil Kem (also known as
Matter-Eater Lad). The people of Bismoll have the ability to eat and digest all forms of matter, which they evolved by genetically engineering themselves after a radioactive dust cloud surrounded and isolated their planet and deadly microbes ravaged their food supplies.[95]
Braal: The homeworld of
Cosmic Boy and his younger brother Magnetic Kid. Braalians possess the power of magnetism, which they gained via genetic engineering to fend off hostile metallic creatures.[95]
Dryad: The homeworld of
Blok. After the planet was destroyed by its unstable radioactive core, its natives chose to enter a state of dormancy and be sent into space until they landed on a planet capable of sustaining them.[95]
Durla: The homeworld of
Chameleon Boy and his race of shapeshifters. They evolved this ability after a devastating nuclear war that destroyed most life on the planet; as a result, they took on drastically different forms, and their original form is unknown.[95]
Hajor: The homeworld of the telekinetic mutant
Kid Psycho.
Imsk: The homeworld of
Shrinking Violet. Imskians are able to shrink to tiny, even microscopic, size at will. The planet itself has also been rumored to shrink on occasion, but this have never been proven.[95]
Kathoon: A perpetually dark planet with no sun. The homeworld of
Night Girl.
The Labyrinth: A prison planet that served as a successor to Takron-Galtos.
Lallor: The homeworld of Duplicate Boy, Evolvo Lad, Gas Girl, Life Lass, and Beast Boy. It was previously a warlike world, which led to most life being destroyed and its remaining inhabitants becoming much more peaceful to make up for their past.[95]
Myar: The "alchemists' planet" and the homeworld of
Nemesis Kid.
Naltor: The homeworld of
Dream Girl. The inhabitants of Naltor have a matriarchal society and possess the power of dream-based
precognition.[95]
Nullport: A planetoid famed for the construction of spacecraft.
Orando: The medieval homeworld of
Princess Projectra (also known as Sensor Girl). Its inhabitants are largely emigrants from
Gemworld and possess a feudal society.[95]
Phlon: The homeworld of
Chemical King. It has a large amount of valuable minerals under its surface, making it important to the United Planets.[95]
Rawl (also spelled Raal): A planet originating from the Legion of Super Heroes animated series. It is here that
Brin Londo was experimented on by his father
Mar Londo and lived for some time before being rescued by the Legion.[104]
Shanghalla: An asteroid that serves as a burial place for the galaxy's greatest superheroes.[95]
Shwar: The homeworld of Fire Lad.
Somahtur: The homeworld of
Infectious Lass. It is largely unknown due to being only recently discovered and under quarantine from the United Planets.[95]
Starhaven: A planet colonized by
Native Americans, located near the center of the Milky Way. The homeworld of
Dawnstar.[95]
Tharr: The homeworld of
Polar Boy. It is among the hottest planets in its galaxy, which led some of its inhabitants to undergo genetic engineering to evolve the ability to project intense cold.[95]
Toomey VI: The homeworld of Green Lantern Barreer Wot.
Trom: The homeworld of
Element Lad, the last survivor of his planet's element-transmuting race. The planet has high levels of radiation, with the Trommites evolving within a valley with lesser levels and gaining their abilities from passive radiation exposure.[95]
Vonn: A planet invaded by the Tython.
Vengar: A tropical world and the home of the
Emerald Empress. After gaining her powers, she took over the planet before its people managed to overthrow her.[95]
Weber's World: An artificial planet and the headquarters of the
United Planets.[95]
Winath: An agricultural colony where twin births are the norm. It is the homeworld of the twins
Garth Ranzz (also known as Lightning Lad or Live Wire) and
Ayla Ranzz (also known as Lightning Lass or Spark) and their brother Mekt Ranzz (also known as
Lightning Lord).[95]
Xanthu: The homeworld of
Star Boy and Atmos. It is largely inhabited by scientists, who constructed several space stations to study the stars.[95]
Zerox: The name of Gemworld after it moved into the "main" dimension.[95] It is the homeworld of
Mordru and the planet where the
White Witch learned magic. In the Legion of Super Heroes animated series, it is depicted as a
bureaucracy with strict laws that is largely cut off from the rest of the universe and hidden with a cloaking spell.[105]
Zoon (or "Zuun"): The homeworld of
Timber Wolf. It is a formerly prosperous Zuunium-mining colony within a triple star system that was rendered largely uninhabitable due to excessive mining, with its remaining inhabitants moving underground.[95] In the Legion of Super Heroes animated series, it is additionally depicted as orbiting a
red sun.[106]
Zwen: The homeworld of Stone Boy. Its inhabitants developed the ability to transform themselves into stone to survive their planet's long periods of darkness and multiple predatory species.[95]
Fourth World: A dimension that exists between Hell and the Universe. Although it is not considered a universe in itself, it contains several worlds, the most prominent being Apokolips and New Genesis. The only means of transportation from this dimension to the Multiverse is the Boom Tube.
