Welcome back to Fantastic Five, where we shout out the best comics of the week! This week was all about the Big Two, as DC nabbed three of the top five spots while Marvel took the other two. Let’s get to the books!
Best comics of the week: February 11, 2026
#5: Batman & Robin #30
Batman & Robin was far better than I ever expected it to be, and the underdog of the Batman line. In a world where Batman makes up a huge percentage of DC’s publishing slate, I’m not surprised to see some of those titles come to an end, but I am really bummed out that one of them has to be one as consistently great as this. I’ve said it before, but while the Batman titles have all been extremely strong, Batman & Robin was the one that I feel like could have used the bigger push. I’m sure there’s a new title coming soon for the Dynamic Duo, but I doubt it will have the heart that Phillip Kennedy Johnson and Fico Ossio’s run has had.
Read Jonathan Waugh’s full review!
#4: Supergirl #10
‘Supergirl’ #10 tackles Valentine’s Day with relationship drama
Kara Zor-El goes on a date with the mysterious tattoo guy in Supergirl #10, but it’s not a happy Valentine’s Day for the Girl of Steel.
Read Diane Darcy’s full review!
#3: Marc Spector: Moon Knight #1
Marc Spector: Moon Knight #1 succeeds by leaning into the character’s instability rather than smoothing it over. Jed MacKay uses disorientation as a storytelling tool, placing readers inside Marc’s unease and letting the mystery unfold at a deliberate pace. Dev Pramanik’s art reinforces that tension, making even mundane spaces feel threatening. The issue tells a complete story while setting up new possibilities for Marc’s fractured psyche. It is a confident reset that demonstrates Moon Knight comics entice with exciting experimentation.
Read David Brooke’s full review!
#2: Immortal Legend Batman #6
‘Immortal Legend Batman’ #6 brings its saga to a bittersweet end
Immortal Legend Batman #6 closes the book on a truly epic reinvention of the Dark Knight, and shows that you can take a character in any direction you want as long as you stay true to their core elements.
Read Collier Jennings’ full review!
#1: Ultimate X-Men #24
In conclusion, Ultimate X-Men #24 is a fantastic and mysterious end to a thrilling comic run. Peach Momoko and Zack Davisson have put in the work to keep this series going strong as it managed to exist outside of the box it was put into. As mentioned earlier in the review, this series is, in my honest opinion, one of the last genuine coming-of-age comics on the stands and I hope it stands as an example of how to write and draw teenage heroes. In truth, teenagers don’t always want to see Spider-Man swinging through New York, they want to see kids being kids. Even if growing up is a bit painful.

