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I dunno if anyone else has a "comfort food" comic/storyline but JLA/Avengers is definitely my go to for that.
The return of Superman was handled far better than I expected it to be, and we got some truly great characters from it. You don't see many events these days that give us good new things that enrich the fiction they're brought into.The Return of Superman - The Reign of the Supermen in the Return TPB was seminal in how it informed my young mind that comic books were great art forms and stories. The twist with Cyborg Superman being a villain, Coast City being nuked and the return of the Big Blue Boy Scout in black and silver was incredible.
Zero Hour: Crisis in Time - pretty pictures aside for my age, seeing a hero turn to villain and everyone trying to stop him from remaking a perfect multiverse and giving everyone what they wish for made me think why this was such a bad thing. Years later I know why, but pretty pictures by Jurgens, Ordway and the feel of the event are very much timeless (pun intended).
Transformers (Marvel 1980s) - Issue 69 The Gathering Storm brought me into the world of Transformers comics and was so different from the one on TV I was used to. Science fiction concepts and pastiches informed my grade school mind thanks to Furman.
Batman Under the Hood Vol 1 and 2 - Got me reading comics seriously after so much happens with so much history in this storyline. I read War Games in it's entirety, it was like experiencing a thriller (albeit a bad one) since it was my fire "sprawling" crossover but Under the Hood was on another level which fed into Infinite Crisis.
Infinite Crisis (and later Sinestro Corps War) for being sweeping, epic and building upon great lore I was familiar with at a cursory glance. It moved the universe forward and established real stakes that felt like things mattered.
Countdown: Lord Havok and the Extremists - this one is a weird one but I loved it in how it showed a "Marvel Universe written as an obvious pastiche" but each issue showcased the origin of a member of the Extremists, with the climax of the story segueing together with Lord Havok's own origin that Frank Tieri made you feel for. I find that this little self-contained story was way more impactful than Grant Morrison's pastiche of Marvel when he finally got around to it in his Multiversity. Liam Sharp's art is incredible at this early stage especially.