Hell: An abode of the demons and afterworld of the damned.
Hypertime: The interconnected web of divergent timelines.
Ifé: The other dimensional homeland of the African gods known as the Orishas, visited by the
Spectre when he is searching for God.[107]
Jejune Realm: A land of comical lesser gods from Vext.
Land of the Nightshades: A realm of shadow-manipulators. Birthworld of
Nightshade.
Land of the Unliving: The home dimension of the cosmic being known as
Nekron, Lord of the Unliving.
Limbo: The void between realities. Former prison of the Justice Society of America.
Magiclands: Seven different realms where magic reigns supreme and can only be accessed by a train station in the Rock of Eternity.[108]
Darklands: A place where the soul goes upon their death. It is also filled with
vampires,
mummies,
pumpkin monsters, and other spooky creatures.
Earthlands: See Earth above.
Funlands: A place that is made up of one big amusement park and is ruled by King Kid. Due to his hatred for adults, any kid who turns 18 will be placed in slavery to help maintain the Funlands.
Gamelands: A dimension that is based around the video game concept. It requires 1,000,000 points to access the CPU needed to leave the Gamelands.
Monsterlands: A dimension where the Monster Society of Evil are imprisoned in its Dungeon of Eternity. Each of its inmates are gathered throughout the Magiclands, including some from the Earthlands. Superboy-Prime was also shown to be imprisoned here. Mister Mind stated to Doctor Sivana that the Monsterlands used to be called the Gods' Realm until the day of Black Adam's betrayal, which led them to strip the gods of their powers and close the doors to the Magiclands.[109]
Wildlands: A dimension populated by anthropomorphic animals and where their humans are extinct. The tiger community is kept in a zoo because one tiger helped the humans during a war between the humans and the animals.
Mirror World: The Fourth Dimension. Home of the Duomalians and the Orinocas. Originally discovered by
Zatara, later rediscovered by the
Mirror Master.[111][112]
Purgatory: An afterworld where souls atone for their crimes.
Pytharia: An Earth-like realm resembling prehistoric history.
Rock of Eternity: The home of the wizard
Shazam, located at the center of space and time and enabling travel across them. It is where the
Seven Deadly Enemies of Man are imprisoned.
Savoth: A planet that is the homeworld of the Savothians,
camel-like aliens who hold a longstanding friendship with the Flash family. The planet is located in another dimension from Earth, which can only be accessed by the Speed Force.
Shadowlands: A place of primordial darkness. It is the power source for
Obsidian and the
Shade, among others.
Silver City: The abode of the angels and afterworld of the blessed.
Sixth Dimension: It serves as the "Multiverse Control Room" which is at the top of the Multiverse scale. The Super Celestial Perpetua created her children the
Monitor, the
Anti-Monitor, and the World Forger here and either one can regenerate here if they are killed.
Skartaris: A magic dimension located "within" the Earth. Current home of Travis Morgan, the
Warlord.
Casanova Club: A nightclub owned by Alex Logue in
Newcastle, England. It was there that a demon was summoned and
John Constantine failed to save a young girl who was taken to Hell.
Crime Alley: The most dangerous area of Gotham City, where
Thomas and
Martha Wayne were killed by
Joe Chill during a mugging.
Hall of Justice: The one-time home base of the Justice League. A version of this is the headquarters of the Justice League in the animated series Super Friends. Another version of this appears in both Justice League Unlimited, and Young Justice, with the latter version acting as a public tourist spot and decoy to hide the existence of the Watchtower.
Justice Society Headquarters: Current version built on the foundation of the former
brownstone headquarters and museum. The former headquarters in Gotham City, the latter in Manhattan. Sometimes called Dodds Mansion.
LexCorp Towers complex: The former headquarters of
Lex Luthor. Located in Metropolis.
Titans Tower: The headquarters of the
Teen Titans, originally located in New York City. Currently located in San Francisco.
Underworld: A place in Metropolis's sewers which is rejected by society and where the Warworlders took control.
Valhalla Cemetery: A burial ground located in
Metropolis for superheroes who have died in the line of duty.
