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Chew (comics)

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Chew
A man sitting at a dinner table holding a gun to the camera
Cover to Chew #1 by Rob Guillory.
Publication information
PublisherImage Comics
ScheduleMonthly
FormatOngoing series
Genre
Publication dateJune 2009 – November 2016
No. of issues60
Main character(s)Tony Chu
John Colby
Mason Savoy
Creative team
Created byJohn Layman
Rob Guillory
Written byJohn Layman
ArtistRob Guillory
LettererJohn Layman
Colorists
  • Rob Guillory
  • Lisa Gonzales (#5–8)
  • Steve Struble (#9–18)
  • Taylor Wells (#27, 19–60)
Collected editions
Taster's ChoiceISBN 1-60706-159-7
International FlavorISBN 1-60706-260-7
Just DessertsISBN 1-60706-335-2
FlambéISBN 1-60706-398-0
Major League ChewISBN 1-60706-523-1
Space CakesISBN 1-60706-621-1
Bad ApplesISBN 1-60706-767-6
Family RecipesISBN 1-60706-938-5
Chicken TendersISBN 1-63215-289-4
Blood Puddin'ISBN 1-63215-396-3
The Last SuppersISBN 1-63215-681-4
Sour GrapesISBN 1-5343-0031-7
Outer Darkness/ChewISBN 1-5343-1657-4

Chew is an American comic book series about a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) agent, Tony Chu, who solves crimes by receiving psychic impressions from whatever he consumes as food, no matter what. It is written by John Layman[1] with art by Rob Guillory[2] and published by Image Comics across the storylines Taster's Choice, International Flavor, Just Desserts, Flambé, Major League Chew, Space Cakes, Bad Apples, Family Recipes, Chicken Tenders, Blood Puddin', The Last Suppers, and Sour Grapes. The series has won two Eisner Awards and two Harvey Awards.

Chew's first issue was released in June 2009, and the series concluded with its 60th issue in November 2016,[3] with a crossover one-shot, I Hate Fairyland – I Hate Image, following in May 2017. An animated film/television adaptation starring the voices of Steven Yeun, Felicia Day, and Robin Williams began production in 2014, going into development hell following Williams' death (despite him being recast with David Tennant in 2015) and being unfinished by 2017.

In 2020, two follow-up projects were released – a three-issue crossover with Outer Darkness (another comic series written by Layman), and the beginning of a spin-off series titled Chu, comprising the "Chewniverse".

Plot summary

[edit]

Set in a world where all chicken and other bird meats are illegal, after a catastrophic outbreak of the bird flu that killed 23 million Americans, Chew centers on Tony Chu, a police detective who is a cibopath (pronounced "SEE-bo-path"[4]). Tony becomes a vice cop with the Philadelphia Police Department, and when on assignment in Taster's Choice, trying to find people smuggling chicken, he enters a black market chicken restaurant on invitation from the U.S. FDA. He has a bowl of chicken soup only to find he gets a psychic impression of the cook killing people and putting them into the soup. He goes to bust the cook, only for the cook to kill himself outside the restaurant. Chu eats a bite of the cooks tongue to find out the names of the rest of the victims. He is fired from his job after the Philadelphia PD catches him eating the cook and gets hired on to the FDA by an agent named Mason Savoy, who is also a cibopath.[5]

The first case that Tony and Savoy are assigned to is finding out what happened to a Health Inspector named Evan Pepper, based on a finger found inside of a hamburger at a fast-food restaurant. During the investigation, Tony has a hit put out on him by a businessman named Ray Jack Montero.[6] It is eventually discovered that Mason Savoy killed Pepper and when confronted about it, bites off Tony's ear to use it as leverage in case Tony ever comes after him. Savoy runs off to discover what really caused the so-called Bird Flu, and banned all chicken consumption.[7]

In International Flavor, Tony takes some time off and flies with his brother to an island called Yamapalu. Chu is there to investigate a certain plant called a Gallsaberry which tastes exactly like chicken. Chu meets with a United States Department of Agriculture agent, who tells Tony that she will tell him all she knows about Gallsaberry, but unfortunately she's murdered and Tony is framed.[8] Tony has his FDA credentials checked and is released only to find out by biting another prisoner that another murder has taken place, over a rooster named Poyo, a cockfight champion. After confiscating the rooster, Tony goes to the morgue to find out more about Gallsaberries. During this time, the chief of police steals Poyo. Tony then eats a Gallsaberry raw and finds out that it is from outer space.[9] Tony sneaks on the base where Gallsaberries are grown, evacuates several people that are imprisoned there only to find out that the entire crop of Gallsaberries are burning.[10] It turns out that Ray Jack Montero is burning the plants to remove any competition, with a little help from some residents of Yamapalu, who are rebelling due to the capture of Poyo. Tony is shot at by an employee of Montero, but is missed, and has a confrontation with a person known as The Vampire who is also a cibopath.[11]

In Just Desserts, Tony finds out that Poyo had been moved to America, so he retrieves him and shuts down a cockfighting ring.[12] It is revealed that Ray Jack Montero had been changing Frog DNA to make them taste (and look) more like chickens, creating a creature called Frickens, or Chogs and packaging their meat and calling it Poult-Free, a chicken substitute. It is also revealed Montero knew that the bird-flu outbreak was going to happen before it did, so Mason Savoy had his partner, Caesar, go undercover inside of Montero's company. Caesar was the one who shot at Tony in Yamapalu and intentionally missed. Montero is captured, and Savoy is surrounded by the FDA when they were watching one of Montero's buildings.[13] Savoy has a confrontation with John and escapes. Amelia finds a toe that was in Tony's fridge, given to him from an old girlfriend.[14] Savoy eats Tony's ear and learns more about him, specifically that Tony has a daughter by the name of Olive. Tony brings Amelia and John with him to his family's Thanksgiving. We meet his friendlier twin sister Toni. While giving grace, there is a 2 car pile-up outside and alien writing in the sky.[15]

A week later, in Flambé, the FDA is making the writing in the sky a priority over the chicken ban. Tony teams up with Mason's old partner Caesar to look for a former FDA agent named Migdalo Daniel who is a Voresoph, Migdalo attacked the agents and accidentally killed himself. A Kentucky Fried Chicken imitation restaurant called Mother Clucker's reopens selling chicken.[16] Tony and Colby investigate a food fight that resulted in several students killing each other at Francis Bacon High School. It turns out that a student named Peter Pilaf has a new food related power. After detaining him, Tony finds out that Pilaf had sent a recipe to astronauts on the Fisher-Okroshka International Space Station which exploded shortly afterwards. It turns out that a servant of The Vampire on the Space Station caused the station to explode and escaped with some computer files and a Gallsaberry.[17] While on a mission with the USDA in North Korea, Tony and Colby find out that the FDA are using Poyo as a secret weapon.[18] Tony is transferred to NASA for the day to work with his sister, Toni. They go to Area 51, Area 51 has pieces of the Space Station including the body of an astronaut. Tony bites the astronaut and discovers The Vampire's involvement.[19] Mason drinks Migdalo's blood, and tells Caesar that there is a connection between people with abilities and the writing in the sky. Caesar then informs Mason that the writing disappeared four days ago. Mason decides to kidnap Olive. Tony and Colby are sent to investigate an egg worshiping cult that predicted the disappearance of the sky writing to the minute. They go undercover and sneak inside the church, and while trying to steal their holy book, the other members of the church drink poisoned Kool-Aid to absolve their sin of eating chicken. The cult's book is not written in English and Tony and Colby are fired from the FDA.[20]

In Major League Chew, Tony is transferred to the Municipal Traffic Division. His new boss seems very excited to have him there. Tony then helps to arrest a gang of bank robbers.[21]

Chew #27

[edit]

Note: After Chew #18, the story then leaps to Chew #27 showing the reader events taking place a year later. It then returns to issue 19.

Tony is in the hospital after being injured in some way. Toni goes to visit him and after chatting with Caesar who came to wish him well, heads back to work. An old friend of Toni's shows up, he had gotten his hands on some Chogs (AKA Frickens) that had been bred with some psychoactive frogs he had. He tries to sell them, but D-Bear shows up and steals all of them. Toni and her supervisor, Paneer, go to D-Bear's restaurant to confiscate the Chogs. D-Bear tries to escape but Toni, who had a gun already in her hands, jumps and bites him in the shoulder. She then lets him leave, D-Bear is then hit by a truck and is taken to the hospital. Later, Tony has a mysterious visitor.

Chew #27 went on sale May 11, 2011. A second printing, subtitled "2nd Helping Edition", went on sale June 20, 2012 between the release of issue 26 and issue 28, and included a bonus short story titled "A View to a Pill" which had previously only been published in the Hero Comics 2011 anthology from IDW Publishing. "A View to a Pill" was not included in the trade paperback releases of the series.

Characters

[edit]
Cover of Chew #15, with all main characters pictured.

(By order of appearance)

Tony Chu

[edit]

The protagonist. Tony is a cibopath. Oddly enough, beets are the only things he can eat that don't trigger his cibopathy. Tony originally worked for the Philadelphia PD, and then for the FDA. He's been called a "By-the-book square that never met a department regulation [he] couldn't love." He's a great detective, but he's not so great around women. Not much of Tony's backstory has been revealed yet, but he has a large family. Back when he was a beat cop, he proposed to his girlfriend, Min "Mindy" Tso, but she went insane and wanted Tony to eat one of her toes. It turns out that Tony still has the toe.[14] Later we find out that Tony had a daughter with Min, whose name is Olive.[15] During his time in the FDA, he falls for Amelia Mintz. When Tony is fired from the FDA, he is transferred to the Municipal Traffic Division.[21] In Chew #27, Tony is in the hospital after being injured in some way, he keeps saying the names of other characters while in a seemingly comatose state.

John Colby

[edit]

John was Tony's partner in the Philadelphia PD. When Tony gets a psychic sensation from his chicken soup and goes to arrest the chef, John is incapacitated by a butcher's knife to the face.[5] After Mason runs, John joins the FDA, with cybernetic implants where his face was injured.[22] John becomes Tony's new partner. John is often seen eating illegal chicken products whenever he can, and is apparently gay after sleeping with his boss to keep him from pestering Tony.[10] John was turned into a cyborg after Mason Savoy suggested it. He was informed about this after Mason attempted to get John on his side and attacked.[14] After alien writing appears in the sky John begins drinking heavily. Forcing Tony to team up with Mason's former partner Caesar.[16] Later, Colby has sobered up enough to work with Tony again. He can control electronic devices with the computers in his head, even though he doesn't understand how.[17] Colby is transferred out of the FDA to a position in the USDA. There he is partnered with a cyborg lion named Buttercup.[21] It is revealed he has sex with the director of the USDA in order to get a new partner, a newly rebuilt Poyo.

Chow Chu

[edit]

Chow is Tony's older brother. He is a former Chicken chef and used to host a TV show called In The Kitchen With Chow Chu. After chicken was banned he freaked out on air and his show was put on permanent hiatus. He began buying illegal chicken[5] He found out about Montero's business and informed Tony.[23] He was tracked down and sealed inside a vault.[7] Chow moves to Yamapalu, where chicken is not illegal and he opens a restaurant there. However he finds out that Yamapalu does not serve chicken but Gallsaberries instead.[8] Tony saves Chow from the island but has to break his jaw to get him to leave.[10] For Thanksgiving Chow cooks his family an illegal turkey, and because of his broken jaw he cannot give grace so Tony has to do it.[15] Chow eventually gets back on TV, and in an alternate future was shot in the head by a member of E.G.G.[19]

D-Bear

[edit]

Also known as Deshawn Berry, D-Bear sells Black Market Chicken. He informs to the FDA so they let him continue. He may have killed at least 5 people. He leads Tony and John into a black market chicken restaurant which results in John getting his face cut and Tony getting outed as a cibopath.[5] John confronts D-Bear, beats him up and extorts him for a month.[22] D-Bear partners with Tony to shut down an illegal cockfighting ring and free Poyo.[12] D-Bear sells a huge shipment of black market chicken to Mother Clucker's.[16] In Chew #27, D-Bear steals some Psychoactive Chogs from one of Toni's friends, he uses them in his restaurant to get customers high and then steal from them. Toni bites him in the shoulder, he's hit by a truck and is sent to the hospital.

