I'm not much for comic books, but my evil SJW friend loaned me some of hers a few months back, so...
Squirrel Girl - #1 & #2, the recent run done by the "Dinosaur Comics" guy. This was really funny! I really liked it. Anyway, seems notable to bring up here since I"m pretty sure Squirrel Girl is Marvel's shot at the equivalent of the RPGDL for comic books - the people who extensively analyze every character's power set, how they match up with everyone else, why that one issue from 1996 should be ignored, why character A is totally stronger than character B, etc. But the real answer is that whoever wins is whoever the writer wants to win. Squirrel Girl, whose power is largely, um, squirrels, gets to beat up all the Avengers off-panel because that'd be funny. It's not even a big deal! She famously beat up Dr. Doom back in the day, and even Galactus isn't that big a threat. No, it's evil Norse troll god-squirrels that are the REAL problem.
Ms. Marvel - #1, the new one. It's *slightly* more serious than Squirrel Girl, but still pretty nudge nudge wink wink about taking comic evil plots TOO seriously, which is fine by me. Anyway this series is famous for having a Pakistani-American Ms. Marvel who is a Muslim, which is always tricky, since frankly religion doesn't normally combo too well with superhero universes? Either you have some alternate universe where there's hadith about how to deal with Galactus and such (and risk making it not resonant to people familiar with the "real" version of the religion), or there's some vast crisis of faith about how {Your Religion} is clearly wrong since the Norse pantheon exists and Moses/ Jesus / Muhammad/ Krishna / Buddha / etc. didn't include many teachings about how to deal with supervillains, which seems a colossal oversight. Like, shouldn't you be able to pray Galactus away? Would God really let Earth get devoured? ANYWAY, smartly enough, the book doesn't actually focus THAT much on the religious side, and keeps the focus more cultural. The immigrant experience in America & all that.
Anyway, I was amused. The only complaint is that the #1 series begins to take its villain plot slightly more seriously toward the end, and it's something that even given the usual extra "it's a comic universe" nitpicking defense, I didn't really buy. If you've seen the anime Eden of the East, it's a bit similar a note as far as "society disrespects the young generation", which is fair enough, just this was a little over-the-top. Still, a minor complaint at most.