Best New Comic Covers This Week 1-28-26

Best New Comic Covers This Week 1-28-26
These comics are scheduled for release on January 28, 2026. As of now, we are not aware of any delays and cannot be held responsible for any unforeseen changes.
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Best New Comic Covers This Week 1-28-26

SUPERMAN #34 by Kyuyong Eom
Kyuyong Eom delivers a cover that feels less like a superhero flex and more like a quiet warning. Lois Lane stands front and center, scratched up, exhausted, and still moving forward, which somehow feels more powerful than any punch Superman could throw. The Daily Planet press badge dangles from her hand like a reminder that truth is heavy and it costs something to carry it. Eom’s painterly realism leans into cinematic tension, with the red sky behind her suggesting a world already on edge while she remains grounded, human, and unbreakable. Superman’s presence is felt rather than shown, baked into the symbolism of the notebook and the subtle S-shield peeking out. This is one of those covers collectors gravitate toward later, when they realize it wasn’t loud, it was confident. It captures the modern DC tone perfectly and reminds collectors that key covers do not always scream for attention, sometimes they just stand there and let you catch up.

THE PUNISHER #5 RED BAND by Doaly
Doaly strips everything down to raw intent here, and the result is unsettling in the best way. Kingpin stares straight through the reader, not with rage, but with a cold, deliberate calm that suggests the damage has already been done. The blood-soaked Punisher skull, red suit bleeds into the background, turning the Punisher skull into negative space rather than a logo, which feels intentional and brutal. The Red Band treatment gives this cover permission to be ugly, confrontational, and uncomfortable, exactly where Punisher comics thrive. There is no action, no weapons, no chaos, just consequence. Covers like this age well with collectors because they feel definitive, a visual statement that represents an era rather than a moment. This one feels designed to be revisited years from now when people talk about which Punisher covers actually mattered.

MILES MORALES: SPIDER-MAN #42 by Taurin Clarke
Taurin Clarke leans fully into scale and legacy, stacking generations, threats, and expectations into a single explosive composition. Miles is mid-leap, framed by crackling energy and looming figures that feel more symbolic than literal, like the weight of history trying to catch him mid-swing. Clarke’s use of light and color makes Miles pop without losing the chaos around him, reinforcing that this Spider-Man belongs in the center of Marvel’s future, not the margins. The background faces and shadowed villains create a layered narrative that rewards repeat looks, which is exactly what collectors want in a modern key cover. It feels epic without being messy, ambitious without losing focus, and confident in Miles’ place in the Spider-Man lineage. This is the kind of cover that quietly sneaks into long-term collections because it feels important even if you can’t immediately explain why.

Best New Comic Covers This Week 1-28-26

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