Bartok the Magnificent: Baba Yaga kidnapped Ivan Romanov. Or so everyone thinks; she turns out to have been framed by the movie's true villain, Ludmilla, in a bid to seize the throne.
Peter Cannon: Thunderbolt (2019): The character named Baba Yaga here is a Russian witch with bird-like legs. She is apparently one of a line of such witches selected and empowered by a coven in the Kremlin. However, this incarnation at least is a superhero — and, as it turns out, a noble, self-sacrificing one.
In a tie-in novel of Primeval, Extinction Event a T. rex thar emerges in Russia is nicknamed after Baba Yaga, due to how her legs reminded some Russians of her chicken-legged hut.
Girl Genius: This page sports an Steampunk version Baba Yaga's hut, with mechanic chicken feet and the egg joke. The thing is even named for the fabled witch.
SCP Foundation: SCP-352 is Baba Yaga who usually convinces very young children to follow her to her home. In the witch's house, there are several threads invisible to the human eye, which will immobilize the potential prey, allowing her to eat them.
Baba Yaga appears in the Dimension 20 series Neverafter, as a mysterious witch who knows more about the nature of stories than most.
Arthur: In "What Scared Sue Ellen?", Sue Ellen imagines Baba Yaga as a possible source of the mysterious noise coming from the woods. She's depicted as a withered old crone who lives in a house that moves around on giant chicken legs.