Wayne Manor: The ancestral home of
Batman. Located outside Gotham City.
Wayne Tower: The location of the main offices of Wayne Enterprises, located in downtown Gotham City.
Correctional facilities
Arkham Asylum: An asylum in Gotham City that houses criminally insane convicts.
Belle Reve: A high security
metahuman prison located in St. Roch,
Louisiana and the headquarters of the
Suicide Squad. In Smallville, Belle Reve Sanitarium is a prison for "meteor freaks" (
metahumans), and the mentally ill located near
Kansas. Belle Reve Special Security Barracks appears in the DC Extended Universe, as the location where
Lex Luthor was sent at the end of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice[2] and in Suicide Squad where it is revealed to be a
Black Site where the Suicide Squad is recruited. In The Suicide Squad the location has been renamed Belle Reve Correctional Center (and is also referred to in some paperwork as Belle Reve Penitentiary), and is implied to be under the authority of both A.R.G.U.S and US Department of Corrections (a fictional version of the
US Bureau of Prisons).
Gotham State Penitentiary: A prison located in the Sommerset neighborhood,[4] which is 12 miles from Arkham Asylum. It housed inmates like the Penguin,
Catman,
Deadshot,
Tony Zucco, Mortimer Kadavar and the
Cavalier, but shortly after Crisis on Infinite Earths, it was the site of a breakout by
Ra's al Ghul.[5] It appears in several episodes of Batman.
Iron Heights Penitentiary: A high security prison devised for many of the foes of either version of the
Flash. Located near
Keystone City.
Peña Duro: Also called Hard Rock in English, it is the former prison of the villain
Bane that is located in
Santa Prisca.[6] Alluded to in the final season of Gotham, where Bane was previously held prisoner but rescued by
Nyssa al Ghul.[7]
Rock Falls Penitentiary: A prison in
Rock Falls, Iowa where
Dr. Sivana is imprisoned after the events of Shazam!. It later appeared in the comics, where a special wing was built to house the magic-based enemies of the
Shazam Family.
Ravenscar Secure Facility: A mental asylum in
Yorkshire where
John Constantine was committed after the Newcastle Incident.
Slabside Island: Also called the Slab and Slabside Penitentiary, it is a high security metahuman prison. Originally in New Jersey, it was later transported to Antarctica after the Joker's "
Last Laugh" riot.
Shilo Norman was the original warden of Slabside Penitentiary. A version of it appears in Arrow called Slabside Maximum Security Prison where
Oliver Queen is sent to for crimes as the Green Arrow.[8]
AmerTek Industries: A military arms dealer previously in Washington, D.C.
John Henry Irons worked there until he discovered his inventions were being used for evil purposes. The company appears in a Season 5 episode of Arrow and alluded to in the Batman: Arkham series.
Steelworks: Located in Metropolis, founded and owned by
John Henry Irons.
Kord Industries: An industrial firm founded and owned by
Ted Kord. Kord Industries is mentioned in several episodes of Arrow and seen in Smallville episode "Booster".
LexCorp: An international multi-corporation founded and owned by
Lex Luthor.
Lord Technologies: Founded and owned by
Maxwell Lord in the Arrowverse. In Wonder Woman 1984, Black Gold Cooperative, also known as simply Black Gold, was an oil cooperative founded by Max Lord during the Cold War with
Simon Stagg.
Rathaway Industries: Founded by Osgood Rathaway, father of the
Pied Piper.
Stagg Enterprises: A research and development firm in genetics research founded by
Simon Stagg.