Mason Savoy

[edit]

Savoy was Tony's first partner at the FDA. He's a towering man who fights with a pair of sai. He is also a cibopath and has worked with the FDA for a very long time. He is very interested in what actually happened on the day of the bird-flu incident, and a flashback showed him holding a dying woman in his arms on that day. It is revealed that Savoy is the one who killed Evan Pepper, but his motive is never touched on.[7] When Mason is found out by the FDA, he kills most of the agents and wounds John Colby. Apparently, Mason is the one who got Colby turned into a cyborg.[14] Mason now has a vial of blood from the Voresophic Daniel Migdalo, which, if he drank it, would give him Migdalo's incredible intelligence—and his insanity.[16] Savoy is currently a fugitive but is still continuing his investigation, with the aid of Agent Cesar and Olive Chu.

Mike Applebee

[edit]

Applebee is Tony's boss at the FDA. He has it out for Tony from the start, and tries to make his job as difficult as can be. When he was informed of a hit that was put on Tony, he only decided to inform Tony after realizing that a dead Tony would mean more paperwork for himself.[23] Applebee picked Colby to be Tony's new partner, mainly because Colby pretended to blame Tony for getting injured.[22] To get Applebee to leave Tony alone, Colby has sex with him.[10] Afterwards, Applebee tries to be more friendly towards Tony but this is clearly very hard for him.[24] Later, Applebee decides to partner Tony up with D-Bear.[12] When Tony decides to do surveillance on Montero, Applebee tries to make sure that Tony is the one doing surveillance all the time, but Colby decides to do it instead.[13] When Colby confronts Mason, Applebee tells Tony that if Colby is hurt he'll demote him to meter maid.[14] Applebee invites Colby over for Thanksgiving, but Colby never shows up.[15] Soon after, Applebee begins sending Colby and Tony on progressively more dangerous and suicidal missions.[12] John Layman, the author of Chew, has revealed that Applebee will survive until the end of the series.[25]

Amelia Mintz

[edit]

Amelia is a food critic at a newspaper. She is a saboscrivner. Tony knows her only from her articles—until he's assigned to get her fired. Why? Lately, she's gotten bored with her job and has begun writing exclusively about the most disgusting food she can find. These recent articles are so intensely unappetizing that they induce vomiting in anyone who reads or listens to them. Tony, however, seems to be immune to this nauseating effect, possibly due to his previous experience with disgusting food. When Tony goes to her office, she helps him defuse a situation with some terrorists from the group E.G.G.. She goes with the governor of Yamapalu.[26] After finding out that he's imprisoning people, she is also captured.[10] She is one of the people Tony saves from Yamapalu, and soon after they start dating.[24] She starts writing about food for him, so he can experience taste without triggering psychic sensations.[12]

The Vampire

[edit]

The Vampire (Real name unknown, also known as Collector) is a cibopath from Serbia. Not much is known about him. He pretends to be a vampire to inspire fear, and drinks the blood of his victims to learn about them through cibopathy. He also eats the flesh of powerful people in order to "collect" their abilities. He sent agents to the Gardner-Kvashennaya International Telescope,[23] he murdered the USDA agent Lin Sae Woo and her specially trained cyborg Rat Jellybean,[8] invaded a compound on Yamapalu,[10] and saved the Cibolocuter Fantanyeros only to kill him and feed on him.[11] His minion sabotages a space station, escapes and brings The Vampire some computer files and a Gallsaberry.[17] He speaks Russian and English. His Russian-speaking minions address him as Upyr, which is a Slavic folklore undead monster similar to a vampire.

Poyo

[edit]

Poyo is a rooster from Yamapalu, who started out as a cockfighting champion. He was kept in a secret safe house by the gambling ring, until his location was discovered by Tony Chu and chief of police Raymond Kulolo.[9] He later became a secret weapon of the FDA, considered to be a weapon of mass destruction, and then an agent of USDA. Poyo is the star of three spin-off one-shot comics - Chew: Secret Agent Poyo, Chew: Warrior Chicken Poyo and Chew: Demon Chicken Poyo.

Toni Chu

[edit]

Toni (short for Antonelle) is Tony and Chow's sister. She works for NASA. Toni worked for a long time at the Farmington-Kapusta International Telescope in the Amazon.[27] She was supposed to be transferred to the Gardner-Kvashennaya International Telescope[15] but she stays in the States after alien writing shows up in the sky.[17] She teams up with Tony at Area 51 and foils an E.G.G. plot to kill the President of the United States, the Queen of the United Kingdom, The Pope and her brother Chow.[19] Toni also stops D-Bear from selling psychedelic frickens at his black market chicken restaurant.[27] It is revealed that Toni has a food-related power in issue #19. Unlike Tony, Toni's power only works on living tissues, so she doesn't receive psychic readings from eating cooked food. It is later revealed that she had a drunken, sexual experience with Caesar, though she doesn't want him to remember it, possibly out of shame. Toni is eventually kidnapped by the Vampire. After telling him she's already helped being about his downfall at the hands of his brother, he kills her. But, having foreseen her death, Toni ate a diet of beets beforehand so that the Vampire could not gain her abilities by eating her flesh. Toni had foreseen the death of at least four major characters, including her own.

Olive Chu

[edit]

Olive is Tony's daughter. After her mother's death she was raised by her aunt Rosemary, and has a strained relationship with her father. Like the other members of Chu family, Olive has special food-related abilities. As a cibopath, Olive is potentially more powerful than both Savoy and her father. When kidnapped by a desperate Savoy who required a cibopathic partner, Olive resists his attempts to subdue her, and only agreed to work with Savoy on her own terms.[20]

Locations

[edit]

Gardner-Kvashennaya International Telescope

[edit]

The Gardner-Kvashennaya International Telescope is one of the three most powerful telescopes in the world. The operating budget is 34 million dollars per year. It spent 2 years focused on the planet Altilis-738. Mason and Tony head there to find out about the mysterious death of Senator Hamantaschen. When they got there they found out that the telescope only needed 3 million to operate and they used the rest of the money on prostitutes, drugs and a llama. It turns out the prostitutes worked for The Vampire and the telescope station was mostly destroyed.[23] The telescope was eventually repaired and made operational and Tony's twin sister Toni is going to be working there.[15] Later, Toni tells Tony that she will not be transferred to the station.[16]

Yamapalu

[edit]

Yamapalu is one of the smallest populated islands in the Western Pacific Ocean. The governor of the island has been recruiting and kidnapping some of the top chefs and food critics in the world to cook a plant called a Gallsaberry which tastes like chicken when cooked that only grows on Yamapalu. The island is eventually attacked by Montero and most of the Gallsaberries are destroyed. The governor shoots himself after a meeting with The Vampire.[8][9][10][11]

Altilis-738

[edit]

Altilis-738 is the third planet in a small solar system more than 24 light years away. It is populated by a species of purple people. 24 years ago strange writing appeared in the sky causing panic and then 24 years later, when the light reaches Earth, it is revealed the planet exploded.[23] The same writing appeared above the Earth.[15]

Mother Clucker's

[edit]

Mother Clucker's is a Kentucky Fried Chicken imitator that opened 35 years ago. After the Chicken ban it was closed down. The owner of the restaurant is bitter towards the FDA and still hangs around the closed restaurant. After alien writing appears in the sky he decides to buy black market chicken and reopen his restaurant to the public.[16]

Francis Bacon High School

[edit]

Francis Bacon High School is a high school attended by Peter Pilaf and also Tony's daughter Olive. Their school's team name is the Shakin' Bacons. Several students there were killed in a food fight.[17]

[edit]

The Chew Universe is filled with a variety of characters who exhibit supernatural powers relating to food and their interpretation thereof.

Cibopath

[edit]

A Cibopath can take a bite from anything and get a psychic sensation of what has happened to that object. The only thing it does not work on is beets. Tony Chu, Olive Chu, Mason Savoy, and The Vampire are Cibopaths. During the 'Major League Chew' arc, it is revealed that Tony, and possibly all Cibopaths, can absorb the skills of who he eats. The Vampire, Tony Chu, and Olive Chu are also capable of absorbing abilities although most prominently, The Vampire and Olive.

Saboscrivner

[edit]

A Saboscrivner can write about food so accurately that people get the sensation of taste when they read about the food. Amelia Mintz is a Saboscrivner.

Cibolocutor

[edit]

A Cibolocutor is able to communicate through food, and can also translate written works like plays, poems and operas into their food. Fantanyeros is a Cibolocutor.

Voresoph

[edit]

A Voresoph becomes smarter the more he eats. Daniel Migdalo is a Voresoph.

Special Agent Vorhees's power

[edit]

Seen through the series eating and mumbling, Special Agent Vorhees appears to have the ability to taste and identify every ingredient in whatever he's eating. At this point, this power has not been formally introduced. Also, he may be immune to the powers of the other characters, as The Barista's foam message had no effect on him (Though Caesar claims this is because Vorhees is illiterate).

Effervenductor

[edit]

An Effervenductor has the capability of creating mind-controlling messages in foams. The Barista is an Effervenductor.

Peter Pilaf's power

[edit]

This so far unnamed power lets the user control people through food. Peter Pilaf has this power.

Xocoscalpere

[edit]

A Xocoscalpere has the ability to sculpt chocolate—and only chocolate-- 'with such accuracy and verisimilitude' that it can mimic its real-life counterpart exactly. Hershel Brown was a xocoscalpere, having created many chocolate weapon sculptures with all the deadly capability of the original. Olive Chu, having eaten part of Hershel Brown, has acquired the ability of xocoscalpery.

Cibovoyant

[edit]

A Cibovoyant can see the future of any living thing that he or she eats. This power does not work on the dead or on inanimate objects. So far, Toni Chu is the only Cibovoyant at this point, and uses this power to see the future of potential lovers as well as her injured brother.

Tortaespadero

[edit]

Able to cut tortillas into sharp objects.[28]

Cipropanthropatic

[edit]

Able to see the memories of anyone nearby eating the same thing. Sage Chu, Toni's sister, has this power.[29]

Sabopictor

[edit]

A Sabopictor is able to paint a picture that tastes deliciously what it looks like. Quindim Buongiovanni is one of three living Sabopictors, though he is last seen being attacked and likely killed by The Vampire.

Ciboinvalescor

[edit]

Able to become stronger the more he eats. Dominic Partridge is a Ciboinvalescor.[30]

Coquerafthartos

[edit]

A Coquerafthartos is granted an extraordinarily long life after cooking a single special dish. Jeremiah Cumberland was a Coquerafthartos for close to 600 years before he was collected by The Vampire.

Lubodeipnosophistes

[edit]

Able to seduce anyone they dine with.

Cibocelerent

[edit]

Able to cook fast.

Mnemocoquus

[edit]

Able to cook memories into their dishes.

Cibolinguist

[edit]

Able to speak the language of whatever nationality of dish they were cooking.

Lagamousikian

[edit]

Able to string guitars with pasta noodles.

Mixosecerner

[edit]

Able to create drinks that compel you to tell secrets.

Bromaformutare

[edit]

Able to take on the form of whatever he's last eaten.

Mnemcibarian

[edit]

Able to create meals you could never forget.

Hortamagnatroph

[edit]

A hortamagnatroph has skills in the garden which allow them to grow fruits and vegetables of enormous sizes.[31]

Eroscibopictaros

[edit]

A literal food pornographer. Able to take pictures of food that "inspire erotic feelings in the viewer". Ken Keebler is an eroscibopictaros.[32]

Molluhomicuquus

[edit]

Able to cook poisonous clam chowder. Marsala Kaczorowski is a molluhomicuquus.

