Hot New Comics This Week 8-6-25

Hot New Comics This Week 8-6-25.
These new comics are scheduled for release on August 6, 2025. As of now, we are not aware of any delays and cannot be held responsible for any unforeseen changes.
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Hot New Comics This Week 8-6-25.
Here come the comics that collectors will be side-eyeing, bagging, boarding, and nervously watching eBay listings for—because this week’s stack isn’t just big, it’s got a pulse. From surprise villain team-ups to supernatural skyscrapers and multiversal moon madness, speculation doesn’t sleep.

Through Red Windows #1 might as well come with a warning label and a therapist’s number. Ram V and Joëlle Jones craft a deeply disturbing psychological horror drenched in ambition, paranoia, and architectural dread. Athul Laal thinks he’s climbing the corporate ladder—but the skyscraper he’s climbing is filled with literal demons. DSTLRY continues its prestige rollout, offering this unsettling mix of The Game meets Channel Zero in a 48-page, perfect-bound monster of a debut. Every door hides a secret, and every shadow hides something worse. Collectors take note—these DSTLRY #1s tend to vanish fast. Captain America #2 wastes no time. Cap is out of the frying pan and directly into Latveria’s iron grip. For the first time ever, Steve Rogers comes face to face with Doctor Doom in a modern origin that’s more than just another team-up clash. It’s a reshuffling of Marvel’s power players, plus there’s the mystery of David Colton—a wildcard soldier who may be friend, foe, or something in between. The new Howling Commandos also tag along, adding layers to a potential sleeper hit. First meetings, covert ops, and a dictator with a superiority complex? That’s what speculative buyers call a checklist. Moon Knight Fist of Khonshu #11 isn’t just another Moon Knight comic—it’s a milestone. Fifty years of Marc Spector’s lunar chaos gets a twisted birthday party filled with familiar faces and unexpected returns. The multiple personalities of Moon Knight’s past all show up to the party, and surprise guests from his tangled history crash the celebration. With this anniversary issue, don’t be surprised if there are status shifts or resurrection teases that spike the aftermarket chatter.

Blink and You’ll Miss It #1 is Boom Studios giving you indie weirdness with a capital W. Melody Nelson and Jesse Harmon reunite in their bizarre hometown of Perennial Harbor—but things have changed. Think Twilight Zone through a romantic lens, where the small-town charm is now overrun with eerie oddities. First issues from Boom with mystery and relationship threads have a track record of jumping in value. Small print, high intrigue, and that title? Yeah, blink and you might really miss your chance to grab a first print. Cheetah and Cheshire Rob The Justice League #1 is the heist comic you didn’t know you needed. Greg Rucka and Nicola Scott give us an Ocean’s Eleven-style setup in space—with two iconic villains deciding that stealing from the Justice League’s orbiting HQ is a good idea. Plot twist: it just might be. The Watchtower is stacked with AI defenses, insane security, and, oh yeah, the most powerful heroes in the DC Universe. Expect new tech, possible cameos, and one stylish caper that could steal more than just DC’s finest toys—it might steal the spotlight this week. The Amazing Spider-Man #9 has Peter Parker still bruised from the Hellgate saga and now facing a brand-new crew of villains: The Aftershocks, alongside the familiar Shocker. Yes, it sounds like a 90s rock band, but it’s a debut of a whole new group that could easily stick around. Also, Mary Jane’s dropping revelations—so any shift in status quo or romantic bombshells could give this issue longer legs on the speculation scene. Wolverines And Deadpools #2 doubles down on the chaos by shoving both franchises into a Shadow King trap. Twice the Wolverines. Twice the Deadpools. Which means twice the likelihood for variant versions, twisted reveals, or some alternate something getting its first spotlight moment. This series isn’t just multiverse mash-up candy—it’s bait for speculators looking to gamble on new versions sticking.

Absolute Superman #10 escalates the arc by revealing Kal-El’s true enemy: Ra’s al Ghul. The infamous leader of the Lazarus Corp has already murdered millions, but now he’s got his eyes set on twisting the Man of Steel. The title teases a dark Superman—literally “Son of the Demon”—so if you’re into watching your caped icons flirt with the abyss, this is your issue. Look out for power shifts, emotional meltdowns, and maybe even a redesign or power tweak that starts here. Marvel Rivals Hellfire Gala #1 is one giant party, but with Ultron crashing the mutant soirée, things spiral into full-scale chaos. The real kicker? Cerebro is the target, and that means the mutant resurrection playbook could be at risk. The gala format means cameos galore, new outfits, and plenty of opportunities for character debuts or reintroductions. Plus, we get Squirrel Girl, Rocket, Jeff the Land Shark, and The Thing being…well, themselves. Absurdist gold wrapped in high stakes. Predator Black, White & Blood #2 continues the anthology carnage with not one but three new Predator tales, including a continuation of the convict vs. Predator standoff from issue one. Joe Kelly and Álvaro López build a serialized entry into Predator lore, while Rebecca Roanhorse drops a horror-sci-fi gem involving Area C (yes, beyond Area 51). This is where canon can quietly be built while collectors are still chasing foil covers. Predator fans know: these anthologies age well. Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe One Last Time #5 hits its finale with a bang, or maybe a universe-ending paradox. Deadpool vs. Flux Paradoxia (who?) could either reset everything or twist it into a new multiversal branch. These “last time” Deadpool stories are never truly the last, but if this issue introduces anything game-changing or multiverse-spanning, it’ll move fast in aftermarket circles. Godzilla Escape the Deadzone #1 marks the second major chapter of IDW’s new Kai-Sei era. This connected Godzilla universe is growing fast, and this issue explores the horrors of what lies within the Deadzone. First appearances, kaiju showdowns, and the foundation for a broader monster mythos makes this a must-watch. Monsterverse fans and completists will be watching closely. Cul-De-Sac #1 from Bad Idea might be the sneakiest horror debut of the week. Vampires hiding in plain sight in suburbia is one thing. The kids realizing their parents are the monsters? Another. But throw in an elite team of vampire hunters, secret societies, and Mike Carey’s twisted storytelling and you’ve got a horror comic with real teeth. Jonathan Wayshak’s fine art style only adds to the unease. First issue from a notoriously under-printed publisher? Don’t wait.

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