S.T.A.R. Labs: Brief for Scientific and Technological Advanced Research Laboratories, a place of scientific research on
metahuman studies located in various facilities. It "quickly became a mainstay of the pre-Flashpoint DC universe, acting as a prison for metahuman menaces and a medical resource for injured or mysteriously afflicted Super Heroes."[18] In The Flash TV series the S.T.A.R. Labs facility of Central City functions as the headquarter for the team around the titular hero. Perry Dantzler compares it to the Arrow Cave from the Arrow TV series, where a "dark, secretive atmosphere" with "solid walls and dim lighting" fits the focus on crime fighting. S.T.A.R. Labs, in contrast, is a bright space illuminated by natural light, with "white walls and gleaming equipment" designed to "remind viewers that the characters in the lab [...] are primarily scientists first and superhero teammates second." This emphasis on science influences the direction of the show: "The entirety of S.T.A.R. Labs reflects a need for uncovering the truth". S.T.A.R. Labs is a "high-tech space" which through the combination and application of knowledge empowers "the abilities of superheroes to flourish and improve", a "material space" where "superheroes' identities and abilities are shaped" through technology.[19]
Justice League Satellite: The headquarters of the
Justice League of America, located in orbit 22,300 miles above the surface of the Earth. It is destroyed during the
Crisis on Infinite Earths but rebuilt in Justice League of America Vol. 2 #7 after Infinite Crisis, later destroyed in Forever Evil.[20] A third one was gifted by
LexCorp under the title "Watchtower".[21]
Justice League Watchtower: Originally a
White Martian base located on the Moon, it is later used as the headquarters of the JLA during the run of JLA equipping with advanced technology from races like
New Genesis/
Apokalitian, and
Kryptonian.[22] In the
DC Animated Universe, it is depicted as having been built by Batman,[23] while in Justice League Action, it was built on a volcano in the waters around Metropolis that was created by the
Brothers Djinn and became dormant after their defeat.[24]
Portworld: An intergalactic spaceport and home of
Green Lanterns Wyxla and Tahr.[25]
Starlag: A prison station used by the Alien Alliance. First appeared in Invasion! #1 (January 1989).
Ranx the Sentient City: A sentient city and member of the
Sinestro Corps. It was first mentioned in the story "Tygers", in Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #2 (1986). It was destroyed by Green Lantern
Sodam Yat.[26]
Warworld: An artificial planet used by
Mongul and
Brainiac.
Schools and universities
Burnside College: The private college that Batgirl (Barbara Gordon) attends in the New 52 universe.
Gotham Academy: As of DC Rebirth continuity, it is a prestigious private boarding school that many of Gotham City's elite have attended. Previous incarnations of institutes with the name "Gotham Academy" includes The Batman and Young Justice television series, where it was the school of
Dick Grayson,
Artemis Crock,
Barbara Gordon, and others.
Gotham Military Academy: A military academy located in Gotham City. Colonel
Sophie Moore, a former classmate and girlfriend of
Kate Kane when the two attended
West Point, is an instructor there.[27]
Gotham University: Also called Gotham State University, it is located in Gotham City. In the Golden Age story "
The Man Behind the Red Hood!",
Batman and Robin, while teaching a criminology class, discovered that the
Joker was the criminal formerly known as the
Red Hood. Other staff and students include
Jonathan Crane[28] and
Stephanie Brown.
Holliday College: The main university in Gateway City.
Wonder Woman met the Beeta Lambda sorority members the Holliday Girls and
Etta Candy there.
Metropolis University: The main university in Metropolis. Clark Kent is an alumnus of MU.
Midwestern University: Located in Keystone City, this university is the alma mater of
Jay Garrick. In some stories, the school is called Western State University.[35]
Sanford Military Academy: An international boarding school with a reputation as a "dumping ground" for problem children from wealthy families.[36]
Stanhope College: A college located just outside Metropolis. Linda Lee, the
Silver Age Supergirl, was a former student.[37] Post-Crisis, the school, now located in Leesburg, Virginia, is renamed Stanhope University;
Linda Danvers is enrolled here.
Université Notre Dame des Ombres (Our Lady of the Shadows University): A college in France for the training of spies and super-enhanced humans. The headmistress is the former
Phantom Lady Sandra Knight. Graduates include the future Phantom Lady Dee Tyler, and
Vivian and Constance D'Aramis.
Codsville: A small fishing village in
Maine[46][47] for which the original
Doom Patrol gave their lives.[48] Renamed "Four Heroes City" after the death of the team.
Feithera: A hidden city of bird-people. The home of
Northwind. Located in Greenland (destroyed).
Freeland: Originally depicted as a neighborhood in the city of Metropolis. Reinvented for the Black Lightning TV show as a large city in Georgia. Home to Black Lightning and filled with metas (people with powers).
Keystone City: The home of both the first and third Flashes:
Jay Garrick and
Wally West, as well as
Jakeem Thunder. In post-Crisis stories, it is located across a river from Central City, located in
Kansas.[60] The city appears in several episodes of The Flash.
Metropolis: The home of
Superman. Metropolis is speculated to be located in the city of
Cleveland, Ohio or in a region of New York/New Jersey, although the vast majority of sources within DC have placed
Metropolis in Delaware, on the opposite side of the Delaware Bay from
Gotham City in New Jersey (in the
"Bronze Age" continuity, these two cities were considered "twin cities" and were connected by the "Metro-Narrows Bridge", stated to be the longest suspension bridge on Earth-One).[66]
Monument Point: The home to the Justice Society of America as they try to rebuild the city after they failed to save it from destruction.
