Unique dynamic paneling is something that I really respect when I see it, and I've been trying to do better about in my own comics. Here are some of my favorite series with cool panels:
@phenylketonurics I talked to them a little bit about their methods and they said that they base their layouts on the Fibonacci sequence, golden spirals, etc. Reminds me a bit of the fine-artist Richard Diebenkorn, who even though they didn't make comics, you could probably also get some inspiration from him and his Ocean Park series.
For something a bit more traditional but still very solid you should check out
@revisionstudios I don't have as much to say about this because I haven't read very much of it, but I have talked with one of the creators, and there's a neat blend of influence where the paneling style is very manga-influenced (full bleed panels, slanty stuff, pop-outs) but the framing/shot composition is more western influenced, I definitely can't explain their process as well as they can though, so hopefully they'll chime in.
@felixmorales I've not talked to Felix before, but their paneling is really good and does a great example of pacing and emphasis through panel structure. I don't know if they use the forums but hopefully they'll chime in a bit on their process.
And finally...
@dojo does some really creative stuff with the long-scrolly format that I've not been able to find in other comics. I haven't talked to him much about it but one thing he's mentioned that he does is he tries to keep blank-space when scrolling to a minimum. Also he does this thing where he forms panels out of the contours of speechbubbles which I think is VERRRRRYYYY cool.
Also, I used to do a thing on the forums where I got artists to share small bits of advice and technique on a certain topic, we did one on panel structure: