TOP 5 Comics This Week 6-18-25

TOP 5 Comics This Week 6-18-25.
These new comics are scheduled for release on June 18, 2025. As of now, we are not aware of any delays and cannot be held responsible for any unforeseen changes.

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Check out these posts from this week:
NEW THIS WEEK! – New Comic Book Day Picks: First Appearances and MORE
NEW THIS WEEK! – Cover Gem of the Week: Bring On The Bad Guys Doom #1 – Skan Srisuwan
NEW THIS WEEK! – Best New Comic Covers This Week: A Bloody Thrill, A Sultry Creep, and a Transformation Breakdown
NEW POST! – 15 Movies That Deserve a Sequel—And Why Hollywood Needs to Make Them Now
NEW POST! – James Gunn vs Superman
NEW POST! – Can Hollywood Survive Without TikTok? The Movie Marketing Shift

TOP 5 Comics This Week 6-18-25.
Comic book speculation isn’t about guessing—it’s about watching patterns, spotting firsts, and buying smart before everyone else realizes what just hit the racks. This week, publishers are tossing more than just variant covers our way. We’re seeing a wave of actual narrative firsts: brand-new characters, long-game villains, and series launches that plant the kind of seeds collectors live for. From Marvel to DC to Image, the setup is clear—there’s value in villainy, multiversal collisions, galactic artifact hunts, and anything that messes with Superman’s day. If you’re speculating, collecting, or just hunting that next unexpected hit, these are the Top 5 Comics worth paying attention to this New Comic Book Day.

Bring on the Bad Guys Doom #1
Marvel kicks off its villain-focused anthology run with a one-shot that refuses to stay quiet. This issue, written by Marc Guggenheim with art by Stefano Raffaele, is more than just a Doctor Doom side mission—it introduces Sister Sorrow, a shadowy figure linked to the Soul Forge, a relic designed to strip the souls of the entire Earth. Because of course it does. This is the kind of character debut that tends to fly under the radar—until the writer or publisher decides she’s worth elevating. Given that this is part one of a seven-issue villain-centric initiative, it’s safe to assume Marvel has longer plans. If Sister Sorrow becomes a fixture or ties into a larger arc, this one-shot becomes a cornerstone. One-and-done format, character debut, and an artifact with multiversal consequences? Speculation boxes: checked.

Spider-Verse vs. Venomverse #2
This series isn’t playing it safe, and issue #2 ensures that no collector is either. The premise itself—a conflict where the Web of Life tangles with Symbiote lore—is built for ongoing firsts, weird variant Spider-Men, and high-energy chaos. This issue promises yet another batch of brand-new Spider and Symbiote characters, further deepening the pool of potential breakout stars. The Hive Mind and whatever’s governing this twisted war aren’t done dropping bombs, and every issue is essentially a loot box for speculators. Don’t blink. This issue could be holding a character that becomes the next viral toy announcement in six months. Bag it, board it, label it—before the aftermarket tells you to regret it.

Superman Unlimited #2
Dan Slott’s ambitious Superman mini ramps into issue two by opening the doors to the Krypto-Knights, a new team led by the Kryptonite King. That’s right—new names, new lore, and a storyline that could start dictating the next year of Superman continuity. Emerald City is no longer background noise—it’s now a key player in the planetary power game. Slott’s playing a longer narrative here, and Gorilla City’s involvement means we’re potentially heading toward a crossover powder keg. This issue also deepens the Daily Planet’s growth, which, oddly enough, might not be just B-plot filler—this expansion has major energy market implications. Krypto-Knights as new antagonists and the rise of Emerald City’s influence? That’s early-run speculation fuel.

Star Wars: Doctor Aphra – Chaos Agent #1
Doctor Aphra gets a new volume—and this time, she’s working with Luke Skywalker. Set during the New Republic era, this ongoing by Alyssa Wong and artist Minkyu Jung kicks off with rare artifacts, tattoo-enhanced tech, and a setup that practically demands future adaptation. Aphra has long been a fan-favorite with major Disney+ potential, and pairing her with Skywalker pushes her even deeper into canon relevance. If there’s ever a time to grab an Aphra issue for potential long-term gain, it’s the start of a series—especially one where she’s being positioned directly in the orbit of one of the Big Three. Bonus: new tech introduced here could have legs if it expands into wider continuity. Watch this book.

Spawn: Bloodletter #1
Tim Seeley and Joseph P. Illidge present what could be a sleeper hit in the Spawn Universe with the introduction of Tasha Thornwall, aka The Bloodletter. CIA-linked, mystical, and harboring serious resentment toward Al Simmons, this character isn’t just showing up for a one-and-done role. She’s being positioned as a franchise-worthy anti-hero with her own internal war—and potentially her own future series. The creative team isn’t skimping here, and the Spawn Universe has been growing methodically in recent years. Any new character that sticks, especially one this uniquely conceptualized, can end up headlining their own corner of the universe. Thornwall has spin-off potential. Collect accordingly.

TOP 5 Comics This Week 6-18-25.

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