Spawn #376
| Writer | Matthew Rosenberg |
| Artist | Stephen Segovia |
| Cover Price | $3.99 |
Spawn has been beaten, bloodied, and left for dead. But unfortunately for Spawn’s attacker, all that did was make him mad.
CRITIC REVIEWS Back to Top
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9.3
Fanlight Zone - Richard Coryell
Jun 03, 2026Spawn #376 jump starts this new story arc with the new creative team at the helm. This issue feels a little different than the issues that came before it. This new feeling is exciting and opens up way more possibilities on where this series can go. If you have fallen off the Spawn series, this is a perfect time to jump back in and start fresh with this run. You won’t want to miss this one as it promises to be one of the most original arcs we’ve had in this universe. Read Full Review
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9.0
AIPT - David Brooke
Jun 03, 2026Spawn #376 feels like the start of something genuinely exciting. Rosenberg shifts the focus away from cosmic battles and toward the people forced to live in the aftermath, creating a fresh perspective on a character more than three decades old. Combined with Segovia's atmospheric artwork and a setting transformed by the end of the war between Heaven and Hell, the result is a compelling first chapter that builds intrigue while making the stakes feel larger than ever. A bold new era that makes Spawn feel dangerous, mysterious, and essential again. Read Full Review
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8.0
Comic Crusaders - Al Mega
Jun 04, 2026Spawn is a confident, moody, street-level jump into a new chapter of the Spawn mythos. Rosenberg brings a sharp emotional hook, Segovia delivers visuals with both menace and humanity, Nugent drenches the world in bruised atmosphere, and Orzechowski keeps the rhythm clean and powerful. It’s big without losing the block. It’s supernatural without forgetting the people sweeping glass off the sidewalk. It’s a reminder that Spawn works best when he is not just a character, but a question: angel, demon, weapon, warning, or last bad dude standing between humanity and something worse? Read Full Review
USER REVIEWS Back to Top
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7.5
If you read my review of King Spawn #55, then you know my "history" with Spawn titles. That said, jumping into Spawn was something I was apprehensive about, but felt like doing anyway with this creative team and the promise of a jumping-on point. Luckily, I liked this. Not as much as I was hoping, but still nonetheless. Really liked where Rosenberg went with the flashback story, though I don't really feel that I got a strong sense of where it's heading in future issues. It almost felt more like a one-shot story...which, probably shouldn't be the case with the first issue of a new arc? I don't know. Not saying that there won't be any follow-up on it, but that's just how it felt purely by reading this on its own. In any case, I liked this eno more
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4.0
I suppose I am the target market for Spawn as I fell away from the title back around issue 117. The problem with this so called jumping on point is that it lacked a hook to bring me back. The pacing seemed really off at the start with so much needless words and a real lack of vision to grab me , the reader. As the pacing got quicker I just personally found myself drifting along with it. The art and colours weren't what I loved back in the day either. Sorry Spawn but I as an old fan won't be back......JM