Pederexplodier

[edit]

Able to produce explosive flatulence. Brann Jerwar is a Pederexplodier.[33]

Punicacuratio

[edit]

Able to eat pomegranates and experience a preternatural restorative effect alongside some other assorted anomalous benefits.[34]

Viresarantheacist

[edit]

Able to get stronger by eating spinach. The featured Viresarantheacist is unnamed but is referred to as a "sailor man," a reference to Popeye.[35]

Victuspeciosian

[edit]

Able to craft a unique preparation out of food to make facial beauty masks that yield amazing transformational (although temporary) results. Judy Heinz-Campbell of Judy's Beauties Beauty Salon & Boutique is a victuspeciosian.[36]

Collected editions

[edit]

Trade paperbacks

[edit]

The series has been collected into trade paperbacks:

# Title Release date Page count Collected issues Cover price TPB ISBN
1 Chew, Volume 1: Taster's Choice November 2009 128 Chew #1–5 $9.99 ISBN 1-60706-159-7
2 Chew, Volume 2: International Flavor April 2010 128 Chew #6–10 $12.99 ISBN 1-60706-260-7
3 Chew, Volume 3: Just Desserts November 2010 128 Chew #11–15 $12.99 ISBN 1-60706-335-2
4 Chew, Volume 4: Flambé September 2011 120 Chew #16–20 $12.99 ISBN 1-60706-398-0
5 Chew, Volume 5: Major League Chew April 2012 120 Chew #21–25 $12.99 ISBN 1-60706-523-1
6 Chew, Volume 6: Space Cakes January 2013 156 Chew #26–30, Chew: Secret Agent Poyo one-shot $14.99 ISBN 1-60706-621-1
7 Chew, Volume 7: Bad Apples August 2013 128 Chew #31–35 $12.99 ISBN 1-60706-767-6
8 Chew, Volume 8: Family Recipes April 2014 128 Chew #36–40 $12.99 ISBN 1-60706-938-5
9 Chew, Volume 9: Chicken Tenders February 2015 160 Chew #41–45, Chew: Warrior Chicken Poyo one-shot $14.99 ISBN 1-63215-289-4
10 Chew, Volume 10: Blood Puddin` August 2015 128 Chew #46–50 $14.99 ISBN 1-63215-396-3
11 Chew, Volume 11: The Last Suppers May 2016 128 Chew #51–55, Chew / Revival (Chew creators' half) $14.99 ISBN 1-63215-681-4
12 Chew, Volume 12: Sour Grapes January 18, 2017 184 Chew #56–60, Chew: Demon Chicken Poyo one-shot $16.99 ISBN 978-1-5343-0031-6
N/A Outer Darkness/Chew September 15, 2020 72 Outer Darkness/Chew #1-3 $12.99 ISBN 978-1-5343-1657-7
1(Chu) Chu, Volume 1: The First Course January 26, 2021 128 Chu #1-5 $9.99 ISBN 978-1-5343-1774-1
2(Chu) Chu, Volume 2: (She) Drunk History January 25, 2022 128 Chu #6-10 $16.99 ISBN 978-1-5343-2003-1

Hardcovers

[edit]

There are also large hardcover editions which each collect two consecutive trade paperbacks:

  • Chew Omnivore Edition, Volume 1 (collects Chew #1–10, 264 pages, August 2010, ISBN 1-60706-293-3)
  • Chew Omnivore Edition, Volume 2 (collects Chew #11–20, 264 pages, December 2011, ISBN 1-60706-426-X)
  • Chew Omnivore Edition, Volume 3 (collects Chew #21–30 and the Chew: Secret Agent Poyo one-shot, 288 pages, March 2013, ISBN 1-60706-670-X)
  • Chew Omnivore Edition, Volume 4 (collects Chew #31–40, 272 pages, July 2014, ISBN 978-1-63215-031-8)
  • Chew Omnivore Edition, Volume 5 (collects Chew #41–50 and Chew: Warrior Chicken Poyo one-shot, 304 pages, December 2015, ISBN 978-1-63215-623-5)
  • Chew Omnivore Edition, Volume 6 (collects Chew #51–60, Demon Chicken Poyo one-shot and Chew/Revival one-shots, 344 pages, April 2017, ISBN 978-1-5343-0180-1)

As well as the omnivore editions, there are even larger hardcover editions called the Smörgåsbord editions, named after the large Swedish buffets, collecting 20 issues each:

  • CHEW Smorgasbord Edition Volume 1 (collects Chew #1–20, 576 pages, November 2013, ISBN 1-60706-805-2)
  • CHEW Smorgasbord Edition Volume 2 (collects Chew #21–40 and the Chew: Secret Agent Poyo one-shot, 576 pages, July 2015, ISBN 1-63215-428-5)
  • CHEW Smorgasbord Edition Volume 3 (collects Chew #41–60 and the Chew: Warrior Chicken Poyo one-shot, Chew: Demon Chicken Poyo one-shot, and the dual crossover event, Chew/Revival, 640 pages, July 2017, ISBN 1-5343-0212-3)

Other releases

[edit]

Tony Chu additionally appears in I Hate Fairyland – I Hate Image, a special I Hate Fairyland issue which crosses over I Hate Fairyland with many other Image Comics properties. This issue has been published as a Free Comic Book Day release, as a "Special Edition," and as a component of the I Hate Fairyland: Book Two hardcover release.

The charity anthology Comics for Ukraine: Sunflower Seeds includes an original Chew short story.[37]

Reception

[edit]

The first three issues of Chew have all sold out multiple printings with the first issue receiving four printings as well as being reprinted in black and white in The Walking Dead #63.[38][39] The first issue was so popular that it was called one of Image's most acclaimed titles, and was reprinted again in the first wave of the Image First line.[40] IGN gave the first issue a 9.5 out of 10[41]

Chew Vol. 1: Taster's Choice[42] and Chew Vol. 2: International Flavor[43] have both been on the New York Times Bestsellers List.

Chew ended up on several Best of 2009 lists, including IGN's Best Indie Series of 2009,[44] and MTV Splashpage's Best New Series of 2009.[45] Chew was also #4 on ComicBookResources.com's Best 100 Comics of 2009 list.[46]

On July 23, 2010, Chew won the Eisner Award for Best New Series.[47] On July 27, 2011 Chew won the Eisner Award for Best Continuing Series.[48]

Chew also won two 2010 Harvey Awards (Best New Series and Best New Talent)[49] and was nominated for, but did not win, two 2010 Eagle Awards (Favourite New Comicbook and Favourite American Colour Comicbook).[50]

In other media

[edit]

Unfinished animated adaptation

[edit]

In July 2010 it was announced that production company Circle of Confusion, the same company that produces the Walking Dead television series, was planning to adapt Chew.[51] In March 2011 Showtime announced it was developing Chew into a half-hour comedy series, based on a script by Terri Hughes Burton and Ron Milbauer.[52]

Chew was mentioned in Hart of Dixie.[citation needed]

On February 1, 2013, John Layman wrote on Facebook, "Chew Showtime TV show not happening."[quote needs citation]

In April 2014, it was announced Chew would now be getting an animated adaptation. This project would be produced by Jeff Krelitz and David Boxenbaum via their multimedia company Heavy Metal. Jeff Krelitz would also be directing and John Layman would write. The executive producers would be John Layman, Rob Guillory and Scott Boxenbaum. Steven Yeun would voice the main character Tony Chu, Felicia Day would voice his love interest Amelia Mintz,[53] and Robin Williams would voice Mason Savoy; following Williams' death in the middle of production, after Yeun and Day had recorded their parts, work on the project "stalled" until he was recast with David Tennant in June 2015;[54] despite this, on April 21, 2017, it was revealed in an interview with Rob Guillory that while all voice recording for the animated adaptation had been completed and animation partially begun, the project had been quietly shelved, Guillory saying that "it just didn't happen because Hollywood can be weird sometimes…".[55]

Tabletop game

[edit]

On May 19, 2014, IDW Games announced a tabletop game. The game will feature multiple ways to play including board, card and dice games. IDW Games will be working with John Layman and Rob Guillory to create the game which was initially due to be released early 2015.[56] After multiple delays, it was eventually released on July 15, 2015.

Tabletop role playing game

[edit]

On October 5, 2021, publisher Imagining Games launched a Kickstarter for a Chew tabletop role-playing game. The campaign realised nearly $53,000 from a goal of a little under $7,000. On the day of the campaign launch, Hyper RPG aired an actual play demo on their Twitch channel featuring Kaiji Tang as the GM, Jimmy Wong as Tony Chu, Elyse Willems as Amelia Mintz, Malika Lim Eubank as Toni Chu, and Zac Eubank as John Colby.[57] CHEW The Roleplaying Game is a "Forged in the Dark" game with rules adapted from Blades in the Dark. It was designed and written by Pete Petrusha, Justin Forest, Justin Ford, Steve Dee and Joseph Weaver. It was released in 2024 and won a Judge's Spotlight Award at the 2024 ENNIE Awards.[58]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]

Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Chew is an American comic book series written by John Layman and illustrated by Rob Guillory, published by Image Comics from June 2009 to November 2016, spanning 60 issues and several specials.[1][2][3] The story centers on Tony Chu, a cibopath—an individual who receives psychic impressions from anything he eats—working as a special agent for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to solve food-related crimes in a near-future world where poultry has been outlawed following a devastating bird flu pandemic.[1] This unique premise blends crime noir, dark humor, and surreal elements, following Chu's reluctant use of his ability, often by consuming evidence like human remains, amid a cast of eccentric characters including rogue chefs, cannibals, and black-market food dealers.[1][2] The series garnered critical acclaim for its inventive storytelling and Guillory's distinctive, expressive artwork, which complements the bizarre tone with vibrant, grotesque visuals.[2] It won the Eisner Award for Best New Series in 2010 and Best Continuing Series in 2011, as well as the Harvey Award for Best New Series in 2010, with Guillory receiving the Harvey for Best New Talent that year.[2] Chew became a New York Times bestseller and has been translated into 11 languages, solidifying its influence in the creator-owned comics landscape as a successful independent title funded initially by Layman's earnings from video game writing.[2] Collected editions include 12 trade paperbacks, six hardcovers, three compendium volumes, and a 2025 omnibus edition, making the full saga accessible to readers.[2][4] A spin-off series, Chu, launched in 2020, expanding the universe with new characters in a food-themed noir setting.[5]

Publication history

Development

John Layman, a former editor at WildStorm Studios who transitioned to freelance writing, conceived the concept for Chew as a story centered on a detective with cibopathy—the ability to receive psychic impressions from anything he eats—set against a backdrop of a bird flu pandemic that has banned chicken consumption in the United States.[2] The idea drew inspiration from Layman's observations of societal anxieties around apocalyptic events, including post-9/11 fears and outbreaks like bird flu, which he aimed to blend into a comedic narrative with elements of crime noir and food satire.[6] Layman's interest in gourmet cuisine, influenced by his wife's passion for fine dining and food culture, shaped the series' emphasis on culinary puns and thematic exploration of eating habits.[7] After multiple rejections from DC's Vertigo imprint, Layman pitched the project to Image Comics publisher Eric Stephenson in 2007, who approved it for its original premise and committed to publication once an artist was secured.[2] To fund the initial issues independently, Layman used $15,000 earned from writing for the video game Champions Online, covering the production of the first five issues while he refined the world-building into a satire on food obsessions and regulatory absurdities.[2] Layman connected with artist Rob Guillory through a mutual contact, writer Brandon Jerwa, after discovering Guillory's portfolio online from a prior Tokyopop pitch; they met in person at San Diego Comic-Con in 2008, where Guillory reviewed the first script.[6] Guillory was selected for his distinctive, cartoony style that effectively merged grotesque horror with absurd humor, allowing Chew to visually balance gritty investigative drama with over-the-top food-related gags and character designs inspired by actors like Ken Leung for protagonist Tony Chu.[2][6] This collaboration evolved the initial concept from a standalone pitch into a structured ongoing series planned for 60 issues from the outset, with Layman handling writing, lettering, and production to maintain creative control.[8]

Serialization

Chew was serialized by Image Comics over 60 issues from June 2009 to November 2016, completing the planned storyline arc as announced by the publisher in June 2016 ahead of the final arc's launch in July.[9][3] The series began with a monthly publication schedule, releasing the first ten issues consecutively from June 2009 (#1) through March 2010 (#10).[3] As production progressed, the schedule shifted to irregular intervals, particularly in later years; for example, issue #55 was published on February 24, 2016, followed by a five-month gap before #56 on July 20, 2016, and similar delays occurred between other issues toward the end. Issues were produced in the standard modern-age U.S. comic book format, measuring approximately 6.625 inches by 10.25 inches, with full-color interiors printed on glossy paper stock and saddle-stitched binding; most issues contained 32 pages, including front matter, the 22-page story, advertisements, and covers.[3] The final issue (#60) was an oversized 48-page finale.[10] Within the main run, notable variations included issue #27, released out of sequence on May 11, 2011, as a flash-forward preview of future events, which was reprinted on June 20, 2012, after the completion of the preceding arcs to provide narrative context.[11][12] A crossover one-shot with the series Revival, co-written by Chew creator John Layman and Revival writer Tim Seeley, was published separately on May 28, 2014, featuring intertwined stories from both universes.[13]

