Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 6-11-25
Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 6-11-25.
These new comics are scheduled for release on June 11, 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! Giant-Size Amazing Spider-Man #1 – Lee Bermejo
NEW THIS WEEK! Hot Picks for NCBD: Major Marvel Shocks, Dark DC Drama, and First Appearances Galore
NEW THIS WEEK! Best NEW Cover Art This Week 6-11-25
Last Week – Hot Picks for NCBD 6-4-25
Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 6-11-25.
When it comes to comic book speculation, you’re not looking for filler. You’re looking for sparks—the kind that ignite value, turn issue #1s into collector essentials, and make long-term readers wish they’d paid attention sooner. This week’s Top 5 delivers exactly that: cosmic goodbyes, psychological warfare in Gotham, and the kind of character debuts that make longboxes feel like treasure chests. Whether you’re chasing first appearances, new team dynamics, or the kind of gut-punch storytelling that makes prices climb on the aftermarket, this lineup has it. Marvel, DC, and Image all step up with something that hits hard for collectors and speculators alike. Let’s break down what you need to stash, slab, and maybe never sell……right away.
Death of the Silver Surfer #1
It doesn’t get more blunt than the title. Norrin Radd might be staring down his last ride, and that alone should have collector antennas buzzing. Greg Pak, no stranger to emotionally annihilating fan-favorite characters, brings the same intensity he gave Planet Hulk to a story that could mark the end—or evolution—of the Silver Surfer. Artist Sumit Kumar handles the cosmic devastation with style, while Galactus lurks in the background like a ticking time bomb. The Fantastic Four appear, and someone is chasing the Power Cosmic like it’s the last seat on the lifeboat. If there’s a death that leads to a rebirth or a cosmic power shift, you can expect this issue to spike. First appearances? We’re watching closely. Don’t sleep on this as a potential foundation for Marvel’s next celestial phase.
Giant-Size Amazing Spider-Man #1
Three stories. Three powerhouse creative teams. One massive reason to own it: a new character introduction by Chip Zdarsky and CAFU that Marvel isn’t downplaying. Kevin Smith kicks things off with his first Marvel tale in years, weaving the emotional and absurd in typical Smith fashion. Then Al Ewing and Mark Buckingham get weird across timelines, proving that Spider-Man stories don’t need linearity when they’re done right. But it’s that Zdarsky/CAFU finale that puts this on the radar for long-term value. Marvel doesn’t let Chip introduce nobodies, and when you sandwich it between a Smith comeback and an Ewing mind-bender, you’ve basically set the stage for a first appearance that matters. This is the kind of issue that becomes “the one you should’ve picked up” once that new character sticks.
New Avengers #1
Let’s be honest—this team is absolutely bonkers. Carnage. Clea. Namor. Hulk. Wolverine. If that sounds more like the lineup of a villain redemption arc than an Avengers team, that’s because it is. But what makes it work is the wild concept behind it: Bucky Barnes and Black Widow trying to stop the damage done by Illuminati clones who’ve spiraled out of control. This isn’t Avengers light—it’s Avengers deranged. Which is exactly why collectors should be watching. First team appearances. New alliances. And the sheer potential of a book that looks ready to blow continuity wide open. The risk factor is high, but so is the reward if this becomes the next Dark Avengers or Thunderbolts. Add in the potential for new villains and unexpected power shifts, and this is one to spec on hard.
Absolute Batman #9
Forget Arkham. Gotham has a new therapy center now: Ark M. And if you thought Arkham was bad, Ark M is basically a human rights violation wrapped in an expensive treatment label. Bruce Wayne goes undercover to crack open its secrets, but it’s the return of Bane and the haunting re-emergence of Alfred’s past that drive this issue into key territory. The introduction of a new villain tied to Alfred’s mysterious history is the spark here—an origin that could resonate far beyond a single issue. This is DC playing with legacy and psychology, and when they do it right, those issues tend to become sleeper hits. Expect collectors to start hunting once the new villain’s name starts circulating. Between Bane and Bruce operating off the grid, this issue builds up serious heat.
Gehenna Naked Aggression #1
Image Comics keeps its indie heat streak alive with Gehenna Naked Aggression #1. Don’t let the title fool you—this isn’t mindless pulp. It’s a story about a hit contract passed between syndicates like some cursed object, and Gehenna, the target, decides she’s done being hunted. Think Gun Honey meets Elektra: Assassin, with a style that leans into the violent, the raw, and the relentlessly personal. The real speculative gold here? This could be the first in a long-running franchise, and early issues of books like this tend to go nuclear if optioned. The art by a still-rising star brings that unmistakable indie grit, and the pacing doesn’t let up. If this one goes to second print, you’ll wish you grabbed the first on day one.
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