Lustomic - New Comics
That night, Maya couldn’t resist. She grabbed L-12: “The Thief.” The plot was simple: a pickpocket working a crowded market. But on page four, when the thief’s hand brushed a stranger’s pocket, Maya felt a phantom tickle on her own thigh. When the thief was chased, Maya’s legs twitched. When the thief finally stole a locket containing a photo of a dead mother, Maya wept—not for the thief, but for her own mother, who had left when Maya was six.
She slammed it shut.
The gimmick, Silas explained, was ancient technology. Not a story you read, but a story that read you . Using neuro-reactive ink and panel layouts that triggered the brain’s fusiform face area, the Lustomic hijacked the reader’s empathy. A romance issue made you fall in love with the protagonist. A horror issue made you feel the monster’s breath on your neck. An action issue made your pulse race as if you were dodging bullets. lustomic new comics