Groo returns to the funny pages this week with the second installment of a four-issue miniseries that asks a simple, urgent question: can a well-meaning but catastrophically inept hero prevent a foretold disaster? Groo: The Prophecy #2 lands in stores on Wednesday, June 3, and it pushes the series’ central joke—chaos masquerading as help—into a new, oddly tense direction.
Plot and creative team
The new issue centers on the priestess Sybilia, who keeps being haunted by visions of her village’s destruction just as Groo stumbles into town. The tension comes from the gap between intention and outcome: Groo arrives as a would-be savior, but his tendency to aggravate situations raises the stakes of Sybilia’s warnings.
Creators on the book are long-associated with the character: writer-artist Sergio Aragonés teams with veteran collaborator Mark Evanier, with lettering by Stan Sakai and colors from Carrie Strachan. The read blends sight gags and timing-driven humor with a through-line about prophecy and unintended consequences.
What to expect in this issue
Preview pages suggest a mix of celebratory fanfare and mounting mishaps: villagers greet Groo as a champion, then watch him mismanage simple construction tasks with spectacular results. The comedy leans into visual set pieces—Groo’s confusion about sequence and order is played for laughs, but the priestess’s dreams add a darker edge that keeps the story from being entirely frivolous.
For longtime readers, the issue offers familiar rhythms; for newcomers, it functions as an accessible slice of slapstick fantasy with a narrative hook that asks whether fate can be outwitted by ineptitude.
- Title: Groo: The Prophecy #2
- Creators: Sergio Aragonés (writer/artist), Mark Evanier (writer), Stan Sakai (lettering), Carrie Strachan (colors)
- Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
- On sale: June 3, 2026
- Format & price: 32 pages, $4.99
- Series: Four-issue miniseries
The issue quietly underscores why Groo endures: the character’s formula is adaptable. A simple gag structure—well-meaning hero, botched good deed—continues to deliver both laughs and a slightly sharper satirical edge when placed next to more serious elements like prophetic dread.
Why this release matters now
Beyond the immediate punchlines, Groo: The Prophecy #2 matters for a few practical reasons. It keeps one of comics’ classic humor properties active in the market, providing reliable material for retailers and collectors during a busy summer slate. It also showcases veteran creators who remain influential to new generations of cartoonists and readers.
On a cultural level, the story’s pairing of prophecy with blundering heroics offers a mild commentary on how communities respond to crisis: eager to believe in saviors, even when those saviors are imperfect. That makes the issue roughly as relevant to readers seeking light entertainment as to those interested in how humor can reflect contemporary anxieties.
If you follow Groo or track releases from Dark Horse, this issue is an expected continuation; if you’re just browsing new comics, it’s an accessible one-off that balances sight gags with a plot thread likely to carry through the miniseries.
Copies should be available at comic shops and digital platforms on the release date. For collectors, note the page count and listed cover price; for casual readers, sampling the preview pages before purchase can help decide whether the particular tone of this miniseries suits your tastes.
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Hello, I’m Jax. I guide you through the latest comics releases and enrich your geek universe.