Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 5-28-25.
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Top 5 NEW Comics This Week 5-28-25.
Fifty years of X-Men history being rewritten in real time, horror icons tangling with Marvel’s finest, and Donald Duck engineering his way into Iron Man’s legacy—yes, it’s that kind of week. Comic speculation doesn’t slow down, and neither does the stream of books sneaking key first appearances, new villains, and nostalgia-fueled gambits into the Wednesday racks. If you’re bagging and boarding based on long-term value, variant heat, or straight-up gut feeling, these are the five books that deserve your attention before the aftermarket turns them into cautionary tales. As always, firsts are everything. Here are the Top 5 NEW Comics for this week:
Giant-Size X-Men #1
Here we go again—Marvel takes a swing at redefining a moment that redefined mutants in the first place. Al Ewing and Sara Pichelli lead off this 50th anniversary one-shot with help from Jackson Lanzing, Collin Kelly, and none other than Adam Kubert. Kamala Khan is forced to bear witness to a revised retelling of the Krakoa formation story, but something’s cracking in the time-space narrative. A first appearance of an X-Man that “never was” means the retcon may become a reality—and that instantly puts this one-shot on every speculator’s radar. It’s issue #1 in a five-part event, which means if this mystery mutant becomes a recurring player, you’ll be seeing this issue headlining eBay listings by the end of the summer. Fifty years later and this franchise still knows how to keep collectors anxious.
What If Donald Duck Became Iron Man #1
This is one of those “joke books” you ignore until you realize it’s the one everyone’s fighting over at the convention two months later. Donald Duck gets the armor and the legacy—but make it golden-age retro with a beak. The book riffs off Iron Man’s original debut in Tales of Suspense #39 and mashes up the Marvel/Disney brands in a way that’s equal parts absurd and genius. The Beagle Boys force Donald to invent a machine, he makes a weaponized duck-suit instead, and collectors get a crossover that has potential Disney+ Easter egg written all over it. Don’t roll your eyes—What If? books are infamous for turning jokes into canon. Add in a guaranteed variant storm, and you’ve got a sleeper novelty book with genuine speculative weight.
Batman #160
Jeph Loeb and Jim Lee are back on the Bat—and that alone raises eyebrows. But this arc, “H2SH,” is more than just another Hush redux. Enter Silence, a new villain partnered with Hush, who seems tailor-made for psychological warfare and possible franchise longevity. The big question: is Silence just a thematic echo of Hush, or a new major player in the Bat-mythos? DC doesn’t introduce villains in Loeb/Lee projects without considering how to use them down the line. Don’t wait for Silence to appear in six other books before paying attention—because if this character survives, this is the issue everyone will want. Batman books are already spec-heavy by default; this one brings some legitimate heat.
Predator vs. Spider-Man #2
The first issue delivered jungle-level tension in NYC, and now things get even uglier. A blackout cuts power to the city, Mary Jane is stuck on a subway train, and a Predator named Skinner has decided the old code of honor isn’t bloody enough. This is pure horror tension layered onto superhero chaos. And yes, Kraven is circling too. But it’s Skinner who collectors need to clock—if he survives this arc or shows up again in another franchise crossover, this issue might age into a sleeper key. Predator variants have a habit of sneaking up in value once the killer becomes a brand name. Watch this one closely—especially if there’s a Predator origin tease hiding between panels.
Werewolf by Night Red Band #10
This is the finale, and it’s not going out quietly. Red Band means unrestricted gore, and this issue delivers on every drop. Marvel’s horror imprint rarely plays it this raw, and if there’s a monster debut—or a final page teaser for the next horror initiative—this issue becomes a foundation block. The original Werewolf by Night keys still pop up on speculation charts, and Marvel clearly wants to build a horror ecosystem here. If the next Blade or monsterverse event hinges on what happens here, this issue is going to be retroactively mined for clues. Buy it now, bag it, and sit on it. Or regret it when the horror crowd catches up.
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