Top 5 New Comics to Watch This Week 8-6-25

Top 5 New Comics to Watch This Week 8-6-25.
These comics are scheduled for release on August 6, 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 New Comics to Watch This Week 8-6-25.

Fifty years in, and Moon Knight: Fist of Khonshu #11 makes sure the party is anything but normal. This is a major anniversary issue that celebrates Marc Spector’s chaotic tenure with a parade of personalities and ghosts of his vigilante past. Writer Jed MacKay doesn’t hold back, and artist Alessandro Cappuccio gives this commemorative chaos a visual punch that’s more brutal than festive. With the multiple identities all surfacing and potential resurrection nods teased, this isn’t just a retrospective—it could easily be a launchpad for a new status quo. These milestone issues tend to stick around in collector circles, especially if any major shifts or new characters show up unannounced. Whether it’s a villain revival, a costume change, or a first glimpse at a new direction, this issue could end up being one that people look back on as the moment things changed.

The Amazing Spider-Man #9, and yes, we’re back in post-Hellgate survival mode. Writer Zeb Wells introduces a new band of villains called The Aftershocks, and while they may sound like they belong on a Warped Tour flyer, they’re actually debuting as a crew that joins the Shocker in causing Peter Parker more grief. The significance here is the first appearance of this group, and in a market where teams of villains tend to rise and fall based on synergy, these guys could find staying power—especially if Marvel decides they’re worth investing in beyond this arc. Add in Mary Jane’s cryptic plot thread that promises romantic or character status shifts, and this issue becomes a double threat in speculation. First appearances and personal bombshells? That’s the stuff eBay listings are made of.

Absolute Superman #10 ditches the usual hopeful tone and goes full existential crisis. Ra’s al Ghul is unmasked as Superman’s true antagonist, and the Lazarus Corp has already claimed millions of lives. That’s the backdrop. The real hook here? The emergence of the idea that Kal-El may be influenced or even tainted by the dark legacy of Ra’s, prompting references to “Son of the Demon.” Writer Joshua Williamson is clearly setting up a new status quo, and artist John Timms is delivering visuals that hint at a possibly darker Superman—power surge, visual evolution, or some corrupted morality shift that might not be temporary. If DC is flirting with a longer-term change here, this issue could be the starting point that collectors target as a key turning point.

Marvel Rivals: Hellfire Gala #1 continues Marvel’s party-with-potential format, but this time the event gets hijacked by none other than Ultron. Because why not? Writer Alyssa Wong throws the machine god into the glitziest event in mutant culture, aiming him straight at Cerebro, which could mean the resurrection protocols might be wiped—or rewritten. For collectors, gala issues are always a playground for character design debuts, surprise cameos, and setup seeds that sprout in other books. With appearances from Rocket, Squirrel Girl, The Thing, and Jeff the Land Shark—because nothing says high fashion like chaos beasts—there’s a chance we’re getting one or more unexpected character upgrades or introductions. And anytime Cerebro is in the crosshairs, mutants tend to evolve fast.

Cul-De-Sac #1 from Bad Idea is easily the sleeper pick of the week, and in typical Bad Idea fashion, it’ll probably be under-ordered, hard to find, and a target for speculative heat. Writer Mike Carey serves up a horror concept that’s part The Burbs, part Let the Right One In, and artist Jonathan Wayshak gives it the kind of fine-art-meets-grit approach that instantly makes it feel more sinister. The core premise? Suburban kids discover their vampire parents aren’t just strict—they’re part of something ancient and predatory. With secret vampire societies and a covert hunter team teased, this first issue may pack multiple character debuts and a world big enough for future arcs or spin-offs. And with Bad Idea’s print runs typically lower than your average indie, you won’t want to blink and miss this one.

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