Essentially a DCU Hogwarts, complete with the obligatory 'are you sure they should be in a teaching environment?' characters (if you liked Snape, you'll love Mr E as Dean of Students!). Kwitney's introduction, despite its ostensible efforts to frame the series' long gestation as a fun, collegiate time which enabled it to be the best it could be, in fact confirms the general impression that DC has for some time now been a state of absolute chaos, with constant second-guessing, editorial revisions to their own revisions, briefs endlessly shifting, and departments not knowing what they're doing themselves, never mind what anybody else is. But while it's tempting to wonder what earlier versions would have been like, the one which was actually published is set within a time bubble created by the last magic-users as the terrible Malevolence destroyed them all, enabling them to have more time to prepare. Which also means that Zatanna has been de-aged and is one of the students, when you'd naturally expect her to be one of the teachers, especially given the rest of the faculty are established DC mystic characters (from Merlin to Rose Psychic), while most of the rest of the lead kids are legacy characters, descendants of various often-villainous wizards. This also means that yes, even within the palimpsest that is current DC continuity, this is yet another mini-revision, because there's nothing like constantly upending your timeline to make sure readers stay invested and feel the stories are meaningful. On the upside, I suppose without that excuse it wouldn't really be plausible to have characters like Cain & Abel, or the Three Witches, wandering around campus, and they are quite entertaining, although inevitably massively underused given the series' brief life. Instead, the main plot follows the kids trying to get along, fit in and such, as school stories will tend to – so basically a slightly aged-up version of the recently concluded Gotham Academy, except that there's also a 'which of the kids will become the Malevolence' subplot running, so it also feels like it's ripping off Avengers Academy. There are some fun bits and bobs along the way (the idea of a magically animated life-form derived from the physical and emotional gunk in a college's drains is horrifically brilliant), but overall, when it's been produced in such a mess of an environment, it's little wonder if it can't help but be a mess, any potential it had squandered in a rushed and generic denouement.
And now, of course, though I'd begun it before the news broke, it's the first Didio-era DC I've read since DC did for Didio. Which can't help but cement my feeling that, much as when Levitz left, what comes next will probably be even worse but all the same, good riddance.