Hot New Comics This Week 11-19-25

Hot New Comics This Week 11-19-25
These new comics are scheduled for release on November 19, 2025. As of now, we are not aware of any delays and cannot be held responsible for any unforeseen changes. Explore any red-highlighted links or comic covers to shop directly from all available eBay sellers now.

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Hot New Comics This Week 11-19-25
This week’s lineup of Hot Comics feels like the hobby’s version of controlled chaos: sequels that weren’t supposed to happen, crossovers that shouldn’t exist, long-awaited character shifts, new number ones itching for speculation heat, and a handful of books that remind collectors why Wednesdays are the only days that matter. These aren’t the books that sit quietly on shelves. These are the “second print incoming” candidates, the “why didn’t I grab two?” books, and the “I’ll check eBay… never mind” regrets. We’re looking at first appearances, franchise shake-ups, creative team fireworks, and several titles landing at exactly the right time. Here are the Hot Comics — in no particular order, because alphabetical order has never sold a comic in the history of comics.

Spider-Man Holiday Spectacular #1 arrives precisely when collectors start asking which holiday books become next year’s seasonal key. Marvel continues its “annual-but-not-annual” tradition with Spidey stumbling into winter-themed chaos, which tends to hide fun first appearances or one-off villains that eventually spark future nostalgia value. These holiday releases age surprisingly well, and with new readers constantly entering the hobby through Spider-Man, these quirky issues have a long tail.

Predator Kills the Marvel Universe #4 dives deeper into a series that blends nostalgia with pure mayhem. The novelty of seeing Marvel staples stalked by a cinematic hunter hasn’t worn off, and each issue teases more grotesque collisions. This installment pushes the Predators into even heavier Marvel territory, and the body count practically begs collectors to hold onto these for long-term curiosity. When a concept is this unhinged, it tends to become a cult favorite.

Radioactive Spider-Man #2 continues building out its mutated, alternate-take vision of Peter Parker’s world. Issue #1 was a sleeper surprise and sparked chatter about new supporting characters who might grow into something more. Issue #2 keeps expanding that universe while quietly planting new threats and tech evolutions. With the “Age of Revelation” storyline tying everything together, collectors should keep both eyes on what this issue seeds.

Hot New Comics This Week 11-19-25

All-New Spider-Gwen: The Ghost-Spider #4 keeps Gwen’s multiversal momentum alive. She’s one of Marvel’s most consistently rising characters with steady fan demand and frequent speculation spikes. This issue pushes forward her cross-dimensional mystery while offering the type of tension and emotional pacing that typically triggers future callbacks. Gwen-related series often produce standout new variants and new character introductions, so even mid-series issues deserve attention.

The Punisher Red Band #3 embraces the mature rating with confidence, taking the character back into brutal, grounded territory. This Red Band format allows creators to explore Punisher stories without censorship, making these issues more collectible over time. With Punisher’s presence in the Marvel landscape shifting dramatically, each chapter feels like a statement on where the character belongs—and what future iterations might look like.

X-Men of Apocalypse #1 launches with the energy of a title fully aware that collectors are starving for fresh X-content. Apocalypse spearheading a full book means inevitable new mutants, reinterpretations, potential first appearances, and a status quo shakeup. Mutant events always ripple across the line, and this opening chapter seems poised to introduce concepts that could matter long-term in the X-lore.

Godzilla Destroys the Marvel Universe #5 is the crescendo of Marvel’s most unapologetically wild event. The “Carnage-Zilla” reveal on the cover signals what the pages deliver: full-scale destruction and mashup energy collectors can’t resist. Anytime Marvel leans into these big monster crossovers, the final issues tend to heat up—especially with anything resembling a first appearance or form-change. This series will be revisited for years by collectors just for the concept alone.

Hot New Comics This Week 11-19-25

Star Wars Jedi Knights #9 pushes its Jedi-era storytelling into more intense territ ory. With Star Wars comics always acting as reservoirs for new canon lore, even mid-series issues like this one frequently introduce characters or ideas later referenced in shows or novels. Issue #9 continues escalating tension among factions and deepens the mythology collectors love chasing once it connects to larger continuity.

One World Under Doom #9 keeps Doom’s sweeping authoritarian saga moving forward. Doom-centric stories have always been dependable speculation wells because any new direction for Victor von Doom eventually bleeds into other Marvel lines. This issue amps up the political and cosmic stakes simultaneously, and with Doom’s cinematic future constantly teased, books with major moves for him are watched closely.

Nova Centurion #1 marks a new era for the Nova Corps, giving the spotlight to a different Centurion and fresh cosmic threats. Anytime Marvel launches a cosmic number one, it’s an immediate speculation checkpoint—especially with MCU cosmic expansion always whispering in the background. This series has the right ingredients: a new protagonist, a reimagined mission, and the potential for brand-new characters debuting within the Corps hierarchy.

DC/Marvel Batman Deadpool #1 might be the most delightfully wrong thing to exist. Batman and Deadpool sharing a book is enough to short-circuit the collector brain. It’s not just a crossover—it’s a universe mash that nobody thought would ever happen again after the old Amalgam era. Cross-company books attract long-term collector attention because of how rarely they happen, and issue #1 is always the book to stash away. Expect speculation ripples just on principle.

Final Boss #1 from Image Comics comes swinging in with big energy, muscles, mysticism, and pure 90s-chaos meets modern craft. This creator-driven launch blends hyper-stylized action with potential world-building that could develop into the next breakout indie hit. New Image number ones with strong art direction often spike early, and Final Boss carries that exact DNA.

Hot New Comics This Week 11-19-25

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