Nanda Parbat: A mystical city hidden in the mountains of Tibet, primarily associated with the hero
Deadman. Depicted as the home of the
League of Assassins in the TV series Arrow.
National City: The home of
Supergirl. Originally created for
her eponymous TV series, but was later adapted into the comics,[71] and then used as Supergirl's home starting from DC Rebirth.[72] Located in southern California.
Santa Marta: This city served the Flash briefly as a base of operations. It was all but destroyed by
Major Disaster. Located in California.[79]
Science City: The home of the Titan
Red Star. Located in Russia.
Slaughter Swamp: A paranormal wetland region found on the outskirts of Gotham City and birthplace of
Solomon Grundy.[80] Featured in Super Friends as the site of the
Legion of Doom's headquarters, and briefly in Gotham.[81] It additionally appears as a stage in Injustice 2.
Solar City, Florida: The home of Bruce Gordon/
Eclipso.
Star City: The home of the
Green Arrow. Location has varied over the years; however, the DC Rebirth Green Arrow series specifically states it was originally
Seattle, only later being renamed Star City. In the Arrowverse, it was originally named Starling City before it was rebranded as Star City by Ray Palmer/Atom.
Sub Diego: A submerged part of San Diego located off the coast of California. It is the home of
Aquagirl and served as a base of operations for
Aquaman for a time. Run by Mayor
Cal Durham.
Superbia: The home base of the
Ultramarine Corps. Floated over the radioactive remains of
Montevideo, it was later floated and smashed into
Kinshasa.
New York City: The home base to many superheroes over the years, including the current incarnation of the
Teen Titans. Nicknamed "the Cinderella City" in the DC Universe.
Seattle: The current home base of the
Green Arrow and his company,
Q-Core and the former home city of the
Black Canary, where she owned and operated Sherwood Florist, a flower shop.
Capitol City: A major city near Shusterville, and the location of the office of the Bureau for Extra-Normal Matters, where Clark Kent and Lana Lang are interns. Located in Florida. (Superboy)
Dairyland: A lush farmland located in the
Heartland. (Super Friends: Season 1, Episode 7)
Edge City: The metropolitan area mentioned in various episodes of Smallville, including "Stray", "Ryan", "Power", "Doomsday", "Escape", "Prodigal", and "Sneeze".
Londinium: A fictionalized version of London, England. (Batman: Season 3, Episodes 105–107).
Steel City: The hometown of the Titans East in the Teen Titans series. Located on the East Coast.
Seaboard City: An alternate-universe city appearing in the Justice League episode "Legends". Home to the
Justice Guild of America and
Injustice Guild of America. Their exploits are viewed as fiction by the inhabitants of the main universe, who were inspired to create comics based on them.
Bana-Mighdall: A fictional Amazon nation located in the Middle East. Birthplace of
Artemis.
Bialya: A fictional Middle Eastern country and former refuge of supervillains, once ruled by the
Queen Bee. Its population was nearly wiped out by
Black Adam during 52.
Bhutran: A fictional isolated land in southern Asia surrounded by mountains. First appeared in Superman (vol. 2) #97 (February 1995).
Blackhawk Island: The former home base of the
Blackhawks.
Bulgravia: A fictional Balkan country. Setting for the first mission of the
Human Defense Corps.
Galonia: One of several minor European nations controlled by the Earth-Two
Lex Luthor.
Gotham Bay: A river which runs through Gotham City. Speculated to be the
Delaware Bay region in geography.
Hasaragua: A fictional South American country. Home of
Brutale.
Kahndaq: A fictional Middle Eastern country, home of, and formerly ruled by,
Black Adam. It is generally pictured as occupying part of the
Sinai Peninsula, the Asian portion of Egypt.
Nyasir: A fictional Eastern-African country; has strong 'Redemption' religious movement. Capital city: Buranda.
Oolong Island: A fictional location in the DC Universe and the home base of
Chang Tzu and occasionally the
Doom Patrol.
Quirian Emirates: A fictional country briefly mentioned in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "The Cape and Cowl Conspiracy", which Josiah Wormwood had a connection with (
DC Animated Universe).
Qurac: A fictional Middle Eastern country. It is located on the west side of the
Persian Gulf on the
Arabian Peninsula.
Rhapastan: A fictional Middle Eastern country said to border Turkey.
Plastic Man and
Aquaman attempt to broker a ceasefire there during the "Tower of Babel" storyline.[88]
Rheelasia: A fictional Asian country. First appeared in Birds of Prey #1 (January 1999).
