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Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 featured image

UNIVERSAL MONSTERS: THE INVISIBLE MAN #4 – New Comic Review

Posted on November 27, 2025

Universal Monsters: The Invisible Man #4, by Image Comics on 11/26/25, delivers a final chapter that promises blood, betrayal, and a lesson on why you should always check your flour for footprints before settling your tab with science.

Credits:

  • Writer: James Tynion IV
  • Artist: Dani
  • Colorist: Brad Simpson
  • Letterer: Becca Carey
  • Cover Artist: Dani (cover A)
  • Publisher: Image Comics
  • Release Date: November 26, 2025
  • Comic Rating: Teen
  • Cover Price: $4.99
  • Page Count: 42
  • Format: Single Issue

Covers:

Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 cover A
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Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 cover B
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Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 cover A
Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 cover B

Analysis of UNIVERSAL MONSTERS: THE INVISIBLE MAN #4:

First Impressions:

The opening pages drop the reader right into a paranoid spiral that feels both claustrophobic and inescapable. The narrative wastes zero time reminding us of the core idea: when playing with power, prepare for payback. The tension is thick enough to bottle and sell at a chemist’s shop.

Recap:

In Universal Monsters: The Invisible Man #3, the issue cracked open with local gossip about disappearances and a suspicious man in dark glasses, then zeroed in on Griffin’s descent: juggling a frayed relationship, stifling heat, and clandestine experiments. Tommy, a desperate boy, became both subject and symbol of Griffin’s moral erosion; after making Tommy vanish, Griffin’s empathy followed suit. The final chaos left Griffin thinking himself predator until the hunt turned on him, and the invisible prey struck back.​

Plot Analysis:

Griffin begins the issue haunted by Tommy’s escape. Fear of exposure drives him from home, hiding his movements and covering his tracks. Despite his outward calm, paranoia shadows every step; he distances himself from Flora, feigns normalcy, and bides his time to marry into safety. The specter of Tommy’s potential revenge lingers, with Griffin both obsessed and terrified by the invisible force he’s unleashed.

Suffocating routine pushes Griffin to isolate himself, working in secret to refine his formula while reliving the trauma of Tommy’s disappearance. He stages precocious defenses by renting a room, scattering flour, concocting cover stories, hoping to outsmart his unseen adversary. The tension ratchets up as Griffin imagines Tommy’s vengeance touching everyone he loves; yet, all his calculations don’t prevent disaster.

The inevitable confrontation arrives. Tommy, still invisible, returns for retribution. Emotional and physical violence erupt, the pair trading barbs and blows. In the chaos, Griffin’s brilliance gives way to desperation. All his supposed control unravels as Tommy reveals he’s read Griffin’s research and knows there’s no cure, flipping the power dynamic with chilling finality.

The story ends with Griffin fully isolated, clinging to delusions of superiority and hope for reversal. He flees into further solitude, convinced he can solve the riddle of reappearance, even as his own humanity slips quietly out the door, unseen by anyone who’d care to look

Story

The pacing is relentless but never rushed; a steady march toward fate, driven by Griffin’s increasingly frantic internal monologue. Dialogue crackles with venom, every exchange meaningfully pushing either plot or sanity a step further from safety. Structure is tight, with flashbacks and paranoia blending to create a thick fog of suspense.

Art

The art is expressive but maintains clarity, even when depicting the unseen. Panel composition uses negative space and visual tricks to evoke absence, amplifying psychological dread. Colors skew cold and muted thought ashen blues and angry shadows, mirroring the moral rot at the story’s heart.

Characters

Griffin’s unraveling is depicted with surgical precision; even as he acts monstrously, his logic remains grossly believable; ambition curdles into fear and self-justification. Tommy’s arc is tragic and vengeful, giving him the narrative closure horror fans hunger for. Supporting characters serve mainly as emotional pressure points, but stay consistent in their roles.

Originality & Concept Execution

The book sidesteps clichés, peeling back classic horror to expose something raw – a creature story with a brain as well as teeth. Execution matches intent: this is not just a rehash, but a darkly inventive riff on power, abuse, and what’s left behind when ambition trumps empathy.

Positives

The comic’s strength lies in its complete commitment to the psychological rat race. Every scene tightens the screws. The art team translates absence into palpable tension while the script spares no one from consequences. Dialogue and paneling keep the reader on edge, ensuring investment in every reveal and reversal

Negatives

Repetition in Griffin’s internal logic can feel excessive, as though hammering home the obvious. Some side characters are more decoration than substance, used to stoke tension without deepening the human drama. When the final confrontation arrives, the speed at which chaos unspools may leave some readers wishing for a few more pages to let the horror settle

Art Samples:

Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 1
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Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 2
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Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 3
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Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 4
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Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 1
Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 2
Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 3
Universal Monsters - The Invisible Man 4 preview 4

The Scorecard

Writing Quality (Clarity & Pacing): 3.5/4
Art Quality (Execution & Synergy): 3.5/4
Value (Originality & Entertainment): 1.5/2

Final Thoughts:

(Click this link 👇 to order this comic)

Would UNIVERSAL MONSTERS: THE INVISIBLE MAN #4 earn shelf space for a twelve-year-old horror hound? Absolutely… if they can stomach the psychological gut-punch. Every dollar and minute invested gets wrung for maximum effect; just don’t expect the story, or its monsters, to leave gently once you close the cover

Score: 8.5/10

★★★★★★★★★★


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