Spin-offs and specials

The Chew universe expanded beyond its core series through a dedicated spin-off title and a trilogy of humorous one-shot specials centered on the fan-favorite character Poyo, the cybernetic rooster. These works maintain the original's blend of culinary-themed supernatural elements and satirical action while exploring peripheral characters and standalone adventures. In 2020, a three-issue crossover miniseries with Outer Darkness, written by John Layman and illustrated by Rob Guillory alongside other artists, was published from March to May, blending the Chew world with science fiction elements in an interdimensional story featuring Tony Chu aboard a starship.[14][1] The primary spin-off, Chu, launched in 2020 as a 10-issue series written by John Layman with artwork by Dan Boultwood. Published by Image Comics from July 2020 to December 2021, it follows Saffron Chu, the sister of protagonist Tony Chu, who possesses a unique cibopathic ability allowing her to glean secrets from the people she dines with rather than the food itself. The series is designed to stand alone for new readers while incorporating lore from Chew, such as references to the avian flu pandemic and familial connections, and it unfolds as a cat-and-mouse thriller in the shared universe. Layman has described Chu as spinning out from the early events of Chew and running concurrently, providing backstory for Saffron, who was absent from the main series. No further issues have been released since #10, placing the title on indefinite hiatus.[15][16][17] Complementing Chu, the Poyo specials form a loose trilogy of self-contained one-shots, each spotlighting the violent, enigmatic rooster Poyo in over-the-top, comedic scenarios that parody spy thrillers, martial arts epics, and supernatural horror. The first, Chew: Secret Agent Poyo (2012), written by Layman with art by Rob Guillory, depicts Poyo's exploits in a 24-page tale of infernal intrigue, establishing his larger-than-life persona as comics' "most beloved homicidal cybernetic kung-fu rooster." This was followed by Chew: Warrior Chicken Poyo (2014), a 32-page issue where Poyo battles terrorists in a high-stakes presidential crisis, again by Layman and Guillory. The trilogy concludes with Chew: Demon Chicken Poyo (2016), another 32-page one-shot by the same creative team, positioning Poyo in a cosmic conflict between heavenly and hellish forces. These specials, released sporadically during the main Chew run, emphasize Poyo's absurd heroism without advancing the primary narrative, amassing a cult following for their irreverent tone. No additional Poyo-focused releases have appeared since 2016.[18][19][20]

Collected editions

Trade paperbacks

The Chew series was collected into twelve trade paperbacks published by Image Comics, each typically compiling five consecutive issues of the main 60-issue run, providing affordable softcover editions for readers.[21] These volumes were released between 2009 and 2017, with early editions priced at $9.99 and later ones at $16.99, featuring full-color artwork by Rob Guillory and varying page counts to accommodate story arcs and bonus material.[22][23]
VolumeTitleRelease DateCollected MaterialPagesISBNCover Price
1Taster's ChoiceDecember 2009Chew #1–5128978-1-60706-159-5$9.99
2International FlavorApril 2010Chew #6–10128978-1-60706-260-8$9.99
3Just DessertsSeptember 2011Chew #11–15128978-1-60706-335-3$9.99
4FlambéMay 2012Chew #16–20128978-1-60706-555-5$9.99
5Major League ChewDecember 2012Chew #21–25128978-1-60706-678-1$9.99
6Space CakesDecember 2012Chew #26–30128978-1-60706-758-0$9.99
7Bad ApplesAugust 2013Chew #31–35128978-1-60706-591-3$12.99
8Family RecipesApril 2014Chew #36–40128978-1-60706-987-3$12.99
9Chicken TendersFebruary 2015Chew #41–45, Warrior Chicken Poyo160978-1-63215-289-3$12.99
10Blood Puddin'August 2015Chew #46–50128978-1-63215-396-8$12.99
11The Last SuppersMay 2016Chew #51–55144978-1-63215-681-5$14.99
12Sour GrapesJanuary 2017Chew #56–60, Demon Chicken Poyo152978-1-53430-031-6$16.99
The spin-off series Chu, focusing on Saffron Chu, was collected into its own trade paperbacks starting in 2021. Volume 1: The First Course collects issues #1–5 (128 pages, ISBN 978-1-53431-774-1, released January 2021, $9.99).[24][25] Volume 2: (She) Drunk History collects issues #6–10 (128 pages, ISBN 978-1-53432-003-1, released January 2022, $16.99).[26][27]

Hardcovers and deluxe editions

The Chew series has been collected in premium hardcover formats through the Omnivore Edition, a six-volume set of oversized hardcovers that reprints the main run with bonus material such as sketches, commentary, and expanded covers.[28] These volumes emphasize high-quality binding for collectors, gathering 10 issues each (except the final volume) from the original Image Comics serialization.[29]
VolumeIssues CollectedPage CountRelease DateISBN
Omnivore Edition Volume 1#1–10264August 24, 2010978-1-60706-293-6[28]
Omnivore Edition Volume 2#11–20264December 20, 2011978-1-60706-426-8[30]
Omnivore Edition Volume 3#21–30, Secret Agent Poyo one-shot288March 26, 2013978-1-60706-670-5[31]
Omnivore Edition Volume 4#31–40272July 29, 2014978-1-63215-031-8[32]
Omnivore Edition Volume 5#41–50, Warrior Chicken Poyo one-shot304December 15, 2015978-1-63215-623-5[33]
Omnivore Edition Volume 6#51–60, Warrior Chicken Poyo, Demon Chicken Poyo, CHEW/REVIVAL, REVIVAL/CHEW344April 4, 2017978-1-53430-180-1[34]
Complementing the Omnivore set, the Smorgasbord Edition offers three deluxe oversized hardcovers, each compiling 20 issues in a slipcased format with additional extras like creator annotations and variant art, designed for enhanced visual presentation of Rob Guillory's detailed illustrations.[35] These volumes provide a luxurious alternative, doubling the content per book compared to the standard hardcovers while maintaining the series' focus on thematic depth and humor.[36]
VolumeIssues CollectedPage CountRelease DateISBN
Smorgasbord Edition Volume 1#1–20576November 26, 2013978-1-60706-805-1[35]
Smorgasbord Edition Volume 2#21–40, Secret Agent Poyo one-shot576July 14, 2015978-1-63215-428-6[37]
Smorgasbord Edition Volume 3#41–60, Warrior Chicken Poyo, Demon Chicken Poyo, CHEW/REVIVAL, REVIVAL/CHEW640July 4, 2017978-1-53430-212-9[38]

Compendiums and other releases

In 2025, Image Comics released the Chew Nomnibus, a comprehensive trade paperback compiling the entire 60-issue run of the series alongside the 2016 one-shot Chew: Demon Chicken Poyo #1, spanning 1,320 pages in total. This oversized edition, measuring 7 x 10 inches, serves as an all-in-one collection for readers seeking the complete narrative in a single volume, with an MSRP of $69.99 and ISBN 978-1-5343-5437-1. A limited variant featuring a signed bookplate by creators John Layman and Rob Guillory was offered through select retailers, enhancing its appeal for collectors.[39][40][41] Beyond the core series, the 2020 crossover miniseries Outer Darkness/Chew—which integrates elements from Layman's sci-fi title Outer Darkness into the Chew universe—was collected into a standalone trade paperback. This 72-page edition gathers issues #1–3, illustrated by Afu Chan with cover art by the same and contributions from Rob Guillory, and carries ISBN 978-1-5343-1657-7 at a cover price of $12.99. Variant covers for the individual issues, including homage designs and retailer incentives, were produced during the miniseries' serialization but are primarily associated with single issues rather than the collected format.[15][42] The Chew series has also been made available in digital editions across multiple platforms, including the official Image Comics app, Amazon Kindle, and Comixology, allowing access to both individual issues and collected volumes since the early 2010s. No dedicated box sets or slipcased collections beyond the standard hardcover editions have been officially released by Image Comics, though third-party bundles of the Omnivore hardcovers occasionally appear in resale markets.[15]

Premise

Core concept

Chew is set in an alternate near-future version of the United States where a catastrophic avian flu outbreak has killed 23 million Americans, prompting the government to ban all chicken and other bird meats nationwide.[43] This prohibition has fueled a thriving black market for poultry, transforming the food landscape and elevating the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) into a powerful law enforcement agency tasked with combating illegal meat trafficking and related crimes.[44] The series explores this dystopian culinary underworld through the lens of detective work, where investigations often revolve around bizarre food-related mysteries.[1] At the center of the narrative is Tony Chu, an FDA agent endowed with cibopathy, a rare psychic ability that allows him to receive vivid impressions—such as memories, emotions, or sensory details—from anything he ingests, including human flesh.[1] This power enables Chu to solve cases by consuming evidence, but it comes at the cost of constant revulsion, as he experiences the full history and essence of his "meals." Notably, beets are the sole exception to his cibopathic visions, providing a neutral food source that he consumes regularly to sustain himself without unwanted psychic feedback. The core concept blends procedural detective fiction with culinary-themed supernatural elements, creating a genre hybrid often described as a "food noir" or culinary mystery.[45] In this world, crimes range from smuggling contraband chicken to more grotesque offenses involving cannibalism and clairvoyant cuisine, all investigated amid a society grappling with enforced vegetarianism and underground gastronomic vices.[1] This setup allows the series to examine the intersections of law enforcement, personal disgust, and the human relationship with food in a heightened, alternate reality.[45]

Themes and style

Chew explores themes of food obsession, portraying it as a central force shaping society and personal identity in a world where poultry is banned due to a fictional avian flu outbreak.[46] The series satirizes corruption in regulatory bodies, depicting the FDA as an overpowered entity akin to Homeland Security, where black-market dealings and governmental overreach thrive amid prohibitions on everyday consumables.[46] Family bonds emerge as a recurring motif, often strained by conflicting loyalties and the personal toll of extraordinary abilities, highlighting tensions between siblings and parental figures.[46] Additionally, the narrative delves into the consequences of supernatural powers tied to consumption, illustrating how such gifts lead to moral dilemmas, isolation, and unintended repercussions for individuals and their relationships.[47] The stylistic approach blends absurdist humor with grotesque violence, creating a madcap tone that juxtaposes culinary puns and lighthearted gags against visceral, body-horror elements like cannibalistic investigations.[47] Food-related wordplay permeates the dialogue, from quips like "If you outlaw chicken, only outlaws will have chicken" to epidemic scenarios involving projectile vomiting from tainted reviews, underscoring the series' playful yet macabre wit.[46] Storytelling often employs non-linear arcs, with writer John Layman crafting sequences out of order to build suspense and reveal character backstories in fragmented, thematic clusters.[48] Rob Guillory's artistic style features detailed, expressive illustrations that emphasize the tactile textures of food—rendering meats, fruits, and viscera with hyper-realistic gloss and splatter—to heighten the horror-comedy contrasts.[47] His compositions ground the absurdity through dynamic panel layouts and exaggerated expressions, amplifying the emotional and visceral impact of the narrative's twisted scenarios.[47] This visual approach, described as "mind-blowing" by the publisher, integrates the grotesque with the gourmet, making the improbable elements of the world feel vividly tangible.[1]

Plot summary

Main storyline

Tony Chu, a cibopathic detective capable of receiving psychic impressions from anything he eats except beets, joins the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in a world where chicken has been banned due to a catastrophic avian flu outbreak.[1] Initially recruited to investigate food-related crimes, particularly those involving the illegal black market for chicken, Tony's work quickly escalates as he uncovers deeper conspiracies tied to extraterrestrial influences, secretive cults, and revelations about his own family's hidden abilities.[49] The series' narrative arcs span investigations into high-profile incidents, beginning with the murder of health inspector Evan Pepper, which draws Tony into a web of corruption within the culinary underworld. Subsequent storylines explore interstellar threats, including the mysterious destruction of the planet Altilis-738 and a devastating attack on the island of Yamapalu, forcing Tony to confront alien entities manipulating global events. These events intertwine with personal stakes, such as losses among his loved ones and entanglements with enigmatic figures like the self-proclaimed Vampire, whose obsessive collection of individuals with unique food-based powers heightens the danger.[45] Throughout 60 issues, the overarching plot builds toward a climactic resolution of an impending global food crisis, blending Tony's professional duties with profound personal sacrifices as he navigates alliances, betrayals, and the broader implications of his cibopathic gift in a society reshaped by prohibition and psychic phenomena.[10] The storyline maintains a continuous thread of escalating mysteries, from terrestrial black market busts to cosmic confrontations, ultimately tying disparate elements into a cohesive exploration of power, identity, and survival.[49]

Special issues

The series features several special issues that deviate from the standard narrative format, including non-linear storytelling and crossover events with other Image Comics titles. One notable example is Chew #27, published in May 2011, which jumps forward in the timeline to depict events set approximately one year after the prior issue, providing a glimpse into future character developments while maintaining the series' blend of humor and horror. This structural choice, part of the "Space Cakes" arc, was released out of sequence after issue #18, before the story retroactively filled in the intervening events starting with #19, allowing readers an early preview of Tony Chu's circumstances in a hospital bed amid ongoing conflicts.[50][51] Crossovers represent another category of special issues, expanding the Chew universe through collaborations. The 2014 one-shot Chew/Revival, co-written by John Layman and Tim Seeley with art by Rob Guillory and Mike Norton, consists of two interconnected 10-page stories totaling 20 pages, where Tony Chu travels to Wisconsin and intersects with characters from the zombie-revival series Revival, solving crimes involving psychic food impressions and supernatural resurrections in a shared multiverse.[13][52] In 2020, Layman and Guillory reunited for the three-issue miniseries Outer Darkness/Chew, which integrates Chew's cibopathic elements with the space opera horror of Outer Darkness, following Tony Chu and crew aboard a demonic spaceship where food-based powers clash with cosmic threats, structured as self-contained episodes building to a larger arc.[53] Poyo, the cybernetically enhanced rooster companion known for his violent antics, anchors several standalone specials that highlight his character in absurd, action-packed vignettes outside the main plot. Chew: Secret Agent Poyo (2012), a 20-page one-shot, places the titular chicken in a spy thriller parody, dispatching hellish foes in a wordless, image-driven sequence emphasizing his martial prowess after his apparent death.[54] This is followed by Chew: Warrior Chicken Poyo (2014), another one-shot that escalates Poyo's adventures into a kung fu epic against interdimensional enemies, focusing on high-octane fights without reliance on dialogue to convey his rage-fueled heroism.[19] The trilogy concludes with Chew: Demon Chicken Poyo (2016), a final 20-page special depicting Poyo's infernal rampage in Hell, again prioritizing visual storytelling and explosive action to explore his indomitable nature.[55] These Poyo-centric releases, while integrated thematically with the broader series, stand as experimental formats celebrating the character's cult popularity through minimal text and maximal chaos.)