San Monté: A fictional Latin American country. First appeared in "War in San Monté," Action Comics #2 (July 1938).
San Sebor: It was overthrown by the corporate-sponsored Conglomerate.
Superbia: A mobile city-state which initially floated above the radioactive ruins of
Montevideo, Uruguay.
Starfish Island: The island where billionaire Oliver Queen was stranded before becoming the
Green Arrow. In the
Arrowverse, it is known as Lian Yu and located in the
North China Sea.
Toran: One of several minor European nations controlled by the Earth-Two Lex Luthor.
Tropidor: A fictional Central American country.[89]
Tundi: A fictional West African country. After
David Zavimbe defeated its ruler, Lord Battle, the U.N. seized control to steer it toward democracy.[90]
Umec: A fictional Middle Eastern country. Its name is an acronym created by
Greg Rucka and stands for "unnamed Middle Eastern country".[91]
Khondra: The location of the secret military laboratory that created the sentient virus and
Sinestro Corps member Despotellis.
Khundia: The homeworld of the
Khunds; speculated to be near the
Great Bear constellation.
Korbal: A planetoid in the same solar system as Winath. It is here that
Garth,
Ayla, and
Mekt Ranzz obtained electrical powers after being attacked by
Lightning Beasts.[94][95]
Kreno: A planet where cyborgs are engineered. The homeworld of the cyborg mercenary B'aad.[96]
Krolotea: The homeworld of the
Krolotean Gremlins.[97]
Krypton: The homeworld of
Superman and
Supergirl (destroyed). Formerly located near
Pisces in the
Andromeda Galaxy, speculated to be pointed north towards
Libra in some modern versions. Krypton orbited the red giant
Rao within the
Pleiades in Post-Modern Age comics.
M'brai: A planet with a unique evolutionary system.[98]
Maag: The homeworld of the
Green Lantern Volk of Maag.
Muscaria: A planet primary inhabited by sentient fungi. The homeworld of
Green Lantern Amanita.[99]
Myrg: A planet ruled by Princess Ramia and her Terran consort/husband
Doiby Dickles.
Naftali: A planet that the
Martian Manhunter visited to meet an ancient holy man named K'rkzar; located in the galaxy
MACS0647-JD.
Oa: The homeworld of the
Guardians of the Universe, speculated to be near the center of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Mosaic World: A chaotic place on Oa where
Appa Ali Apsa transported various cities from different galaxies.
Odym: A Paradise-like planet, location of the
Blue Lantern Corps Power Battery.
The Obsidian Deeps: A Green Lantern Sector in deep space.
Orinda: A secret base of operations for the
Manhunters.
Ovacron Six: The homeworld of
Green LanternHannu. Its inhabitants disdain the use of weapons and rely on their own strength.[100]
Pandina: The homeworld of
Star Sapphire Remoni-Notra.
Puppet Planetoid: A planet in the
DC Universe in the 30th century. According to legend, a race of giants created playthings on this world long ago. It is now mostly uninhabited. A number of notable events took place here for the
Legion of Super-Heroes. When under attack from
Satan Girl,
Supergirl hid the Legion here.
Ultra Boy once saved
Sun Boy's life here. Former Legionnaire
Blok eventually found his way to this world and lived in seclusion for many years, until tracked down by the space pirate Roxxas, who used advanced Dominator weapons to kill him as a kind of "demonstration" for the
Dominators of his abilities.
Qualar IV: A planet primarily inhabited by humanoid chicken-like aliens. The homeworld of
Green Lantern Perdoo.
Rann: The adopted homeworld of
Adam Strange located in the Polara star system.
Saturn: It is orbited by the lunar homeworlds of the
Faceless Hunter,
Jemm, and the Red and White Saturnian races.
Kalamar: A subatomic lunar world.
Sol: The native white-yellow star and the source of Kryptonian superpowers on Earth.
Southern Goldstar: The homeworld of Green Lantern
Olapet.
Sputa: The bacterial homeworld of the Green Lantern
Larvox.
Takron-Galtos: A prison planet existing in the 30th and 31st centuries that houses high-profile inmates from around the galaxy. Destroyed during Crisis on Infinite Earths.[95]
Talok III: The homeworld of former
Starman Mikaal Tomas.
Thordia: A planet located near Cetus. The homeworld to
Darkstar's enemy Pay-Back.
