Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 6-4-25
Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 6-4-25.
These new comics are scheduled for release on June 4, 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! – Hot Picks for NCBD 6-4-25: Key Issues, First Appearances, and more
NEW! – This Week’s NEW Comic Covers: Double D’s and MORE!
NEW! – Cover Gem of the Week: Amazing Spider-Man #5 – Joëlle Jones
NEW – Karate Kid: Legends – A Franchise Past Its Prime
Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 6-4-25.
The long game of comic collecting isn’t always about flashy covers or hype-loaded variant marketing—it’s about understanding where the story pivots. When first appearances sneak in under the radar. When creative teams subtly reset the board for what’s coming next. This week’s Top 5 Comics aren’t just a mix of chaos and cosmic showdowns; they’re five deliberate plays in the ongoing speculation market. We’ve got new characters that could shake up entire publishing lines, multiversal mayhem with major continuity implications, and writers who aren’t afraid to let things actually change. Whether you’re watching for the next breakout villain, a sleeper hit debut, or the groundwork for Marvel’s next space saga, this week has all the signals of future value—or at least future headaches for anyone who slept on these releases. Let’s get into it.
Ultimate Spider-Man: Incursion #1
Deniz Camp and Cody Ziglar hand off a multiversal grenade in Ultimate Spider-Man: Incursion #1, and naturally, Miles Morales is the one left holding the pin. Or in this case, his little sister Billie is—because she steals the multiversal key left behind by The Maker and immediately breaks reality. What follows? A chaotic detour straight into the reformed Ultimate Universe. And here’s where things get serious: we get a new Peter Parker, The Spot is slicing his way across realities again, and nothing about this crossover setup feels temporary. First appearances are all but confirmed. We’re potentially looking at new alliances forming, a redefining of the Ultimate line, and a direct link to future Ultimate stories that’ll dominate shelves in the next year. One of the smartest pickups this week if you’re tracking where the Ultimate Universe is heading. Keep this issue close. It won’t be overlooked for long.
Marvel Knights: The World To Come #1
You can thank Joe Quesada and Christopher Priest for making the phrase “Marvel Knights” mean something again. With Marvel Knights: The World To Come #1, the legacy gets a modern twist—and it starts with a vacuum. The post-T’Challa landscape of Wakanda leaves every power-hungry opportunist salivating, and the Marvel Knights find themselves caught in the middle of what feels like a geopolitical chess game with superpowers (the caped kind, not the governmental kind). There’s a gritty throwback feel here, but it’s paired with the kind of worldbuilding that Quesada and Priest thrive in—political intrigue, philosophical stakes, and the kind of backroom manipulation that could lead to a new ruler, or at least a radical shift in the Marvel pecking order. If there’s a first appearance of a new Wakandan ruler or a new Marvel Knight, this issue moves from shelf-warming nostalgia to future key.
Ghost Rider vs. Galactus #1
Yes, Marvel went there. Ghost Rider vs. Galactus #1 throws Johnny Blaze into orbit, armed with vengeance and possibly nothing else. Writer J. Michael Straczynski and artist Juan Ferreyra take Ghost Rider out of hell and into the cosmos in what could easily become one of Marvel’s most talked-about single issues this year. Galactus is the kind of foe that even Thor thinks twice about, so watching Ghost Rider aim his fiery penance at a cosmic devourer suggests we’re in for either complete lunacy or complete reinvention. And that’s where collectors should pay attention. If Blaze taps into something new—a transformation into a cosmic version of the Rider, a new weapon, or even a temporary win over Galactus—it’s one of those turning-point issues. Marvel rarely lets Ghost Rider shift gears this hard unless they’re planning to use it later.
Imperial #1
Cosmic chessboard, meet Marvel’s next power play. Imperial #1 doesn’t just tease a galactic war—it sets the tone for what might be the next big cosmic saga in the Marvel Universe. This is the kind of debut where characters like Hulk, Black Panther, and Nova don’t just cameo—they anchor factions. The creative team is laying down the groundwork for something bigger, and this first issue smells like a sleeper key. New factions could form. New cosmic rulers could rise. And if we get any first appearances of intergalactic political figures (Marvel loves those), this comic jumps from “intro issue” to “spec collector magnet.” There’s also an undertone of legacy being passed—or stolen—which always means watch out for whoever Marvel quietly introduces here. Think Annihilation energy but with a 2025 aesthetic. This one is about scale—and future payoffs.
Hellverine #7
Still feral. Still on fire. Hellverine #7 continues its body-count-heavy march through supernatural warfare, but here’s where things get even wilder: Hell Hulk is now front and center. We’re still trying to figure out what this gamma-demon hybrid really is, but Marvel clearly isn’t tossing this thing aside. The lore is stacking. Project Hellfire is evolving. If this issue delivers even a partial origin of the Hell Hulk, expect this book to start making “first full appearance” lists before long. The chaos is part of the draw, sure—but it’s the hints at bigger stakes that elevate it beyond a gore-fest. Whether it’s new lore about government-run hellspawn or a clearer look at what exactly Project Hellfire is building, this issue holds weight. A violent sleeper hit with long-term potential if any of these new concepts stick.
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