Hot NEW Comics This Week 7-9-25

Hot NEW Comics This Week 7-9-25.
These new comics are scheduled for release on July 9, 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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Check out these posts;
NEW POST! – Best New Comic Covers 7-9-25
NEW POST! – Cover Gem of the Week: Predator Black, White, & Blood #1 – Mahmud Asrar
NEW POST! – Movie Review: Heads of State
LAST WEEK – Superman 2025 Funko Pops Take Flight Ahead of the New Movie
LAST WEEK – Cover Gem: Spider-Gwen: Ghost-Spider #15 – Kris Anka
LAST WEEK – Fantastic Four Trailer Breakdown: The Thing’s Beard and That Silver Surfer Voice
LAST WEEK – Why James Gunn’s Superman Might Be the Most Human Yet

Hot NEW Comics This Week 7-9-25.
There’s a reason Wednesdays are sacred in the world of comic collecting. It’s not just the smell of fresh ink and paper or the weekly ritual of sorting pull lists—it’s the eternal chase for what’s next. That elusive first appearance, the creator-owned sleeper hit, or the cover with just enough chaos to make collectors stare. This week’s haul is stacked with speculation fuel, creator shakeups, and a swimsuit special (yes, really). Let’s break it all down.

Uncanny X-Men #17 throws the Krakoan-era coolness straight into the horror genre and does it with disturbing precision. When a wildly insensitive horror director creates a hit slasher movie centered around a serial-killing mutant girl, the cultural backlash is real—and deadly. Anti-mutant violence starts spreading across the nation, but is this just media-driven hysteria or something worse hiding behind the camera? With the X-Men as the hunted, the Misery vibes are strong. The real speculation here? How this twisted plot might seed a new mutant villain or force a status shift in public perception of mutants. Don’t sleep on it. Daredevil Cold Day in Hell #3 ends the mini-event with the entire city of New York going dark, and only Matt Murdock is left to light the way (with his fists and Catholic guilt, of course). The story closes what’s been hyped as the Daredevil project of the decade, and if that doesn’t scream potential for future ramifications, we don’t know what does. If this issue doesn’t set up the next evolution of Daredevil’s role in the Marvel Universe, it’ll at least be the one everyone points back to when it all goes sideways later. Fantastic Four #1 kicks off another new volume, and yes, it’s one of those first issues that Marvel wants to be a jumping-on point. This time, the team gets scattered across four different eras of Earth’s history thanks to—you guessed it—Victor von Doom. Dinosaur fights? Check. Ancient rock-based macguffin? You bet. New series artist Humberto Ramos brings big chaotic energy to match the multitemporal madness. New volume, potentially new characters per timeline, and a classic team getting shaken up—this one has long-term spec play potential. Predator Black, White & Blood #1 unleashes a triptych of violent brilliance. Joe Kelly leads off the issue with a story about a young Predator trying to prove himself in the Australian outback… with convicts. It’s part bush survival tale, part bloody rite of passage. Add in stories from Eliot Rahal and Sarah Gailey, and you’ve got a black-and-white anthology with red-soaked promise. Predator fans are a loyal breed, and this anthology could introduce new blood (pun intended) to the Predator mythos, especially with a younger, unproven Yautja possibly becoming a recurring character.
Explore any red-highlighted links or comic covers to shop directly from all available eBay sellers now.
Hot NEW Comics This Week 7-9-25.

Explore any red-highlighted links or comic covers to shop directly from all available eBay sellers now.

Hot NEW Comics This Week 7-9-25.
The Unchosen #1
is where high-concept indie storytelling crashes into explosive debut hype. David Marquez—who’s been known more for illustrating Marvel’s biggest icons—makes his first leap as both writer and artist, and the premise? A 13-year-old girl wakes up post-catastrophe, hunted for being the one who caused it. Think The Last of Us but flipped—she’s not the cure; she’s the blast radius. Expect strong first-appearance value and a potential new favorite for speculators banking on creator-owned titles getting optioned. First issue, first character, first-time creator taking full control? That’s three firsts in one.
Laura Kinney Wolverine #8 finally reintroduces Haymaker in present-day continuity. This MGH (Mutant Growth Hormone)-enhanced bruiser once ran errands for the Kingpin and now has a fresh mission… and a chip on his shoulder. What’s his endgame? Who cares—he’s back. And first modern appearance of a character with shady underworld ties = instant speculation radar blip. Laura’s run has been heating up in the background, but this issue puts it back on the map. Marvel Swimsuit Special Friends, Foes & Rivals #1 is exactly what it sounds like—and absolutely not what it sounds like. The premise: Roxxon Comics (yes, them) drops an unauthorized swimsuit issue, and the Marvel Universe retaliates with its own. There’s an actual storyline courtesy of the Wasp, but let’s not kid ourselves. This oversized issue is page after page of glamorized splash art. Speculators might be shocked when one or two of these splash pages contain a cameo or visual introduction that becomes relevant later. Marvel’s been sneakier. Also—print run curiosity is real. Imperial #2 continues the Marvel cosmic mystery where galactic leaders are dropping like flies, and it’s up to Nova and Star-Lord to solve the murders. That search brings them into the Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda—yep, that one. The mashup of cosmic Marvel and Wakandan lore means potential new tech, new factions, and possibly some new galactic royalty. This mini-event hasn’t hit full speculation heat yet, but it’s simmering. All it takes is a first appearance to trigger the fire. Superman Treasury 2025 Hero For All #1 is a treasury-sized flex. Dan Jurgens and Bruno Redondo team up to deliver a widescreen, super-sized Superman story that ties in with the Summer of Superman push—and the new movie. So yes, this one contains preview images and a movie variant cover. And when the alien armada invades Earth, it’s more than just lasers in the sky. There’s a deeper, internal threat hinted at that might set up something big for DC’s publishing plans. Add the collectible format to the mix, and this oversized issue becomes a display piece. Planet Death #1 is a deluxe, high-end drop from Bad Idea Comics. Created by John Wick’s Derek Kolstad and DC’s Robert Venditti, with art from Tomás Giorello and color wizard Dave Stewart, it’s basically a war movie in a comic, but on ice. Frozen alien world? Check. Entire battalion slaughtered? Yep. One lone soldier trying to finish the mission solo? That’s your main guy. It’s sci-fi grit dialed up to 11 with prestige-level presentation. This one’s built to be collectible from the jump. And yeah, probably option-bait for the streaming platforms too.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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