Top 5 New Comics 11-5-25
Trending Pop Culture: Top 5 New Comics 11-5-25
These new comics are scheduled for release on Novenmber 5, 2025. As of now, we are not aware of any delays and cannot be held responsible for any unforeseen changes.
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Trending Pop Culture: Top 5 New Comics 11-5-25
This week’s Top 5 New Comics lineup is what happens when publishers decide subtlety is overrated and deliver straight collector bait. From Captain America staring down a Xenomorph to She-Hulk reclaiming her throne as a gladiator queen, this week is built for those who actually understand what long-term value looks like in the modern market. The speculative energy is real—crossovers, first appearances, and a Bad Idea book that refuses to behave. Some covers hit nostalgia; others push pure chaos. All of them, however, are the kind of comics that get collectors watching eBay listings instead of reading panels.
Alien vs. Captain America #1
Let’s start with the crossover that no one thought they’d see, yet everyone suddenly needs. Alien vs. Captain America #1 marks the first official encounter between Marvel’s patriotic icon and the acid-blooded nightmare from 20th Century Studios. The cover by Paulo Siqueira is everything collectors crave—dark, cinematic, and brimming with horror energy. The Marvel x Alien collaboration has already proven to move early print runs fast, but this one levels up with the novelty of Cap standing toe-to-toe with a Xenomorph army. Expect new character introductions within the story’s setup and potential lore blending between both universes. When Marvel touches legacy monsters, speculation spikes. The ratio variants? Already selling above ratio pricing.
DC K.O. Knightfight #1
Joshua Williamson’s writing paired with Dan Mora’s art signals this debut issue isn’t here to play. Knightfight #1 introduces an alternate timeline where Gotham’s underground combat culture pushes Bruce Wayne into something darker, meaner, and much less refined than the detective persona fans know. This first issue is the first appearance of the “K.O. Universe” concept within DC—an experimental offshoot that might just expand into something bigger if fan response explodes. Fabrizio Tommaso’s kinetic cover gives that mid-air ferocity we associate with Batman’s best moments, and it’s one collectors are already spotlighting as a visual standout. It’s the kind of comic that either quietly builds a cult following or detonates as a one-shot speculation favorite. Either way, it’s on the list for a reason.
Trending Pop Culture: Top 5 New Comics 11-5-25
Planet Death #2
Bad Idea has a knack for turning chaos into a collector’s dream. Planet Death #2 continues that streak. Written by Derek Kolstad and drawn by Tomas Giorello, this second issue digs deeper into the war-torn sci-fi madness established in issue one, and rumor is, a new alien warlord debuts here—possibly the franchise’s long-term big bad. With print runs notoriously limited, Bad Idea books are practically pre-packaged speculation bait. The cover captures a cinematic face-off that screams final boss energy, and history tells us these small-run titles tend to gain heat when scarcity meets quality storytelling. It’s smart collecting, not luck.
Planet She-Hulk #1
Marvel doesn’t greenlight a “Planet She-Hulk” without having serious franchise intent. Fanyan’s cover art gives She-Hulk the commanding warrior presence that made Planet Hulk iconic, and this issue reportedly introduces Queen Lyra, a new ruler with connections to both Sakaar and the Hulk lineage. That’s a first appearance worth noting. The tone feels more gladiatorial and self-contained than typical She-Hulk titles, a blend of muscle, myth, and mutant genetics that could become a cornerstone for future MCU adaptation speculation. Smart buyers will treat this one as a modern era collectible with long-tail potential, especially if those variant covers hold tight print numbers.
The Amazing Spider-Man #15
Adam Kubert brings precision chaos to The Amazing Spider-Man #15, featuring Spider-Man in his sleek black-and-gold suit alongside a character whose identity fans have been quietly debating for months. Rumor points toward the first full appearance of a new ally or possible villain connected to the “Gang War” aftermath arc. Kubert’s energy on this variant is classic Marvel—kinetic, explosive, and built for collectors who still appreciate cover craftsmanship. The constant cycle of Spider-Man first appearances remains a reliable playground for speculation, and this issue keeps that pattern alive. Add the creative team
Trending Pop Culture: Top 5 New Comics 11-5-25
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