Blood & Thunder #15 Preview: IPPF Hunts Blood in a High-Stakes Chase
Blood & Thunder #15 keeps the pressure on as Blood finds herself hunted, cornered, and forced to confront a dangerous piece of her past.
Written by Benito Cereno and Robert Kirkman, with art by E.J. Su and Msassyk, the new issue continues the chase as the IPPF closes in. The official hook says it all: “It’s the IPPF vs. Blood.”
The issue arrives at comic book shops and digital platforms on July 8, 2026, with a cover price of $3.99. Readers looking for the official publisher listing can find Blood & Thunder #15 Cover A by E.J. Su and Dee Cunniffe through Image Comics.
Blood Is on the Run
In Blood & Thunder #15, Blood is running from more than just armed agents. She is being chased by something older, heavier, and far more personal: a ghost from her past.
That gives the issue a strong emotional hook beneath the action. This is not only a pursuit story. It is a survival story built around history, consequences, and the danger of old wounds catching up at the worst possible time.
The IPPF agents are closing in fast, but the preview pages suggest this issue is not as simple as a straight manhunt. Blood may be hunted, but she is not helpless. She is smart, fast, dangerous, and still capable of turning a desperate situation into a fight.
The IPPF Brings the Pressure
The visual preview makes the IPPF feel organized, armored, and relentless. Their presence gives the issue a heavy tactical edge. They are not just random guards or disposable background threats. They move like a force that believes it owns the streets.
That makes Blood’s situation more intense. Every corner could be watched. Every alley could hide another squad. Every moment of hesitation could cost her everything.
The issue’s best hook is the way it positions Blood between pursuit and revelation. The IPPF wants her. Her past is catching up. And somewhere in the shadows, unexpected allies may be waiting.
That last detail is important because it keeps the issue from feeling predictable. Blood is isolated, but not necessarily alone.
A Strong Visual Identity
E.J. Su and Msassyk give Blood & Thunder #15 a clean, controlled visual style that fits the chase narrative. The preview pages move between quiet surveillance, tense city movement, and sudden bursts of danger.
The art does a good job making Blood stand out visually. Her design immediately pulls the eye, especially against the colder armor and organized formation of the IPPF agents. That contrast helps sell the central conflict: one fugitive against a system built to contain her.
The city scenes also create a sense of pressure. Streets, interiors, and alleyways feel watched. Even when the page is quiet, there is a feeling that something is closing in.
Why This Issue Matters
Blood & Thunder #15 looks like a major momentum issue because it puts Blood directly into the path of both external and internal conflict.
The external conflict is obvious: the IPPF wants her captured.
The internal conflict is more interesting: Blood is running from a ghost of her past, and that means the story is digging into who she is, what she has survived, and why her enemies still want her so badly.
That combination gives the issue its strongest appeal. New readers get a fast, readable chase story with a clear threat. Current readers get deeper character tension and the promise of answers.
Variant Cover Watch
Collectors have a few options to track for Blood & Thunder #15.
The main release page for Cover A from Image Comics is the best starting point for the standard edition.
Collectors hunting incentives may also want to look at the Midtown Comics listing for the Cover C incentive variant by Karen S. Darboe, while readers looking for another shop option can check the Third Eye Comics listing for the Cover D 1:25 Pete Woods variant.
For readers who follow new comics every week, this is the kind of release worth flagging before Wednesday. The premise is direct, the stakes are personal, and the chase angle gives the issue immediate energy.
Final Thoughts
Blood & Thunder #15 looks like a tense, fast-moving chapter built around pursuit, survival, and buried history.
The creative team leans into a sharp setup: Blood is hunted by IPPF agents, haunted by her past, and possibly closer to help than she realizes. That mix gives the issue enough action for readers who want a chase and enough mystery for readers invested in the larger story.
With Benito Cereno and Robert Kirkman on story, plus E.J. Su and Msassyk handling the art, Blood & Thunder #15 has the ingredients for a strong mid-run chapter that pushes Blood into a dangerous new corner.
Blood & Thunder #15 arrives July 8, 2026, at comic book shops and digital platforms including Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, and Google Play.
Book Details
Title: Blood & Thunder #15
Publisher: Image Comics
Story: Benito Cereno and Robert Kirkman
Art: E.J. Su and Msassyk
Price: $3.99
Release Date: July 8, 2026
Format: Single issue
Available At: Comic book shops and digital platforms
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