Characters

Tony Chu

Anthony "Tony" Chu is the central protagonist of the comic book series Chew, created by writer John Layman and artist Rob Guillory and published by Image Comics. A former police detective with the Philadelphia Police Department, Chu transitions to a special agent for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) after his unique abilities come to light.[1][56] In this role, he investigates food-related crimes in a dystopian America where chicken consumption is outlawed following a deadly avian flu pandemic that killed millions.[48] His cibopathic power—receiving detailed psychic visions of an object's past upon ingestion—allows him to "read" evidence like contaminated produce or illicit poultry, often requiring him to consume gruesome items such as human flesh to uncover clues.[1][57] Chu's personal life is marked by isolation and hardship, exacerbated by his reviled ability, which repulses most people and limits his diet to beets—the sole food that triggers no visions, sparing him psychic overload.[56] He is a divorced father to his teenage daughter, Olive Chu, with whom he shares a protective but distant relationship; she resides primarily with her aunt Rosemary due to family estrangement.[49] Chu's familial bonds are tense, particularly with his brother Chow, a former celebrity chef, but he maintains a close alliance with his twin sister, Toni Chu, a forensic investigator whose own food-related powers complement his.[58][59] As the series progresses, Chu develops from a reluctant operative, haunted by the moral and physical toll of his gift, into a resolute figure tackling escalating dangers that threaten global food systems.[60] His professional partnership with Mason Savoy, another cibopath and FDA operative, becomes instrumental in navigating these challenges and honing his investigative prowess.[49]

Toni Chu

Toni Chu, also known as Antonelle Chu, is the fraternal twin sister of the series' protagonist, Tony Chu, and one of the few members of the Chu family who maintains a positive relationship with him. She works as an agent for NASA, where her specialized skills are employed in probing extraterrestrial and anomalous events, including the analysis of artifacts linked to distant celestial bodies.[61][8] Toni possesses the rare psychic ability known as cibovoyance, which enables her to perceive detailed glimpses of the future by consuming or biting into living organisms. This power distinguishes her from other family members with food-related abilities and positions her as a key asset in foresight-driven inquiries, such as assisting Tony in decoding cosmic enigmas tied to the alien planet Altilis-738.[62][63][64] Throughout the series, Toni's contributions extend beyond professional duties, as she grapples with the emotional toll of her cibovoyant visions, which often reveal distressing outcomes and force difficult personal choices. Her foresight proves instrumental in collaborative efforts with Tony, enhancing investigations into broader mysteries while highlighting her internal conflicts with the invasive nature of her gift. Creator John Layman has noted that Toni's character evolved to play a more prominent role than initially planned, emphasizing her likability and the impact of her arc on the story's emotional depth.[8][65]

Amelia Mintz

Amelia Mintz is a prominent food critic based in Philadelphia, employed by the local newspaper The Mercury Sun, where she specializes in restaurant reviews and culinary commentary.[66] Initially frustrated with the monotony of her position, Mintz began crafting provocative critiques that pushed boundaries, reflecting her desire for more engaging material in her writing.[67] Over time, she transitions from a jaded professional skeptical of extraordinary phenomena to a committed ally in uncovering deeper food-related mysteries, leveraging her expertise to navigate complex investigations.[68] As a saboscrivner, Mintz possesses a rare cibopathic ability that allows her written descriptions of food to evoke actual tastes and sensations in her readers, making her reviews uniquely immersive and influential.[46] This power, which enables precise conveyance of flavors through text, distinguishes her work in the culinary journalism field and provides a sensory bridge for those who consume her articles.[69] Mintz serves as the primary romantic interest for Tony Chu, the cibopath detective, with their relationship marked by intense attraction complicated by the perilous nature of his profession.[70] Despite the dangers surrounding Chu's cases, Mintz supports him by incorporating investigative leads into her reviews, using her platform to subtly aid his pursuits while their bond deepens into marriage.[71] Their dynamic balances personal affection with professional synergy, as her writing occasionally allows Chu to experience tastes remotely, enhancing their collaboration amid ongoing threats.[72]

Poyo

Poyo is a cybernetic kung-fu rooster and one of the main characters in the Chew comic series by John Layman and Rob Guillory, published by Image Comics. Originally a champion cockfighter from the island of Yamapalu, Poyo gained notoriety in illegal fights for eviscerating his opponents with ruthless efficiency. After being captured and exploited in underground rings, he was rescued by protagonist Tony Chu and repurposed by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) as a specialized operative, receiving cybernetic enhancements that amplified his natural ferocity into a weaponized asset for the agency.[73][74] These cybernetic modifications endowed Poyo with superhuman abilities, including exceptional hand-to-hand combat prowess—often depicted in a stylized kung-fu manner—lightning reflexes, enhanced strength, and durability sufficient to engage human-scale threats. As a USDA "doomsday device," he functions as a secret agent capable of neutralizing entire groups of adversaries through precise, lethal strikes targeting vital areas. His role emphasizes his utility as an unconventional enforcer, deployed in critical interventions while maintaining a partnership dynamic with figures like agent John Colby.[73][74] Personality-wise, Poyo is mute, conveying intent exclusively through physical actions and expressions, with rare vocalizations limited to grunts like "bock" or his namesake "poyo." He embodies unyielding violence and fearlessness, approaching every encounter with aggressive, no-nonsense determination and a stoic intensity that borders on the demonic in its relentlessness. Despite his homicidal impulses and propensity for chaos, Poyo exhibits fierce loyalty to Tony Chu, often aligning his destructive tendencies with the group's objectives.[75][74] Throughout the Chew series, Poyo features prominently as a recurring ally in high-stakes USDA operations, leveraging his abilities to turn the tide in dire scenarios. He also headlines spin-off one-shots, including Chew: Secret Agent Poyo (2012) and Chew: Warrior Chicken Poyo (2014), which highlight his standalone exploits in espionage and interdimensional conflicts.[74][75]

Mason Savoy

Mason Savoy is a cibopath and a central antagonistic figure in the Chew comic series, created by writer John Layman and artist Rob Guillory, with his first appearance in Chew #1 (June 2009).[76] As one of the few individuals with the ability to psychically discern the history of anything consumed, Savoy initially serves as an agent for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the series' powerful law enforcement agency empowered in the wake of a devastating avian flu pandemic.[77] He shares this rare cibopathic trait with protagonist Tony Chu, whom he recruits and mentors as his first partner at the FDA, training him in investigations involving illegal poultry and other food-related crimes.[78] Savoy's tenure at the FDA ends in betrayal when his true intentions are exposed during a joint case with Chu investigating the murder of health inspector Evan Pepper.[79] Having infiltrated the agency under the guise of loyalty, Savoy defects after Chu uncovers his involvement in Pepper's death by tasting the victim's blood, leading to a violent confrontation in which Savoy bites off part of Chu's ear before fleeing.[77] His defection stems from a deep-seated vendetta against the FDA, fueled by personal loss attributed to the agency and a profound disbelief in the official narrative of the bird flu outbreak, which he views as a manufactured conspiracy.[78] Driven by an obsessive quest for justice and the truth behind the flu's origins, Savoy goes rogue as a fugitive, interrogating suspects like Ray Jack Montero about foreknowledge of the pandemic during his brief incarceration in an FDA supermax prison.[79] As a major antagonist, Savoy escalates his conflict with Chu by leveraging his cibopathic abilities, consuming the severed ear to glean personal details about Chu's family, which motivates his kidnapping of Chu's daughter, Olive, to recruit her as an ally in his crusade.[80] While holding Olive captive, he attempts to train her in using her own cibopathic powers by force-feeding her various foods, aiming to build a network of like-minded individuals to expose what he perceives as systemic corruption.[79] This unyielding obsession with uncovering conspiracies transforms Savoy from mentor to unrelenting foe, marking him as an unrepentant murderer willing to endanger innocents in pursuit of his ideals.[78]

The Vampire

The Vampire, also known as the Collector, is a Serbian cibopath serving as a primary antagonist in the Chew series. Unlike protagonist Tony Chu, who reluctantly uses his cibopathic ability to gain psychic impressions from consuming food or flesh for investigative purposes, the Vampire actively consumes individuals possessing rare food-related powers to absorb and catalog their abilities for his own gain.[](Chew #7, Image Comics, 2009) This methodical collection process allows him to amass a diverse array of powers, transforming him into one of the most formidable characters in the series.[](Chew Vol. 2: International Flavor, Image Comics, 2010) Central to his immortality-like endurance is the consumption of a person with regenerative abilities, enabling him to heal from otherwise fatal injuries and sustain his obsessive pursuits indefinitely.[](Chew #7-10, Image Comics, 2009-2010) He employs a personal chef—butler to prepare his victims, further emphasizing his predatory and collector's mindset, which draws on vampire mythology to mask his true nature while exploiting the fear it inspires.[](Chew Vol. 2: International Flavor, Image Comics, 2010) This approach distinguishes him from other cibopath variants, who typically experience only temporary visions rather than permanent power acquisition. The Vampire's criminal endeavors span international incidents, including the violent raid on Russia's Gardner-Kvashennaya telescope facility, where he targeted personnel with precognitive abilities tied to food interpretation to add their gifts to his repertoire.[](Chew #7, Image Comics, 2009) He systematically hunts and imprisons cibopaths worldwide, building a hidden network of captives to ensure a steady supply for his cataloging ritual.[](Chew Vol. 2: International Flavor, Image Comics, 2010) These acts underscore his role as an embodiment of gluttonous ambition, prioritizing personal power accumulation over ethical boundaries. His arc culminates in a direct confrontation with Tony Chu, who ultimately defeats and kills him, highlighting the perils of unrestrained hunger for dominance in a world where food-based abilities amplify human flaws.[](Chew #41-45, Image Comics, 2014)

John Colby

John Colby is a supporting character in the comic book series Chew, serving as the cyborg partner to protagonist Tony Chu at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).[81] Originally a highly regarded officer with the Philadelphia Police Department, Colby specialized in vice crimes and was known for his effectiveness in such investigations.[81] His career took a dramatic turn when he sustained severe injuries during a raid on an illegal chicken operation alongside Tony Chu, leading to extensive facial damage from a butcher's knife attack.[81] Recruited by the FDA, Colby underwent reconstructive surgery that transformed him into a cyborg, equipping him with advanced technological implants.[81][82] As a cyborg, Colby's enhancements include the ability to interface directly with machines and digital systems, enabling him to analyze files and provide technical support during FDA operations.[81] This cybernetic integration not only restored his physical capabilities but also augmented his role as the "muscle" in fieldwork, where he handles physical confrontations and logistical tech needs complementary to Chu's cibopathic abilities.[81] Despite his mechanical upgrades, Colby retains a distinctly human personality marked by abrasiveness, pragmatism, and a penchant for unconventional tactics, such as leveraging personal relationships to advance investigations.[81] He often serves as comic relief through his blunt humor and unfiltered dialogue, injecting levity into tense scenarios while demonstrating unwavering loyalty to his partner.[81] Colby's traits starkly contrast with Tony Chu's more restrained demeanor, particularly in their shared world where chicken consumption is illegal due to a past avian flu pandemic.[1] An avid enthusiast of banned poultry—earning him a reputation as a "chicken addict"—Colby frequently indulges in or seeks out illegal chicken dishes, highlighting his disregard for regulations that Chu, burdened by his powers, avoids.[81] This love for contraband food underscores his rebellious streak and adds depth to his character as a foil to Chu's discipline, while his cybernetic nature amplifies his supportive function in combating food-related crimes.[81]

