How Many Post-Credits Scenes Does The Flash Have?
Stick around until after the credits if you want one last laugh from The Flash.

This article contains major spoilers for The Flash.
As if it weren’t enough that Superman Lives.
But The Flash is hiding many more guest appearances throughout its jam-packed two-and-a-half-hour runtime — even beyond the cringey CG resurrections of George Reeves and Christopher Reeve as Justice League. Meanwhile, you’ll have to wait until the movie’s post-credit scene to finally see the return of Arthur Curry.
Although The Flash seems like Aquaman in the alternate timeline — only to discover that in this new reality, Arthur is a dog.
In the post-credit scene, Barry tries to recount this story to a very, very drunk Arthur, who is stumbling towards the Flash’s apartment in Central City after a night of drinking. Barely comprehending the story in his state, Arthur trips face-first into a puddle of the grossest street runoff you’ve ever seen. Deciding he’s quite comfortable sleeping in trash water, Aquaman decides to spend the night in the puddle despites Barry’s pleas that they’re just steps from his apartment.
No, it’s not much, and it doesn’t even set up this year’s Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, but with a movie as full of easter eggs and call backs as The Flash, it seems fitting to end on a lighter note. Plus, it’s difficult to top the movie’s final scene, anyway.
The movie ends with Barry meeting his pal Bruce Wayne outside of the courthouse where his father has just been exonerated. But the Bruce that greets Barry after the Flash’s timeline-shattering adventure in the past is not his version of the billionaire-turned-vigilante. Despite the Flash’s attempts to right the timeline and put everything back the way it was, Ben Affleck’s Batman has still been replaced by another actor from the franchise’s past — and it’s not even Keaton. The Flash ends with the return of George Clooney’s Bruce!
Forget the Snyderverse, the Schumacherverse is back.