Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 (March 2026)

The Devil of Hell’s Kitchen is back - and he brought some old friends.
Charlie Cox returns as Matt Murdock in Daredevil: Born Again Season 2, joined by Krysten Ritter’s Jessica Jones and Elden Henson’s Foggy Nelson, officially tying the Netflix-era heroes into the MCU for real this time.
The trailer shown at NYCC opens with Matt and Karen sharing a rare quiet moment before - boom - an explosion jolts Daredevil’s senses. From there, it’s chaos: propaganda everywhere, protests in the streets, Kingpin (Vincent D’Onofrio) ruling with a smile, and Bullseye making a slick comeback.
The tone feels darker, more grounded, and more political than we’ve seen from Marvel in a while - like Andor meets The Punisher, but with better suits and worse sleep schedules.
X-Men ’97 Season 2 (Summer 2026)

Everyone’s favorite Saturday morning mutants are back for another round - and this time, they brought Apocalypse.
Season 2 of X-Men ’97 will drop in summer 2026, with a third season already confirmed. The new trailer revealed Apocalypse in his classic blue armor, Bishop leading Wolverine, Cyclops, Jean Grey, Jubilee, and Nightcrawler on a trip back to the 1990s, and Logan rocking his brown supersuit again.
The original creative team from the ’90s animated series (Eric and Julia Lewald, Larry Houston) are returning as producers, which basically means: they’re doing this right.
It looks stunning, emotional, and unapologetically retro - just the way it should be.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man Season 2 (Fall 2026)

If Season 1 was the “teenage Spider-Man” warm-up, Season 2 looks like it’s about to go full Venom Saga.
The new trailer shows Peter sneaking into Oscorp to make sure Norman Osborn isn’t cooking up trouble - only to find a certain black goop we all know too well. Daredevil also makes a cameo (again!), and the animation looks smoother, sharper, and more cinematic than the first season.
Fall 2026 can’t come soon enough.
VisionQuest (2026)

Remember WandaVision? Get ready for VisionQuest, its weirder, more philosophical sequel - and the final piece in what Marvel is now calling The WandaVision Trilogy (WandaVision → Agatha All Along → VisionQuest).
Paul Bettany’s White Vision returns, still struggling to figure out who or what he really is. But this time, he’s joined by a human version of Ultron - yes, James Spader is back - along with anthropomorphic takes on FRIDAY, JARVIS, EDITH, and even DUM-E (Tony Stark’s clumsy little robot arm, now with feelings).
The footage shown at NYCC starts like a sitcom fever dream before snapping into existential horror. It ends with a chilling callback: someone whispers that Vision now “has no strings.”
It’s weird. It’s eerie. It might be the best thing Marvel’s done in years.
Wonder Man
Okay, I’ll be honest - the Wonder Man trailer didn’t exactly win me over.
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II stars as Simon Williams - a stuntman-slash-actor-slash-actual-superhero trying to make it in Hollywood while starring in a reboot of… himself. It’s meta on top of meta - the kind of concept that feels like the people who make superhero shows decided to make a superhero show about people who make superhero shows.
I hate that genre. It’s filled with industry in-jokes, self-referential humor, and the kind of Hollywood satire that probably plays better in a writers’ room than it does on your couch. That said, I’m trying to keep an open mind. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II is magnetic, Ben Kingsley’s back as Trevor Slattery (a choice that makes perfect sense in this world of meta-chaos), and there’s always a chance the show finds something clever to say.
So between Daredevil’s political war, X-Men’s mutant time travel, VisionQuest’s AI therapy session, and Wonder Man’s Hollywood chaos, 2026 is shaping up to be the weirdest, boldest, and possibly most creative year Marvel’s had in a decade.