Olive Chu

Olive Chu is the daughter of Tony Chu, inheriting his cibopathic ability to receive psychic impressions from anything she eats.[83] As a young cibopath, her powers are amplified beyond her father's, enabling her to absorb and utilize additional food-related abilities by consuming individuals with unique powers, such as the Tortaespadero's capacity to weaponize tortillas into shurikens.[84] She attends Francis Bacon High School, where her emerging abilities contribute to the challenges of her adolescence.[85] Olive's personality is marked by innocence and resilience, often displaying a reserved and socially awkward demeanor while proving capable and competent in high-stakes situations.[86] In her key arc, she is kidnapped by Mason Savoy, an event that underscores the burdensome legacy of cibopathic powers for the next generation and highlights her vulnerability as a child navigating these inherited traits. This storyline culminates in her development into a full-fledged cibopath, playing a pivotal role in the series' climax by representing the transition of power and responsibility from her father to the younger generation.[86]

Other characters

Chow Chu is Tony Chu's younger brother and a skilled chef who owns the Philadelphia-based restaurant Mother Clucker's, specializing in chicken dishes during a nationwide chicken ban. Involved in criminal enterprises, he supplies black market poultry and navigates the underground food trade while maintaining a facade of legitimate business operations.[85][87] D-Bear, whose real name is Deshaun, serves as a diminutive black market informant and comic relief figure in the series, frequently dealing in illegal chicken and providing tips to FDA agents like Tony Chu. Initially appearing as a snitch in undercover operations, such as investigating cockfighting rings, he later becomes an unlikely ally, enduring mishaps that highlight his resilient yet hapless nature.[88][89][85] Ray Jack Montero is a wealthy entrepreneur and antagonist who engineers the creation of genetically modified frogs known as chogs (or frickens), sourced from the island of Yamapalu and marketed as chicken substitutes, sparking international incidents including attacks tied to his business interests. As the head of Montero Industries, he embodies corporate greed in the food industry, clashing with law enforcement over his illicit innovations.[90][85][91] Other notable secondary characters include Peter Pilaf, Olive Chu's schoolmate who possesses a rare food-related power allowing him to influence others through consumed items, leading to a disruptive incident at his school.[89] Federico Biscotti operates as a Philadelphia mob boss entangled in the series' criminal underworld, often targeted by characters using food-based abilities to uncover his operations.[92] Ken Keebler is an inmate with the power of eroscibopictaros, experiencing intense arousal from food imagery, featured in storylines exploring the bizarre abilities within the FDA's supermax prison. Marsala Kaczorowski, a molluhomicuquus capable of weaponizing mollusks, appears as a dangerous prisoner and antagonist in prison breakout narratives.[93] The E.G.G. Terrorists form a cult-like group worshiping eggs and waging war against chicken consumers, introducing militant elements to the food prohibition conflicts.[94][95] Sage Chu, Tony's sister, wields cipropanthropatic powers to detect human proximity via food, aiding investigations into mob activities.[96]

Setting

Locations

Yamapalu is depicted as one of the smallest islands in the western Pacific Ocean, part of the Federated States of Micronesia and spanning roughly 24 square miles. It serves as the origin point for the Gallsaberry plant, a unique fruit that, when cooked, tastes identical to chicken, drawing international attention amid a global poultry ban. The island becomes central to the story as the site of a violent massacre orchestrated by its governor in an attempt to monopolize and export the plant for profit.[97] Altilis-738 is a distant alien planet, situated approximately 24 light-years from Earth, characterized by its potential to sustain life and inhabited by a species of purple-skinned beings. The planet's destruction ties into cosmic phenomena, including cryptic messages appearing in Earth's skies, which are observed through advanced astronomical facilities.[98] The Gardner-Kvashennaya International Telescope represents a cutting-edge astronomical outpost, constructed in the Arctic Circle as part of an international collaboration between the United States and Russia. Funded at $34 million annually by the U.S., it focuses on deep-space observations, including monitoring extraterrestrial signals, and becomes the target of a targeted attack involving a cibopath.[99] Mother Clucker’s operates as a longstanding fried chicken restaurant chain in Philadelphia, established 35 years prior to the avian flu pandemic that led to a nationwide poultry prohibition. Following the ban, the chain's locations were shuttered by the FDA, but select sites repurposed as fronts for illicit black market operations dealing in contraband poultry.[100] Francis Bacon High School functions as a typical urban high school in Philadelphia, attended by protagonist Tony Chu's daughter, Olive. It gains notoriety in the narrative due to a chaotic food fight that escalates into a deadly riot among students.[101]

Organizations and society

In the universe of Chew, society has been fundamentally altered by a catastrophic avian flu pandemic that killed millions and prompted a nationwide ban on all poultry products, transforming everyday cuisine and commerce into a landscape of prohibition and scarcity. This ban, enacted to prevent further outbreaks, has spurred the creation of synthetic substitutes like "chickyn" and beet-based alternatives, while fostering a pervasive cultural taboo around chicken that permeates social norms and culinary traditions.[68][102] The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) stands as the preeminent federal agency in this world, elevated to a status rivaling traditional law enforcement bodies like the FBI due to its mandate to investigate and prosecute food-related crimes, particularly violations of the poultry ban. Employing agents with specialized abilities, the FDA operates an elite corps dedicated to combating illicit food trade and associated violence, reflecting the agency's central role in maintaining order amid widespread dietary restrictions.[1][103] Criminal syndicates have proliferated in response to the ban, with groups such as the Yakuza emerging as key players in the underground economy by smuggling and distributing illegal chicken across urban centers and beyond. These organizations engage in turf wars, bribery, and assassinations to control black market routes, exacerbating social divisions and contributing to a cycle of corruption that pits them against FDA enforcers.[67][104] Broader societal dynamics include the rise of food cults that revere or manipulate culinary elements as symbols of resistance or prophecy, often intersecting with extraterrestrial phenomena such as mysterious alien skywriting that hints at cosmic threats tied to Earth's food crises. The ban's global ripple effects have intensified international tensions, with diplomatic strains arising from unequal access to poultry alternatives and accusations of cross-border smuggling.[62][105]

Cibopath

Cibopathy, also known as the primary food-related psychic power in the Chew comic series, grants individuals the ability to receive psychic impressions—including visions, emotions, and memories—from anything they consume, extending to non-food items such as evidence or organic matter. This faculty allows cibopaths to access the full history, origins, and associated experiences of the ingested substance or object, functioning as a form of sensory psychometry triggered by mastication. The power is central to the series' investigative elements, enabling detailed reconstruction of events through taste alone.[1][106] Key users of cibopathy include Tony Chu, an FDA agent who applies the ability to solve food-related crimes by gleaning clues from consumed evidence; Mason Savoy, a fellow agent who leverages it for broader investigations and training purposes; Olive Chu, Tony's daughter, whose manifestation of the power is amplified, allowing for deeper and more versatile insights; and The Vampire, a Serbian antagonist who employs cibopathy to systematically collect and absorb the abilities of other powered individuals by devouring them. Tony Chu, for instance, relies on this power throughout the narrative to unravel complex cases involving illicit food trades and murders.[71][79][80][107] The ability carries notable limitations, particularly in its early stages when it is uncontrollable, bombarding users with involuntary impressions from routine eating and often leading to psychological strain or aversion to food. Beets specifically trigger an overload, delivering an intense flood of psychic feedback that can incapacitate the user, though this also renders beets the sole exception to the power's activation on organic matter. With training, cibopaths like Savoy and Olive can refine control, mitigating these drawbacks for more targeted applications.[108][62]

Saboscrivner

The saboscrivner is a rare food-related power in the Chew universe, enabling an individual to write descriptions of food with such precision and vividness that readers experience the actual taste sensations evoked by the words.[109] This ability transforms written text into a sensory conduit, allowing the flavor profiles—ranging from savory notes to bitter aftertastes—to manifest palpably in the reader's perception.[110] The sole prominent user of this power is Amelia Mintz, a professional food critic whose career leverages her saboscrivner abilities to craft reviews that immerse audiences in the culinary experiences she describes.[109] By infusing her writing with this evocative quality, Mintz elevates food journalism, enabling readers to "taste" dishes without consumption and providing unparalleled insight into flavors and textures.[111] In practice, the saboscrivner power enhances critical analysis by making abstract descriptions tangible, but it carries risks of sensory overload, particularly when depicting unpalatable or spoiled foods, which can induce nausea or illness in readers.[109] This dual-edged nature underscores the power's potency, as overuse or application to negative experiences may overwhelm the audience rather than enlighten them.[110]

Cibolocutor

The cibolocutor ability in the Chew universe allows individuals to communicate complex thoughts, ideas, or even entire narratives through the preparation and presentation of food items, serving as a direct medium for conveying information without relying on spoken or written language.[112] This power transforms culinary creations into vessels for translation, enabling the encoding of messages that can be "read" or understood by consuming or observing the dish.[113] One prominent user of this ability is the renowned chef known as Fatanyeros, who employs cibolocution to express intricate concepts such as literature, poetry, or operatic works by infusing them into gourmet dishes.[114] For instance, Fatanyeros can prepare meals that embody the essence of a play or poem, allowing recipients to grasp the underlying themes and emotions through the sensory experience of the food itself.[62] This unique trait positions food not merely as sustenance but as a non-verbal conduit for profound intellectual and artistic exchange, distinguishing it from other food-related powers that focus on sensory or predictive insights.[112]

Voresoph

Voresophy is a food-related superpower in the Chew universe that enables the user to achieve temporary super-intelligence through the act of eating. This ability manifests as heightened cognitive prowess, including superior deduction and analytical skills, active only during consumption and derived from processing ingested material as a source of knowledge. Unlike cibopathy, which imparts specific psychic visions from food, voresophy broadly amplifies intellectual capacity without revealing discrete memories or events.[84] The primary known voresoph is Daniel Migdalo, a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) agent who applies this power in strategic crimes and investigations. Migdalo's ability allows him to ingest brains or other knowledgeable sources to fuel rapid intellectual gains, making him a valuable asset in scenarios requiring on-the-spot genius-level insights. His role within the FDA highlights the practical deployment of voresophy in law enforcement contexts involving complex criminal analysis.[115][116] A key limitation of voresophy is its impermanence; the super-intelligence fades post-digestion, reverting the user to normal cognitive function once eating stops. This transience necessitates continuous consumption to maintain the enhanced state, restricting its utility to short-term applications.[84]

Effervenductor

An effervenductor possesses the ability to generate effervescent foam from beverages, particularly coffee, that embeds hypnotic or mind-controlling messages visible as bubbles within the foam.[84][62] These messages compel consumers to follow suggestions or commands upon ingestion, functioning as a form of subtle manipulation through everyday drinks.[117] The power is limited to short-term effects, influencing the weak-willed or unsuspecting individuals temporarily until the external influence is disrupted.[118] The primary known effervenductor in the Chew universe is an unnamed character referred to as "The Barista," who operates in coffee shops to exploit this ability for personal gain and control over patrons.[84] By infusing hypnotic directives into latte or espresso foam, The Barista can affect multiple people simultaneously, turning a routine coffee service into a tool for coercion.[62] This application highlights the power's reliance on social settings like cafes, where beverages are commonly consumed without suspicion.[117] Unlike other drink-related powers that compel truth or extract information, effervenduction focuses exclusively on embedding suggestive commands through foam, making it a specialized form of beverage-based influence.[118] The visible bubbling nature of the foam serves both as a medium for the messages and a subtle indicator of the power's activation, though it often goes unnoticed by victims.[84]

Xocoscalpere

Xocoscalpery is a food-related supernatural ability that enables the user to sculpt chocolate—and exclusively chocolate—into hyper-realistic replicas of objects or people with such precision and verisimilitude that they can deceive all senses except touch.[62][105] These chocolate creations mimic their real-life counterparts so convincingly that they can function identically in many cases, such as forming operational weapons like shuriken, knives, or even firearms.[119][84] The primary known user of xocoscalpery is Hershel Brown, a skilled artisan who employed the power to craft detailed chocolate sculptures.[120] Later, Olive Chu developed the ability after consuming part of Brown's remains, inheriting his xocoscalpere expertise through her cibopathic nature.[80][84] Applications of xocoscalpery include artistic endeavors, where the sculptures serve as intricate works of edible art, and deceptive purposes, leveraging their sensory realism for misdirection.[62][121] However, the inherent properties of chocolate limit their durability, as the replicas melt under heat or warmth.[105] This vulnerability underscores the power's reliance on controlled environments to maintain integrity.

