Garth Ennis' new series BABS, a sword & sorcery satire; protagonist surrounded by treasure

The Boys is getting its fantasy twin thanks to a new series from Ahoy Comics. After the success of Garth Ennis’ comic series and its television adaptation on Amazon Prime, fans of irreverent, trope-subverting dark comedy are in for a treat with a new take on an old classic: Dungeons and Dragons meets the same style that toppled genres in The Boys thanks to Ennis’ new series, Babs.

By now, comic fans and television fans alike are familiar with the dark and violent tone of The Boys, which was created by Ennis and Darick Robertson. Starting off like any other fantasy story, Babs #1 by Ennis and Jacen Burrows quickly diverts to show its true off-colors.

Babs Gets Caught in a Tree with Sword and Horse

In just the first issue, Ennis and Burrows deliver a full-on parody of fantasy where the characters speak in modern language. Comedic moment after comedic moment unfold in a cascading tide of I-shouldn’t-laugh-at-this laughs. Already, with this fresh take on fantasy, Ennis and Burrows seem to ask why fantasy fans ever took this so seriously.

Fantasy Gets The Boys Treatment in New Dark Comic Fairy Tale

Babs Is the Story Fantasy Needs Right Now

Babs Punches a Goblin

With Babs , fans can expect Ennis to provide a new anti-hero of the same dark mold, in violence, in tone, and in sticky situations.

Ennis is no stranger to treating the sacred world of comics with profane ideas. As with how he dealt with the superheroes of The Boys universe, fantasy is now the too-serious medium that Ennis, alongside his co-creator, has decided to knock down a few pegs. Previously, Ennis also attacked the serious world of religion in his hard-hitting series Preacher (with Steve Dillon), and he also did a stint on DC’s Hellblazer in the nineties, cementing John Constantine as one of the most important anti-heroes of the new century.

Like his other R-rated worlds, with Babs, fans can expect Ennis to provide a new anti-hero of the same dark mold – in violence, in tone, and in sticky situations. Babs is certainly no great and questing hero of a fantastical age. As with heroes never quite living up to their supposed legacy in The Boys, the idea of the hero and the chosen one receive the same treatment in Babs.

Babs Brings Comedy and Violence to the World of Fantasy

Babs #1 Variant Cover by Amanda Conner

Babs 1 Conner Variant Cover: a pale woman with dark hair wearing gold armor holds a sword.

Ennis is a breath of fresh air in a world of comics that take themselves too seriously. DC and Marvel are haunted by crisis after crisis, and Babs shows a world with just as high stakes – but the stakes can be funny, tooThe Boys showed that what people really want is a good laugh – specifically at things they know they shouldn’t laugh at.

Even in the first issue, as Babs gets herself into heaps of trouble (and a few jokes besides), the too-serious grip of fantasy is releasing its hold on comics. Ennis is a trickster in his writing, always poking fun at cultural norms, like he did with The BoysIt seems that, already and alongside co-creator Burrows, Babs might just do the same at Ahoy Comics and stand the test of time.

Babs #1 is available now from Ahoy Comics!