Top 5 New Comics This Week: The Multiverse, Mayhem, and Major Moves
Top 5 New Comics This Week: The Multiverse, Mayhem, and Major Moves.
This week’s Top 5 picks for New Comic Book Day don’t just nudge the needle—they knock the whole meter off the wall. Between iconic creative reunions, unexpected kaiju cameos, and a secret society of Deadpools, collectors have no shortage of key moments, character evolutions, and first appearances to circle. These aren’t casual pulls—they’re the type of books that speculative collectors dig for, waiting for that spark of long-term value or adaptation buzz. Whether it’s variant covers, returning legends, or the next new character that breaks TikTok faster than a foil cover folds, this is the list.
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Top 5 New Comics This Week: The Multiverse, Mayhem, and Major Moves.
Batman #158
DC’s making it official: Hush is back. Not hinted, not teased—he’s back, front and center. And in case that wasn’t enough, Jeph Loeb and Jim Lee are back, too. Yes, the exact duo behind the original Batman: Hush storyline. So if you’re tracking books with legacy value or building out a collection for a character likely to headline a Bat-film in the future, this issue deserves a top spot. Batman #158 isn’t just any sequel—it picks up the narrative thread from the run that helped redefine the Bat-mythos for a generation. Early speculation is swirling that this arc could either redefine Hush’s role in Gotham’s hierarchy or rework his origin altogether. Either way, collectors should expect a flurry of variants, including a glow-in-the-dark cover, which feels like an intentional throwback for longtime Bat-fans. Old-school meets new blood. Bet on this one having staying power.
Pooluminati #1
It had to happen eventually. Marvel finally acknowledged that the Deadpool multiverse is absurd enough to warrant its own inner-circle conspiracy. Enter Pooluminati #1, where 616 Wade discovers there’s a council of Deadpools running things behind the curtain. Imagine the Illuminati if they traded philosophical debate for taco breaks and fourth-wall breaks. That’s your starting point. Expect introductions to entirely new multiversal Deadpools, with potential breakout characters. This is where Marvel slips in Easter eggs that collectors will be chasing five years from now when one of them shows up in a Disney+ special. Add a short story that throws in Elliepool and a rogue princess for good measure, and you’ve got a comic that leans full tilt into chaos. If you collect first appearances, multiverse oddities, or just want the first print of something that could be Deadpool Corps 2.0, this is your pick.
Godzilla vs. Fantastic Four #1
Marvel’s swinging big here. Godzilla vs. Fantastic Four #1 opens the door to a six-issue crossover kaiju saga that merges Toho’s monsters with the Marvel Universe. That’s already a collector’s siren song. But what makes this a must-watch for speculators is the bombshell reveal of King Ghidorah as Galactus’ new herald. Let that simmer. The potential for first appearances, reimaginings, and future animated content or toy lines is massive. And if we know anything about Godzilla books, it’s that collectors who grab first prints of these kinds of team-ups often see them spike down the line. This first issue not only pits Godzilla against Marvel’s first family but includes Silver Surfer, city-wide destruction, and cosmic-level stakes. Don’t be surprised if this entire series gets attention from outside comic circles. You’ll want the first punch landed.
Amazing Spider-Man #70
Marvel ends the “8 Deaths of Spider-Man” storyline with a curveball: Spider-Naut. Not officially revealed yet, but the final issue of a major arc teasing a mysterious evolution or new identity for Peter Parker? That screams collector interest. Whether Spider-Naut is a new transformation, a variant from the multiverse, or a tech-fueled reboot, the introduction of anything new with “Spider” in its name is never subtle. It’s usually a trial balloon for something more. We’ve seen these one-off names quietly grow into fan-favorite versions, and with Marvel being tight-lipped, there’s reason to believe this issue may carry a sleeper key appearance. If you’ve been collecting based on transformation arcs, alternate versions, or costume debuts, this one should be in your stack. Don’t miss the closeout—these finale issues often get reprinted fast once the spec community wakes up.
Daredevil #19
This issue hits with weight. Daredevil #19 marks the fallout of everything Matt Murdock’s been battling internally—and externally—for months. The creative team is treating this one as a turning point, the kind of shift that ends up on collector radar not because it introduces someone new, but because it resets everything. Marvel’s marketing has already called it the beginning of “the next epic,” which usually means new threats, new status quo, and yes, possibly some new characters. These pivot issues often don’t get attention until months later when their seeds start to sprout. If you’ve been following Daredevil’s journey, this is the issue that future storylines will refer back to. It’s the book where the fallout finally hits the pavement of Hell’s Kitchen. Collectors who value turning points and want to catch shifts in character trajectory early should snag this one.
Top 5 New Comics This Week: The Multiverse, Mayhem, and Major Moves.
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