Thoron: A planet in the same solar system as
Krypton. Its inhabitants gain superpowers under a yellow sun, but are not as strong as Kryptonians. The homeworld of Halk Kar.[101]
Throneworld: The capital of a galactic empire. Ruled by former
Starman Prince Gavyn.
Thronn: The homeworld of the
Thronnians and the Honor Team of Thronn.
Transilvane: An artificial planet created by
NASA to simulate extraterrestrial environments. Notable for having two large horn-like protuberances.[102]
Ydoc: A gladiatorial planet. The homeworld of
Green Lantern Vandor.
Ysmault: The
Guardians-sealed homeworld of the Empire of Tears and the location of the
Red Lantern Corps Power Battery.
Zakkaria: The homeworld of the Crimson Star Mob.
Zamaron: The homeworld of the Zamarons and the
Violet Lantern Corps. Speculated to be near
Sirius. Feminine intelligent Nordic or reptilian species can range anywhere to Virgo-Libra North and from Cetus, in the vicinity of Aquarius.
Zebron: A planet of plant-like people threatened by the Ravagers from Olys.
Bgztl: The homeworld of
Phantom Girl, where the natives have the power of intangibility. It is located parallel to Earth in another dimension.
Bismoll: The homeworld of Tenzil Kem (also known as
Matter-Eater Lad). The people of Bismoll have the ability to eat and digest all forms of matter, which they evolved by genetically engineering themselves after a radioactive dust cloud surrounded and isolated their planet and deadly microbes ravaged their food supplies.[95]
Braal: The homeworld of
Cosmic Boy and his younger brother Magnetic Kid. Braalians possess the power of magnetism, which they gained via genetic engineering to fend off hostile metallic creatures.[95]
Dryad: The homeworld of
Blok. After the planet was destroyed by its unstable radioactive core, its natives chose to enter a state of dormancy and be sent into space until they landed on a planet capable of sustaining them.[95]
Durla: The homeworld of
Chameleon Boy and his race of shapeshifters. They evolved this ability after a devastating nuclear war that destroyed most life on the planet; as a result, they took on drastically different forms, and their original form is unknown.[95]
Hajor: The homeworld of the telekinetic mutant
Kid Psycho.
Imsk: The homeworld of
Shrinking Violet. Imskians are able to shrink to tiny, even microscopic, size at will. The planet itself has also been rumored to shrink on occasion, but this have never been proven.[95]
Kathoon: A perpetually dark planet with no sun. The homeworld of
Night Girl.
The Labyrinth: A prison planet that served as a successor to Takron-Galtos.
Lallor: The homeworld of Duplicate Boy, Evolvo Lad, Gas Girl, Life Lass, and Beast Boy. It was previously a warlike world, which led to most life being destroyed and its remaining inhabitants becoming much more peaceful to make up for their past.[95]
Myar: The "alchemists' planet" and the homeworld of
Nemesis Kid.
Naltor: The homeworld of
Dream Girl. The inhabitants of Naltor have a matriarchal society and possess the power of dream-based
precognition.[95]
Nullport: A planetoid famed for the construction of spacecraft.
Orando: The medieval homeworld of
Princess Projectra (also known as Sensor Girl). Its inhabitants are largely emigrants from
Gemworld and possess a feudal society.[95]
Phlon: The homeworld of
Chemical King. It has a large amount of valuable minerals under its surface, making it important to the United Planets.[95]
Rawl (also spelled Raal): A planet originating from the Legion of Super Heroes animated series. It is here that
Brin Londo was experimented on by his father
Mar Londo and lived for some time before being rescued by the Legion.[104]
Shanghalla: An asteroid that serves as a burial place for the galaxy's greatest superheroes.[95]
Shwar: The homeworld of Fire Lad.
Somahtur: The homeworld of
Infectious Lass. It is largely unknown due to being only recently discovered and under quarantine from the United Planets.[95]
Starhaven: A planet colonized by
Native Americans, located near the center of the Milky Way. The homeworld of
Dawnstar.[95]
Tharr: The homeworld of
Polar Boy. It is among the hottest planets in its galaxy, which led some of its inhabitants to undergo genetic engineering to evolve the ability to project intense cold.[95]
Toomey VI: The homeworld of Green Lantern Barreer Wot.
Trom: The homeworld of
Element Lad, the last survivor of his planet's element-transmuting race. The planet has high levels of radiation, with the Trommites evolving within a valley with lesser levels and gaining their abilities from passive radiation exposure.[95]
Vonn: A planet invaded by the Tython.
