Dunno if it’s just me, but the best storylines in sci-fi graphic novels always seem to be the ones that pack both a massive, universe-altering idea and a painfully human-scale problem right into the same panel. Take 'Saga'—the whole war between Landfall and Wreath is this epic backdrop, but the core is just a family trying to stay together and safe. That contrast makes every spaceship chase or ghostly babysitter hit so much harder. The way Vaughan and Staples weave in political commentary about cycles of violence without ever feeling preachy... it’s unmatched.
Then there’s 'The Incal', which is basically a psychedelic, philosophical car chase through a dying universe. The storyline is gloriously insane, jumping from dystopian city-planets to metaphysical revelations, but it all ties back to John DiFool’s pathetic, everyman journey from coward to... well, slightly less of a coward. It shouldn’t work, but the sheer artistic audacity of Moebius and Jodorowsky makes it a masterpiece of weird sci-fi storytelling. The plot feels like a dream you’re trying to remember, in the best way.