Writer & Artist: Ludo Lullabi
Colorist: Adriano Lucas
Cover Artists: Ludo Lullabi; Artgerm; Kael Ngu & Artgerm; Joe Madureira; Chris O’Halloran & André Lima Araújo; Yasmine Putri
Publisher: Image Comics
Price: $4.99
Release Date: July 16, 2025
In a desert village, a man tells a story. The listeners criticize his retelling. He is not a priest. Still, when the man invokes the name of their savior, people drop money into the helmet in his hands. Why should people give this man their offerings? Let's grab a bowl from Loloi's food truck, leap into Ghost Pepper #1, and find out!
Story
Loloi lives on the road. She stops in Human settlements and enthralls the locals with her unique flavors. On this day, a visitor enters the village and sits before her truck. While the robot on his shoulder proves talkative, the man eats in silence.
Sadly, it’s not the man’s day in Ghost Pepper #1. A giant robot detects an anomaly in the village. When it sends its servants to investigate, Loloi's customer doesn't respond. The villagers gape at this visitor defying the Shortfin Controllers. The robot perched on the man’s shoulder apologizes for the disturbance. Still, from one robot to his kin, it suggests that they leave him in peace.
Ghost Pepper #1 introduces a world where people scramble to get by. Like the desert dwellers of Jakku, they live amid the detritus of a fallen civilization. Monuments to the planet's former greatness surround them. Robots dictate their lives. Yet the survivors of the holocaust give thanks to their savior.
In Ludo Lullabi’s story, the holy name of Bataar gives the people strength. His profile of courage and defying the odds reinforces their cultural identity. Like the early Christians who gathered regularly in fellow believers’ homes, the poor, oppressed villagers yearn to hear his story retold. Bataar defied the Great Cinder and imprisoned it on the moon. They can make it through another day.
Art
A man of ample girth tosses a handful of coins into the helmet. But his son only gives the storyteller with metal hands one. The boy saves the rest for Loloi. She chops vegetables with a flourish and dispenses her secret ingredient from a can. Loloi reaches down from the counter on the side of her Dakar-like truck. As the boy clutches a box of spicy vegetables, his father and Loloi return the delight in his bulging eyes and radiant smile.
Long hair shelters the silent diner's features. A robot crouches on the stranger's shoulder like a demon in Ghost Pepper #1. As he plucks noodles from his bowl with chopsticks, the visitor ignores the vast network of towering pillars and the immense beams that extend to the horizon. Metal kaiju stride and leap across the desert. Humanoid robots with V-shaped, pterodactyl-like heads surround Loloi's food truck. With one easy kick, the silent man shoves the desert truck out of the way. Then he rises from the canister to meet the robot guardians.
As Adriano Lucas lavishes a loaded palette on Ludo Lullabi’s engaging characters and imaginative settings, the villagers pray to their savior and share stories with white dialogue balloons and narrative boxes. Raised voices deform balloon shapes and swell the black uppercase dialogue. While the protectors of the people speak white and yellow text into blue boxes, the red-eyed robot crouching on the visitor’s shoulder speaks into red balloons. Sound effects help us hear Loloi’s furious cleaver, a diner’s distaste, a kaiju dropping eggs onto a frightened populace, and lasers destroying the survivors’ meager possessions.
Final Thoughts
On a world devastated by war, survivors cling to communal beliefs. An oral tradition preserves their history. It teaches that scientists created the instrument of their destruction in Ghost Pepper #1. But when robots dictate their lives and prevent their communities from rebuilding, how much of what the people know should they believe?
Rating 9.8/10
To look inside see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.
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