Lobo #1 Facsimile Edition — Giffen and Bisley launch the Main Man's legendary origin.


Keith Giffen and Alan Grant introduced the universe's most dangerous bounty hunter in this facsimile of Lobo's debut. The Main Man must transport the last remaining Czarnian across the galaxy—alive. The problem? The prisoner is writing an unauthorized biography, and Lobo is furious. Simon Bisley's iconic art returns.
There's a specific flavor of chaos that only the Giffen and Grant partnership could cook up, and no character captures that energy quite like Lobo. This facsimile edition brings us back to the very start of the run, where the Main Man was established as the DC Universe's wildest card. We aren't just getting the story here; we're getting Simon Bisley's original cover and interior art, which turned a comic book character into a texture-heavy icon.
Lobo's origin is built on a dark joke: he's the last Czarnian only because he wiped out the rest of his planet to claim the title. But he missed one. Now, the Main Man is tasked with an impossible assignment from L.E.G.I.O.N. custody—he has to escort the sole surviving Czarnian across the galaxy and keep him breathing. The situation gets complicated fast because this prisoner has taken it upon himself to write a tell-all biography of Lobo. The author wants the truth, and Lobo is determined to keep it buried.
A facsimile edition is more than just nostalgia; it's a chance to see the original vision without the fade or wear of decades-old newsprint. Bisley's inks define what Lobo looks and feels like. His work is dense, expressive, and perfectly suited for a character who lives on the edge of violence. Reading Giffen and Grant's dialogue over Bisley's visuals is the purest way to understand why this character has stayed on the shelves for so long.
If you're building a library, this is the anchor piece. You don't need a vintage copy to get the Bisley aesthetic, and the price point lets you grab it without waiting for a sale. It's the entry point that doesn't feel cheap.