Vengar: A tropical world and the home of the
Emerald Empress. After gaining her powers, she took over the planet before its people managed to overthrow her.[95]
Weber's World: An artificial planet and the headquarters of the
United Planets.[95]
Winath: An agricultural colony where twin births are the norm. It is the homeworld of the twins
Garth Ranzz (also known as Lightning Lad or Live Wire) and
Ayla Ranzz (also known as Lightning Lass or Spark) and their brother Mekt Ranzz (also known as
Lightning Lord).[95]
Xanthu: The homeworld of
Star Boy and Atmos. It is largely inhabited by scientists, who constructed several space stations to study the stars.[95]
Zerox: The name of Gemworld after it moved into the "main" dimension.[95] It is the homeworld of
Mordru and the planet where the
White Witch learned magic. In the Legion of Super Heroes animated series, it is depicted as a
bureaucracy with strict laws that is largely cut off from the rest of the universe and hidden with a cloaking spell.[105]
Zoon (or "Zuun"): The homeworld of
Timber Wolf. It is a formerly prosperous Zuunium-mining colony within a triple star system that was rendered largely uninhabitable due to excessive mining, with its remaining inhabitants moving underground.[95] In the Legion of Super Heroes animated series, it is additionally depicted as orbiting a
red sun.[106]
Zwen: The homeworld of Stone Boy. Its inhabitants developed the ability to transform themselves into stone to survive their planet's long periods of darkness and multiple predatory species.[95]
Fourth World: A dimension that exists between Hell and the Universe. Although it is not considered a universe in itself, it contains several worlds, the most prominent being Apokolips and New Genesis. The only means of transportation from this dimension to the Multiverse is the Boom Tube.
Hell: An abode of the demons and afterworld of the damned.
Hypertime: The interconnected web of divergent timelines.
Ifé: The other dimensional homeland of the African gods known as the Orishas, visited by the
Spectre when he is searching for God.[107]
Jejune Realm: A land of comical lesser gods from Vext.
Land of the Nightshades: A realm of shadow-manipulators. Birthworld of
Nightshade.
Land of the Unliving: The home dimension of the cosmic being known as
Nekron, Lord of the Unliving.
Limbo: The void between realities. Former prison of the Justice Society of America.
Magiclands: Seven different realms where magic reigns supreme and can only be accessed by a train station in the Rock of Eternity.[108]
Darklands: A place where the soul goes upon their death. It is also filled with
vampires,
mummies,
pumpkin monsters, and other spooky creatures.
Earthlands: See Earth above.
Funlands: A place that is made up of one big amusement park and is ruled by King Kid. Due to his hatred for adults, any kid who turns 18 will be placed in slavery to help maintain the Funlands.
Gamelands: A dimension that is based around the video game concept. It requires 1,000,000 points to access the CPU needed to leave the Gamelands.
Monsterlands: A dimension where the Monster Society of Evil are imprisoned in its Dungeon of Eternity. Each of its inmates are gathered throughout the Magiclands, including some from the Earthlands. Superboy-Prime was also shown to be imprisoned here. Mister Mind stated to Doctor Sivana that the Monsterlands used to be called the Gods' Realm until the day of Black Adam's betrayal, which led them to strip the gods of their powers and close the doors to the Magiclands.[109]
Wildlands: A dimension populated by anthropomorphic animals and where their humans are extinct. The tiger community is kept in a zoo because one tiger helped the humans during a war between the humans and the animals.
Mirror World: The Fourth Dimension. Home of the Duomalians and the Orinocas. Originally discovered by
Zatara, later rediscovered by the
Mirror Master.[111][112]
Purgatory: An afterworld where souls atone for their crimes.
Pytharia: An Earth-like realm resembling prehistoric history.
Rock of Eternity: The home of the wizard
Shazam, located at the center of space and time and enabling travel across them. It is where the
Seven Deadly Enemies of Man are imprisoned.
Savoth: A planet that is the homeworld of the Savothians,
camel-like aliens who hold a longstanding friendship with the Flash family. The planet is located in another dimension from Earth, which can only be accessed by the Speed Force.
Shadowlands: A place of primordial darkness. It is the power source for
Obsidian and the
Shade, among others.
Silver City: The abode of the angels and afterworld of the blessed.
Sixth Dimension: It serves as the "Multiverse Control Room" which is at the top of the Multiverse scale. The Super Celestial Perpetua created her children the
Monitor, the
Anti-Monitor, and the World Forger here and either one can regenerate here if they are killed.
Skartaris: A magic dimension located "within" the Earth. Current home of Travis Morgan, the
Warlord.