Cibovoyant

Cibovoyant is a rare psychic ability within the Chew universe, characterized by the capacity to experience visions of future events through the consumption of portions of living organisms.[122] This power enables the user to "flash onto" prospective trajectories or outcomes for the subject ingested, providing insights into potential developments rather than exhaustive foresight.[62] Unlike retrospective abilities such as cibopathy, cibovoyancy is strictly precognitive and future-oriented, distinguishing it from powers that reveal past histories or memories.[123] The ability is activated by biting into or ingesting part of a living entity, such as a person or animal, but does not function on deceased subjects or inanimate objects.[124] These visions manifest with a degree of eerie accuracy, offering glimpses of upcoming events in the subject's life, though they are limited to brief previews rather than prolonged or comprehensive prophecies.[62] In the series, this power proves invaluable for anticipatory applications, such as averting crises or informing strategic decisions. Toni Chu, the sister of protagonist Tony Chu, is the primary and only known cibovoyant, leveraging her abilities in a specialized capacity that includes collaboration with governmental agencies like NASA.[122] Her role underscores the power's utility in disaster prediction and high-stakes forecasting, where timely visions can influence outcomes on a large scale.[125] This makes cibovoyancy a pivotal element in the narrative's exploration of food-derived superhuman traits, emphasizing its contrast to Tony's past-focused cibopathy.[123]

Tortaespadero

Tortaespadero is a rare food-related power that enables individuals to transform ordinary tortillas into razor-sharp blades or specialized tools through folding or cutting techniques.[84] This ability renders the tortilla as lethal as a knife's edge, allowing for precise and versatile applications.[126] The transformed tortillas retain their edible nature in their base form but become highly dangerous once activated, posing a dual threat of utility and peril.[84] Users of this power have employed it to create items such as shurikens or grenades from tortillas, demonstrating its potential in combat scenarios where concealability and lethality are key.[126] In practice, tortaespadero serves both offensive and practical purposes, with the power's specificity to tortillas making it a niche yet effective tool in targeted situations.[84]

Cipropanthropatic

Cipropanthropatic is a rare food-related psychic ability in the Chew comic series, enabling the user to perceive the memories of other individuals who are in close proximity and consuming the exact same food simultaneously.[127] This power facilitates a temporary mental link between eaters, revealing personal recollections tied to the act of eating, which distinguishes it from more introspective abilities like cibopathy that focus on the food's own history.[128] The primary known user of this power is Sage Chu, the younger sister of the series' protagonist, Tony Chu, and part of the Chu family, several members of whom possess distinct culinary-based abilities.[127] Sage's cipropanthropatic talent has proven instrumental in investigative contexts, such as when she dined at a restaurant and, upon eating a unique dish, glimpsed the memories of mob boss Don Federico Biscotti seated nearby, who was consuming the same meal; this vision exposed his involvement in a murder, leading to his identification and apprehension with assistance from her sister Antonelle.[127] By forging these proximate connections through shared consumption, the power effectively bridges the experiences of individuals across immediate spatial boundaries, enhancing its utility in law enforcement and crime-solving scenarios within the series.[128]

Sabopictor

Sabopictor is a rare gustatory power featured in the Chew comic series, enabling individuals to paint images that evoke the authentic taste of the depicted food for anyone who views them. This ability transforms visual art into a direct sensory experience, where the flavor is perceived on the tongue without physical consumption, creating a multisensory bridge between sight and taste. The effect is temporary, persisting only during observation of the artwork.[61] The most notable Sabopictor is Quindim Buongio-Vannis, a renowned painter whose works have elevated the power's artistic potential, drawing interest from high-profile collectors and chefs seeking innovative culinary inspirations. Buongio-Vannis's paintings, such as those auctioned among elite bidders, exemplify how Sabopictors apply their ability to produce pieces that not only captivate visually but also satisfy gustatorily, influencing the intersection of fine art and gastronomy. As one of only three known living Sabopictors at the time of his introduction, his contributions underscore the power's scarcity and cultural impact within the series' world.[61]

Ciboinvalescor

Ciboinvalescor is a cibopathic ability in the Chew universe that grants the user enhanced physical strength through the consumption of food, with the power absorbing strength in proportion to the quantity eaten.[129] This general food-based enhancement differs from more specialized powers, allowing activation via any edible substance rather than a single type.[118] The sole known practitioner of Ciboinvalescor is Dominic Partridge, a bodyguard whose abilities enable him to bolster his physical capabilities by ingesting food during critical moments.[130] The effect is temporary, fading after the boost period, and its intensity scales linearly with the volume of food consumed, providing a versatile but quantity-dependent augmentation.[105] Partridge's use of this power demonstrates remarkable feats of strength, such as overpowering multiple opponents with minimal effort after eating.[131]

Coquerafthartos

Coquerafthartos is a rare culinary ability within the Chew universe, enabling the user to achieve an extraordinarily extended lifespan by preparing and consuming a single signature dish. This power fundamentally ties longevity to gastronomic mastery, where the act of cooking the dish imbues the eater with prolonged life, potentially spanning centuries.[105] The primary known user of this ability is Jeremiah Cumberland, a character driven by a personal quest for immortality who harnessed Coquerafthartos to sustain his existence for nearly 600 years. Cumberland's pursuit exemplifies how the power serves individual ambitions for eternal life, transforming a culinary feat into a tool for defying mortality.[84] The recipe for the signature dish remains a closely guarded secret, reliant on rare and elusive ingredients that underscore the power's exclusivity and difficulty to replicate. This secrecy amplifies the thematic exploration of longevity in Chew, where sustenance becomes a metaphor for transcending human limits through food.[105]

Lubodeipnosophistes

The Lubodeipnosophistes is a rare cibopathic ability in the Chew universe that amplifies the user's charisma and seductive influence exclusively during shared meals, enabling them to psychologically compel romantic or intimate attraction in their dining companions.[132] This food-paired effect manifests as an irresistible allure tied to the act of eating together, rendering the power ineffective outside of mealtime contexts and relying on the sensory and social elements of cuisine to heighten interpersonal dynamics.[133] Wielded by an unnamed cibopath as a tool for social manipulation, the Lubodeipnosophistes facilitates subtle control over others through dining scenarios, often employed to influence decisions or extract favors under the guise of hospitality.[134] The psychological mechanism operates by syncing the user's enhanced persuasiveness with the communal ritual of food consumption, bypassing rational resistance and fostering dependency on the shared experience. Unlike more overt cibopathic talents, this ability prioritizes nuance and timing, making it ideal for covert negotiations or alliances formed over meals. In broader terms, the Lubodeipnosophistes exemplifies the social-influencing subset of cibopathic powers, where culinary interactions serve as conduits for mental sway.[62] Its effects are transient, dissipating once the meal concludes, which underscores the power's dependence on ongoing food-related engagement to sustain its seductive hold.

Cibocelerent

Cibocelerent is a specialized form of cibopathy featured in the Chew comic series, granting the ability to cook meals at superhuman speeds while maintaining exceptional quality and flavor integrity. This power revolutionizes culinary preparation by compressing what would typically take hours into mere moments, ensuring that dishes retain their intended textures, tastes, and aromas without overcooking or degradation. In the series, it exemplifies the diverse food-related superhuman traits that drive the narrative's exploration of extraordinary abilities tied to consumption and creation.[105][62] The primary known user of Cibocelerent is an unnamed chef, whose proficiency highlights the power's practical applications in demanding, high-pressure environments. This individual leverages the ability to manage intense workloads, such as fulfilling large orders during rush periods or adapting to unforeseen demands in competitive kitchen settings, thereby enhancing operational efficiency without sacrificing culinary standards. Such scenarios underscore the power's value in professional cooking contexts, where speed directly impacts success and customer satisfaction.[117][1] At its core, the Cibocelerent trait operates through a unique form of time manipulation achieved via precise heat control, allowing the user to accelerate molecular reactions in ingredients selectively. This control prevents uneven heating or loss of moisture, effectively bending the temporal aspects of cooking to align with the power's rapid pace. Unlike conventional methods, it integrates seamlessly with broader cooking themes in Chew, where abilities often enhance traditional gastronomic processes.[135][1]

Mnemocoquus

Mnemocoquus is a specialized form of cibopathy in the Chew universe, enabling individuals to infuse their personal memories directly into prepared dishes. This process embeds the essence of past experiences—ranging from joyful events to traumatic incidents—into the food, such that consumers upon eating trigger a vivid evocation of those memories.[1] The resulting sensory recall is comprehensive, engaging all five senses as if the eater were reliving the original moment firsthand, including sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and tactile sensations. This depth distinguishes mnemocoquus from mere flavor enhancement, creating an immersive psychological bridge through cuisine.[136] The sole known user of mnemocoquus remains unnamed throughout the series, employing the ability for varied applications such as therapeutic interventions to alleviate grief by revisiting cherished recollections or deceptive maneuvers to implant false narratives and influence behavior. These uses highlight the power's dual potential for healing and manipulation within interpersonal dynamics.[1] This ability aligns with broader memory-based cibopathic traits, where culinary acts serve as conduits for cognitive transfer.[1]

Cibolinguist

In the Chew universe, a cibolinguist possesses the ability to learn and fluently speak the language associated with the nationality or cultural origin of a dish by either cooking or eating it.[137] This cibopathic power enables instantaneous language acquisition, allowing the user to communicate effectively in that tongue without prior study.[137] The scope of this ability extends beyond standard national languages to include regional cultural dialects, providing nuanced linguistic proficiency tied to the dish's heritage. An unnamed cibolinguist character utilizes this power to assist in international investigations, acquiring languages on demand to facilitate cross-cultural interrogations and evidence gathering. This application underscores the power's utility in global contexts, where diverse culinary traditions reflect varied linguistic landscapes.

Bromaformutare

Bromaformutare is a specialized cibopathic ability within the Chew series, enabling the possessor to undergo a transformation of their head into the physical likeness of the most recently consumed food item.[138] This metamorphosis alters the head's appearance, shape, and color to precisely replicate the eaten substance, such as shifting into a hamburger after ingestion.[84] The power is wielded by U.S. Senator David Eccles, who employs it primarily as a mechanism for camouflage or political effect in precarious situations.[62] By assuming the form of surrounding or contextual edibles on his head, the user can evade pursuers or integrate seamlessly into food-laden environments, turning a seemingly whimsical trait into a strategic asset for survival or deception. This application underscores the broader theme of food-derived powers in Chew, where even niche abilities contribute to narrative tension and character ingenuity.[135] The transformation persists until the user consumes another meal, at which point the effect dissipates, reverting the head to its original state or initiating a new alteration based on the fresh intake.[138] This temporal limitation introduces an element of urgency, compelling the bearer to manage intake strategically to maintain desired forms during critical moments.

