Never mind fighting styles: Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman's coffee orders say far more about their characters than any of their other features. This trio is DC's most iconic circle of friends, and when they get together for coffee, readers can definitely see what makes them so unique and so well-suited for each other.

This so-called "Trinity" might be three of DC's most powerful characters, but they also have thriving private lives. In daylight, Batman is, of course, the famous Bruce Wayne: a Gotham socialite and philanthropist known for his playboy tendencies and vapid personality. Superman is also known as Clark Kent, the mild-mannered Daily Planet reporter from a small farm in Kansas. Unlike Batman and Superman, Wonder Woman's "secret" identity is perhaps closest to her own personality; she rarely changes anything major about herself or even leads a double life. Known as Diana Prince in Man's World, Diana has had a variety of careers, from ambassador to boutique manager, but she feels closest to her role as Wonder Woman.

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Readers can see these sometimes-false personalities clash when Wonder Woman, Superman, and Batman order coffee in their civilian guises in Trinity #1 by Fabian Nicieza, Kurt Busiek, Scott McDaniel, Andy Owens, Mark Bagley, Art Thibert, Pete Pantazis, Allen Passalaqua, and Pat Brosseau. Bruce Wayne orders something specifically complicated and sweet, Clark Kent bumbles through an order of juice and pancakes, and Diana Prince orders plain black coffee with little fuss.

The Trinity's Coffee Orders Reveals Everything About Their Personalities

Bruce Wayne Batman and Clark Kent Superman Order Coffee and Juice on a Pier

These coffee orders perfectly encapsulate each of these characters' personalities—and their attitudes toward secret identities. Bruce Wayne is perhaps Batman's greatest performance, and he masks his somber personality behind an overly-complicated and performative coffee order, showing just how seriously he takes his secret. Clark Kent is genuinely a wholesome person, so it makes sense he would prefer juice (and pancakes!) over bitter coffee, but the bumbling way he orders belies his confidence as Superman. Meanwhile, Diana—ever the self-confident and self-assured Wonder Woman—calmly orders her black coffee just the way she actually wants it.

Batman and Superman must do everything they can to protect their secret lives—up to and including changing the way they order their coffee and breakfast in public. While Wonder Woman cares less about keeping her identity a true secret, she cares enough for her friends to show up for their coffee meeting as Diana Prince. At the end of the day, these coffee orders matter less than the fact that the Trinity orders their coffee together as Clark, Bruce, and Diana, no matter the risk to their identities. True friendship like that can survive anything—including a serious conflict in how they take their coffee.

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Check out Trinity #1, available now from DC Comics!