User blog comment:Sunshine Souperman/Random Plot Generator for the Unimaginative Comic Book Writer/@comment-153755-20141017125159/@comment-4651179-20141017214749

I would actually recommend you a lot of current new comics.

Epic big-scale books like Jonathan Hickman's Avengers or New Avengers with really interesting concepts which are really well played. Pretty much like Hickman's Fantastic Four run, all the elements present since the first issue converge in a puzzle which is an awesome big picture. New Avengers is the best of those two, it pits the secret group of heroes the Illuminati against the inevitable destruction of the universe, and it presents the thought-provoking moral conflict of having to destroy an alternate universe's Earth if they want to save theirs. Pretty much if it's justified to do evil as long as it is for a greater good, and if it can be considered a greater good if you had to do that evil.

Matt Fraction's Hawkeye. It's totally different and amazing, specially from the artistic stand point (its main artist David Aja has won an Eisner Award for covers, and was nominated for another for interiors). It focuses on the civil life of Hawkeye, and how hard it is for him. This series has been nominated for two Eisner Awards, and its issue #11 won this year's Eisner Award for best single issue, which is told from the perspective of Hawkeye's dog.

Mark Waid and Chris Samnee's Daredevil. This series won an Eisner Award. It's fresh, with a really good vibe.

Nick Spencer and Steve Lieber's The Superior Foes of Spider-Man, which focuses on the failed attempts of five D-list super villains to be the Sinister Six (and yes, they know they're only five). It's mostly different not only because of its focus on super villains, but its focus on failures. It features a lot of visual gags, and humor (like the Shocker freaking out because he's being beaten up by his favorite hero, Luke Cage).

Ales Kot's and Michael Walsh' Secret Avengers. It's totally absurd. An evil android getting pregnant, a sentient bomb that doesn't destroy all of reality because Spider-Woman convinces it to try gelato, Deadpool creating a Hawkeye fan club in Argentina, and M.O.D.O.K. failing on his plan to destroy S.H.I.E.L.D. because he fell in love with Maria Hill. It's as good as it's sounds.

Al Ewing's Loki: Agent of Asgard. It pretty much pitches Loki against destiny itself. From a distant future, an older version of himself came, and it's trying to be sure he becomes evil as he is in the future. It has a really interesting cast, as well as interpersonal interactions. Its humor is really clever.

Warren Ellis and Declan Shalvey's and then Brian Wood and Greg Smallwood's Moon Knight is simply beautiful. The story flows almost-perfectly, and the art is outstanding. It features only one-shot stories each issue, which have mostly revisited some of the elements of Moon Knight. They've included interesting ideas, last issue, for example, was shown from the perspective of different cameras (from phones, reporter's cameras, or Moon Knight's drones).

Those would be my top choices.