Top 5 Comics to Grab This Week: First Appearances, Milestones, and High-Grade Sleepers

Top 5 Comics to Grab This Week: First Appearances, Milestones, and High-Grade Sleepers.
These new comics are scheduled for release on June 25, 2025. As of now, we are not aware of any delays and cannot be held responsible for any unforeseen changes.

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Top 5 Comics to Grab This Week: First Appearances, Milestones, and High-Grade Sleepers.
When it comes to the collecting mindset, Wednesdays aren’t about casual purchases. They’re about strategy. About knowing which issue might pop, which obscure villain might evolve, and which milestone could become a benchmark issue years from now. New Comic Book Day is less about casual fandom and more about keeping your speculation game sharp. And this week is no exception. With a legacy-numbered Deadpool issue that refuses to play it safe, a brand-new Hulk crashing into Miles Morales’ narrative, and indie horror that could spiral into a sleeper hit, the signal is clear: grab what matters now, before someone else does. Here’s your InvestComics Top 5 for this week—because hesitation is for the resale market.

Deadpool #15
Deadpool’s 350th issue, whether you’re counting properly or just going along with Marvel’s math gymnastics, lands with all the subtlety of a chimichanga cannon. Deadpool #15 is the legacy celebration only Wade Wilson could deliver—violent, ridiculous, and fully aware of its place in the collector ecosystem. The headline match is Deadpool vs. Death Grip, and while the name sounds like something lifted from a Hot Topic playlist in 1998, the villain is brand-new. First appearance alert. But the surprises don’t stop there. Gerry Duggan returns with a short story, Matteo Lolli on art, and even the Deadpool Samurai format gets another chapter. These anniversary anthologies can be fluff-filled throwaways, but this one doesn’t suffer that fate. If anything, it offers multiple speculative hooks: a new villain introduction, manga cross-format content, and the kind of extra content that bumps value long term. Bag it, board it, and if history’s any indicator, that new villain might not stay minor.

Miles Morales Spider-Man #34
If you’ve been sleeping on Miles Morales Spider-Man #34, that nap is over. This is a Red Alert issue, specifically because it introduces an all-new Hulk into the Marvel Universe. Miles, already deep in a battle with Ares (yes, that Ares), doesn’t just have to deal with mythological wrath—he’s now in the blast radius of gamma chaos. Whether this new Hulk is a limited player or has long-term legs remains to be seen, but Marvel doesn’t throw “new Hulks” into the mix lightly. This one reads like a setup for major crossover potential. Miles’ series has always been fertile ground for firsts, and the aftermath of this issue could spill into bigger storylines. Every appearance starts somewhere. Be the person who already owns it before the internet starts yelling about second prints.

News from the Fallout #1
When Image decides to go horror-miniseries, they don’t tiptoe. And News from the Fallout #1 is the indie shot worth watching this week. Written by Chris Condon and drawn with unsettling, surreal energy by Jeffrey Alan Love, this comic drops us into 1962 just after a nuclear test corrupts everything it touches. The hook? Everyone dies from radiation—except Otis Fallows, a survivor who may be less victim and more monster. The art is textured, minimal, and unnerving. It’s a dark premise with deeper commentary, and those tend to stick. First issue, new world, new anti-hero. This screams prestige adaptation bait if it lands. Indie horror with haunting visuals and potential lore-building is where collectors make their quietest, smartest moves. You’ve been warned.

Superman #27
Red Kryptonite is never just about power—it’s about chaos. And Superman #27 rides that energy hard. Superman is visibly unraveling from his exposure, and that’s when the vultures always circle. Lois Lane takes on the Lex Luthor Revenge Squad solo because of course she does, and key villains Dr. Pharm and Mr. Graft make their official comeback. These two haven’t been lurking in the background—this is a full-return moment, setting up a power play that could shift both Lex and Clark’s paths. As Superman starts to fracture, old threats are positioning themselves. This is the type of issue that slips through the cracks until it becomes pivotal in a future story arc. Don’t let this be one of those books you regret not grabbing in 9.8 while it was still affordable.

Spawn #367
Mid-run Spawn issues often fly under the radar—until they don’t. Spawn #367 is that issue. Why? Because a new contender is stepping up to challenge Spawn’s hold on the throne, and anyone familiar with McFarlane’s storytelling pattern knows: this means war. Every time a new major villain is introduced in Spawn, it pays to pay attention. The mythology here doesn’t move unless there’s a long game attached. This issue isn’t a flashy milestone, but these are the books that become whispers on collectors’ forums six months later. If this villain stays and becomes part of the regular lore, this issue becomes foundational. It’s already under-ordered. Take that as your first clue.
Top 5 Comics to Grab This Week: First Appearances, Milestones, and High-Grade Sleepers.

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