Collects Doom (2024) #1, Fantastic Four (1998) #583 And Runaways (2015) #1.
In the near future, Doom alone must save the Marvel Universe! Legendary writer Jonathan Hickman (ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN, G.O.D.S.) joins visionary artist Sanford Greene (POWER MAN AND IRON FIST) to send Doctor Doom on a journey unlike any he has undertaken before! With Valeria Richards at his side, Doom embarks on a quest to harness more power than any human has ever wielded before - in order to stop Galactus from bringing about the death of the universe! more thrilling Doctor Doom stories from the two creators - featuring the Fantastic Four and the Runaways!
Jonathan Hickman is an American comic book writer and artist. He is known for creating the Image Comics series The Nightly News, The Manhattan Projects and East of West, as well as working on Marvel Comics' Fantastic Four, FF, and S.H.I.E.L.D. titles. In 2012, Hickman ended his run on the Fantastic Four titles to write The Avengers and The New Avengers, as part the "Marvel NOW!" relaunch. In 2013, Hickman wrote a six-part miniseries, Infinity, plus Avengers tie-ins for Marvel Comics. In 2015, he wrote the crossover event Secret Wars. - Wikipedia
A treasury edition collecting the 2024 one-shot story from Sanford Greene and Jonathan Hickman, along with Fantastic Four (1998) #583 (from Hickman's run on the title) and Runaways (2015) #1 (which featured art from Greene). The main feature is the one-shot comic itself, which being just around 50 pages long, probably doesn't need a collected edition for it. But given that Greene adds his complete uncolored pages and layouts, this might be worth looking into for fans of his artwork. Simply put, the story itself is pretty decent but the artwork is stunning to behold. And with treasury sized proportions, there is definitely a lot to appreciate here.
Set in the near future where Galactus has become more than just a universal constant - his hunger has culminated in the end days for the universe itself. Where all of Earth's heroes as well as the cosmic entities have failed to rein in Galactus, Doom prepares himself for a final showdown with the Devourer. Helped by his goddaughter Valeria Richards, Doom prepares to be the last hero in a dying universe. The story is a decent enough one off tale, though it doesn't really have a true culmination to it other than to showcase Doom's unwavering will.
The added issues here are tangentially related. The Fantastic Four issue is Valeria-centric, and connects her more rebellious attitude with being more in line with Doom's demeanor. The Runaways issue centers around Doom's shadowy presence over the Doom Institute for Gifted Youths. These feel a bit like padding the page count of a collected edition more than actually relevant to the main story though.
While it's neat to see this blown up to treasury size, you'd have to be real bad with your money to spend $30 on a 40 page story, that comes with the same story again without coloring or lettering and the script and layouts plus 2 unrelated reprints of a Fantastic Four issue by Hickman and a Runaways miniseries from Secret Wars.