Greg Berlanti’s Arrowerse latest creation heavily leans on a 2004 Smallville nostalgia with the support of more mature and politically correct screenwriting. In this revisitation of one of the most renowned comic book couples that takes place after the Crisis On Infinite Earths crossover, Clark (Tyler Hoechlin) is now a family man with two teenage kids. Lois (Bitsie Tulloch), tired of the toxic compromises she has to deal with in the workplace, ends up quitting the Daily Planet. The couple decides that what’s best for the harmony and cohesion of the family is to move back to Clark’s rural hometown in Kansas.
However, things don’t turn out exactly as Idyllic as they had initially envisioned them. Lois has a hard time integrating into a much smaller world than Metropolis, and Clark, aside from having to save humanity on a regular basis, finds himself dealing with the hardship of being a parent to his twins—Jonathan and Jordan (Jordan Elsass & Alexander Garfin)—and the struggle that comes with potentially super-powered offsprings and/or the competition and jealousy that the possibility of only one of twins developing superpowers would ensue.