Top Comics This Week: February 11, 2026

Happy Wednesday, comics fans! If you’re the kind of reader who plans your week around that Wednesday rush—the smell of fresh ink, the stack you swear you’ll keep “small” this time—this one’s for you. It’s another packed week in comics, and publishers are clearly not easing us into 2026. Big swings, big debuts, and a few long‑running sagas hitting emotional pressure points.

Here are the top comics you’ll want to keep an eye on this week.

1.) “DC K.O. #4” (DC Comics)

Cover for "DC K.O. #4," Courtesy of DC Comics
Cover for “DC K.O. #4,” Courtesy of DC Comics

The wild, gloves‑off brawler of DC’s current lineup keeps swinging hard. “DC K.O.” has been one of those surprise hits—loud, messy, and proudly unpolished in a way that feels refreshing in a superhero landscape that sometimes takes itself too seriously. Issue #4 digs deeper into the fallout of last month’s cliffhanger, pushing its lead hero into a corner where fists aren’t enough, and the emotional stakes finally catch up.

This chapter leans into the grit: back‑alley confrontations, bruised egos, and a sense that the whole world is watching the wrong person take the blame. The preview pages show a tighter, more character‑driven issue, with the art team dialing up the kinetic energy that made the series pop from day one. If you’ve been craving comics that feel like a late‑night fight movie with a beating heart, this is your pick.

2.) “Wade Wilson: Deadpool #1” (Marvel Comics)

Cover for "Wade Wilson: Deadpool #1," Courtesy of Marvel Comics
Cover for “Wade Wilson: Deadpool #1,” Courtesy of Marvel Comics

Marvel relaunches the Merc with a Mouth—again—but this time the energy feels different. “Wade Wilson: Deadpool #1” kicks off with the kind of chaotic swagger only Deadpool can deliver, but there’s a sharper edge beneath the jokes. The creative team seems intent on grounding Wade in something more personal without losing the absurdity that makes him, well, Deadpool.

In a preview from Marvel, ” Deadpool is a man on the brink, and that means the jobs are deadlier, the stakes are higher, and the humor is darker than ever before. But Wade Wilson isn’t laughing. A dark memory haunts Deadpool, as a mysterious client leads him down a troubling path. This way lies redemption? No, something far worse. Wade can never be forgiven for what he’s done…”

It’s loud, it’s bloody, it’s self‑aware, and it’s exactly the kind of #1 that longtime fans and new readers can jump into without feeling lost. If you like your comics with equal parts heart and unhinged energy, this is the week’s must‑grab.

3.) “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #15” (IDW Publishing)

Cover for "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #15," Courtesy of IDW Publishing
Cover for “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #15,” Courtesy of IDW Publishing

IDW’s TMNT run has been quietly delivering some of the most emotionally rich comics on shelves, and Issue #15 keeps that streak alive. The Turtles are still dealing with the fallout of recent battles, and the family dynamic is shifting in ways that feel raw and real. This issue slows down just enough to let the brothers breathe—before throwing them into another escalating threat, of course.

The preview pages hint at a story that balances introspection with classic TMNT action. There’s a rooftop moment between two brothers that hits harder than expected, followed by a reveal that sets up the next major arc. If you’ve drifted away from the Turtles over the years, this run is the one that pulls you back in. It’s heartfelt, grounded, and still full of the kinetic martial‑arts chaos fans love.

4.) “G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #325” (Image Comics)

Cover for "G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #325," Courtesy of Image Comics
Cover for “G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #325,” Courtesy of Image Comics

The legendary series continues its new era at Image, and Issue #325 proves the creative team isn’t afraid to push the franchise into bolder territory. This chapter is all about tension—political, personal, and battlefield‑level. The Joes are scattered, the stakes are rising, and the preview pages show a mission that feels like it could go wrong in a dozen different ways.

What stands out here is the tone: gritty but not bleak, nostalgic without being stuck in the past. Longtime fans will appreciate the callbacks, but newcomers won’t feel locked out. The pacing is tight, the character work is sharp, and the art leans into that classic military‑action vibe without feeling dated. If you want comics that blend old‑school energy with modern storytelling, this is your anchor title for the week.

5.) “ThunderCats: Lost in Time #1″ (Dynamite)

Cover for "ThunderCats: Lost in Time #1," Courtesy of Dynamite
Cover for “ThunderCats: Lost in Time #1,” Courtesy of Dynamite

Dynamite kicks off a new ThunderCats series with a time‑twisting hook that actually feels fresh. In a preview from Dynamite, “THE FUTURE ISN’T WHAT IT USED TO BE! Ripped from their adopted home of Third Earth, the ThunderCats Pumyra, Neko, Lynx-O, and Ligon find themselves trapped on the distant future world of Sixth Earth – a broken, dystopian planet ruled by a totalitarian police state, where cats are outlawed and hunted to the brink of extinction.” It’s ambitious, weird, and exactly the kind of swing a franchise like this needs.

The preview pages show big, bold art—splashy action, expressive character work, and a sense of scale that sells the premise. There’s a real “Saturday‑morning‑cartoon‑meets‑modern‑epic” vibe, and it works. Whether you’re a longtime ThunderCats fan or just someone who loves high‑concept adventure comics, this debut is worth grabbing off the shelf.

It’s a stacked week, and honestly, that’s part of the fun. Some weeks are quiet; this one is loud, messy, nostalgic, and full of big swings from every corner of the industry. Whether you’re here for superhero brawls, mutant turtles, military legends, or time‑bending cat warriors, the comics world is giving you plenty to chew on.

If you’re heading to your shop this Wednesday, maybe clear a little extra space in your pull list. This week makes it worth it.