Mnemcibarian

In the "Chew" comic series, a Mnemcibarian possesses a rare food-related superpower enabling the creation of dishes that etch themselves indelibly into the eaters' memories, rendering the culinary experience perpetually unforgettable.[105] This ability focuses on crafting meals with profound memorability, distinct from other powers like Mnemocoquus that involve embedding and transferring specific memories into food.[107] The unnamed user of this power leverages it to produce psychological impacts through heightened sensory and cognitive imprinting, where the meal's flavors, textures, and overall essence become fixtures in the consumer's mind.[138] Eaters experience permanent recall of the dish, often accompanied by an enduring emotional tie that evokes nostalgia or intense sentiment upon reflection, amplifying the meal's role in personal memory themes.[62] This superpower exemplifies the series' exploration of cibopathic abilities, where food serves as a medium for lasting mental impressions without altering or revealing external events.[107] In practice, a Mnemcibarian's creations can influence social or interpersonal dynamics by forging unbreakable associations, though the power's application remains tied to culinary artistry rather than manipulation of factual recall.[138]

Hortamagnatroph

In the Chew comic series, a hortamagnatroph possesses the rare ability to grow fruits and vegetables to gargantuan proportions far beyond natural limits.[84] This cibopathic power manifests through exceptional gardening skills, enabling the cultivation of produce that can reach scales large enough for human habitation, such as a pumpkin serving as a full-sized house.[84][139] The primary known user of this ability is Donald Barley, a formerly small-time farmer who discovered his hortamagnatroph nature and parlayed it into significant wealth.[139] Barley's oversized yields, including six-foot-tall carrots and building-sized pumpkins, propelled him to world-renowned status in agricultural circles within the series' food-obsessed society.[84] This capability led to major disruptions in the agricultural sector, as his massive harvests challenged conventional farming economics and drew unwanted attention from groups like the E.G.G. terrorists, who abducted him in issue #35 to exploit his seeds for their own purposes before his rescue by FDA agent Tony Chu.[140][139]

Eroscibopictaros

In the "Chew" comic series, eroscibopictaros refers to a rare cibopathic ability that allows individuals to photograph food in a way that evokes erotic sensations and sexual arousal in viewers, effectively turning culinary imagery into a form of visual erotica. This power manifests through the act of capturing images, where the resulting photographs trigger intense longing and desire, blurring the lines between appetite and sensuality without requiring consumption of the food itself.[84] The primary character embodying this ability is Ken Keebler, a photographer whose work exploits the erotic potential of food visuals for exploitative artistic purposes, often producing content that borders on the pornographic. Keebler's images are designed to provoke immediate physical and emotional responses, linking everyday meals to forbidden attractions in a manner that has drawn scrutiny from law enforcement within the series' universe. His reputation as a "food pornographer" underscores the controversial nature of his craft, which has led to confrontations with authorities seeking to curb its distribution.[141][84] The effect of eroscibopictaros photography creates a direct visual pathway to arousal, distinguishing it from other cibopathic traits by relying solely on sight rather than ingestion or interaction. This ability highlights the series' exploration of how sensory experiences can intersect with human desire, with Keebler's output serving as a tool for manipulation in interpersonal dynamics.[62]

Molluhomicuquus

Molluhomicuquus refers to a specialized cibopathic ability within the Chew comic series, enabling the preparation of lethally toxic dishes that disguise their danger through an initially normal taste and appearance.[93] This power manifests primarily in the cooking of clam chowder, which becomes inherently poisonous upon preparation by the individual possessing the ability, rendering it a potent tool for covert harm.[105] The toxicity develops subtly, allowing the dish to pass undetected during consumption until lethal effects take hold, distinguishing it from overt poisons.[62] The sole known practitioner of molluhomicuquus is Marsala Kaczorowski, a character introduced as an inmate in the FDA Supermax Food Prison.[142] Kaczorowski utilizes this ability strategically as an assassination instrument, leveraging the deceptive normalcy of her chowder to target victims without arousing suspicion.[93] Her proficiency in this power aligns with broader themes of culinary manipulation in the series, where food-based abilities often serve dual purposes of creation and destruction.[105] This capacity underscores the perilous undercurrents of cibopathy, transforming everyday meals into instruments of precision lethality.[62]

Pederexplodier

The Pederexplodier is a rare bodily power in the Chew universe, characterized by the ability to generate explosive gas through the digestive process, resulting in flatulence with devastating destructive potential.[105] This power manifests as a weaponized form of flatulence, capable of explosions equivalent to a 14-kiloton bomb, making it one of the most hazardous abilities tied to food consumption in the series.[84][143] The power is triggered by food intake, which initiates the digestive generation of the explosive gas, allowing the user to release it at will for offensive purposes.[62] Brann Jerwar is the sole known Pederexplodier across the 60-issue run of Chew, utilizing this ability as a destructive weapon that poses a global security threat, leading to his containment in a maximum-security FDA facility.[84] As part of the broader spectrum of bodily powers linked to culinary interactions, the Pederexplodier exemplifies how everyday physiological functions can be amplified into catastrophic forces within the comic's world.[105]

Punicacuratio

In the Chew comic series, punicacuratio denotes the preternatural restorative properties derived from pomegranates, which grant healing effects when properly prepared, such as through the extraction of juice from the berries.[13] This ability is utilized by an unnamed individual for medical applications, enabling the rapid cure of various ailments through ingestion or topical application of the prepared pomegranate substance.[62] The effects manifest as accelerated tissue regeneration and overall bodily restoration, distinguishing punicacuratio as a short-term healing mechanism within the series' array of food-based anomalies.[13]

Viresarantheacist

In the Chew comic series, a viresarantheacist is a rare type of individual endowed with food-based abilities who gains superhuman strength specifically from consuming spinach. This power allows the user to dramatically enhance their physical capabilities, transforming ordinary consumption into a catalyst for extraordinary might.[144] The archetype is exemplified by an unnamed character depicted as a rugged "sailor man," a clear homage to the classic Popeye the Sailor, who employs the ability for combat advantages in high-stakes battles. This parody integrates seamlessly into the series' exploration of culinary superpowers, highlighting spinach as the exclusive trigger for the strength surge in this context.[145]

Victuspeciosian

In the Chew comic series, a Victuspeciosian is an individual possessing a specialized cibopathic ability to craft unique cosmetic masks from food preparations, resulting in temporary physical enhancements to the wearer's beauty and appearance.[146] These masks induce transformational effects that alter facial features and overall aesthetics in remarkable ways, serving primarily as a tool for vanity rather than any practical or investigative purpose.[62] The ability's most prominent user is Judy Heinz-Campbell, a beauty shop owner who leveraged her Victuspeciosian powers to offer exclusive services, charging substantial fees to clients seeking aesthetic improvements.[147] In her operations, Heinz-Campbell prepared special compounds from edible ingredients, which clients applied as masks to achieve idealized beauty standards temporarily.[148] This power physically modifies the user's exterior, distinguishing it from other cibopathic traits that might influence perception without tangible changes. The glamour induced by these masks is inherently short-lived, typically enduring for several hours before fading, which underscores the ability's role in fleeting cosmetic enhancements rather than permanent alterations.[148] Heinz-Campbell's stockpiles of these preparations later played a key role in events surrounding her death, where the compounds were used to mimic her transformed appearance.[147] Overall, Victuspeciosian embodies the series' exploration of food-derived powers intersecting with themes of superficial beauty and personal indulgence.

Reception

Critical reception

Chew received widespread critical acclaim for its unique blend of humor, horror, and crime fiction elements centered around food. IGN reviewer Dan Phillips gave the debut issue a 9.5 out of 10 rating, describing it as a "sick, offbeat, warped, disturbing and very crazy comic" that was also "hilarious and quite brilliant."[149] The series was named IGN's Best Indie Series of 2009, highlighted for its quirky premise and winning creative team.[97] Collected volumes of the series achieved commercial success, appearing on the New York Times Graphic Books Bestseller list, including Volume 4 in 2011.[150] Early issues frequently sold out, prompting multiple printings and demonstrating strong initial demand from retailers and readers.[151] Critics consistently praised the series' grotesque yet comedic tone, with Comics Beat noting in a review of issue #30 that the writing remained "constantly stellar and fun to read," emphasizing its character-driven storytelling and willingness to push boundaries.[152] On Goodreads, individual volumes maintained strong reader approval, with Volume 1 averaging 4.0 out of 5 stars from over 39,000 ratings and other editions scoring 4.2 or higher.[153]

Awards

Chew received widespread recognition in the comics industry, earning multiple prestigious awards for its innovative storytelling and artwork. The series won the Eisner Award for Best New Series in 2010 for issues #1-10, written by John Layman and illustrated by Rob Guillory.[154] In 2011, it secured the Eisner Award for Best Continuing Series.[155] The Harvey Awards also honored Chew in 2010, awarding it Best New Series and recognizing Rob Guillory with Best New Talent.[156][157] Earlier accolades included IGN's selection of Chew as the Best Indie Series of 2009.[158] Similarly, MTV Splash Page named it the Best New Series of 2009.[97] Chew garnered several nominations beyond its wins, including 2011 Eisner Awards for Best Writer (Layman) and Best Penciller/Inker (Guillory).[3] Additional Harvey nominations followed in subsequent years for writing and art categories.[3]

Adaptations

Animated feature

In April 2014, an animated feature adaptation of the comic series Chew was announced, to be produced by Jeff Krelitz and David Boxenbaum through their multimedia company Heavy Metal.[159] The project was planned as a 90-minute direct adaptation of the first collected trade paperback, capturing the series' premise of cibopath Tony Chu using his ability to gain psychic impressions from food to solve crimes in a world where poultry is banned due to a bird flu pandemic.[160] The voice cast included Steven Yeun as the lead character Tony Chu and Felicia Day as his love interest Amelia, with recording sessions underway by mid-2015 as evidenced by actors sharing updates from the studio.[161] David Tennant joined the cast in June 2015 to voice the villainous Mason Savoy, replacing the late Robin Williams who had originally been attached to the role before his death in 2014.[162] Despite progress on voice work, the project was shelved by late 2017, with creators confirming that the animated film was no longer moving forward.[163] As of November 2025, no release date has been set, and development efforts have shifted toward other formats.[164]

Television series

In 2011, Showtime acquired the rights to adapt the comic series Chew into a half-hour live-action comedy pilot, envisioned as a quirky procedural cop show centered on cibopath agent Tony Chu.[165] The script was penned by writers Terri Hughes Burton and Ron Milbauer, known for their work on Eureka, with production handled by Circle of Confusion in collaboration with the comic's creators, John Layman and Rob Guillory.[165] Development progressed through 2012 and into early 2013, focusing on maintaining the source material's blend of humor, crime-solving, and surreal food-related elements within a network-friendly format.[166] No official casting announcements were made during this period, though co-creator John Layman publicly expressed support for actor Ken Leung (Lost) in the lead role of Tony Chu, citing his fit for the character's understated intensity; such suggestions remained speculative and unconfirmed.[167] The project emphasized a procedural structure, with each episode potentially revolving around Chu using his psychic ability to investigate bizarre cases tied to cuisine and crime.[168] By February 2013, the pilot was officially abandoned, as confirmed by Layman via social media, due to irreconcilable creative differences over the tone—particularly Showtime's challenges in balancing the comic's graphic cannibalism and absurdity with broadcast standards.[169][170] Layman later described the script as faithful to the original but noted the network's hesitation around elements like Tony Chu consuming human remains.[170] Although unconfirmed rumors of revival discussions surfaced sporadically in the 2020s, in January 2025 co-creator John Layman stated that efforts were underway to develop a live-action television adaptation; as of November 2025, no further details or announcements have been made.[171][164]

Tabletop game

CHEW: Cases of the FDA is a card game adaptation of the comic series, published by IDW Games in May 2015 and designed by Kevin Wilson.[172] The game captures the series' premise of cibopaths—individuals who gain psychic insights by eating food—working as agents for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to investigate bizarre culinary-related mysteries.[173] It supports 2 to 5 players and typically lasts about 30 minutes, emphasizing quick, competitive play with humorous elements drawn from the source material.[174] The game's components include 5 case cards, 5 culprit cards, 48 clue cards representing various foods and evidence, 52 investigation cards for special abilities and actions, 20 plastic chog tokens (representing vomit, a key risk in cibopathy), and a chog token bag for storage and gameplay use.[173] Players take on the role of FDA agents, drawing clue cards to gather information on active cases while using investigation cards to enlist allies, deploy villains for sabotage, or mitigate risks like induced vomiting that can disrupt opponents' progress.[175] The objective is to connect clues to identify culprits and close the most cases first, with chog tokens accumulating as penalties for overeating or failed deductions, potentially leading to self-sabotage or targeted interference.[176] The game received a pre-order exclusive variant cover of Chew #1 comic by artist Rob Guillory, along with 20 pink plastic chog minis, though the minis' color varied in later printings.[172] It was later expanded with promotional content, including the Chog Frappe promo pack featuring 2 special chog frappe cards and 5 green variant chog tokens, distributed at select events to add new sabotage options and replayability.[177]

Role-playing game

In October 2021, Imagining Games launched a Kickstarter campaign for CHEW: The Roleplaying Game, a tabletop role-playing game adaptation of the comic series, which successfully raised $52,734 from 660 backers.[178] The campaign, running for 30 days, funded the development of a core rulebook and additional materials, with digital PDFs made available to backers in June 2022 and physical copies following later, culminating in a full commercial release in 2024.[178][179] The game utilizes a system powered by Forged in the Dark, a framework derived from Powered by the Apocalypse, emphasizing narrative-driven play with mechanics centered on stressful investigations, heists, and downtime activities in a world of food-related superpowers known as cibopathy.[178][180] Players take on roles as agents of the Special Crimes Division, tackling crimes involving illegal cuisine, cannibalistic cults, and clairvoyant chefs, with core mechanics revolving around position, effect, and stress to simulate high-stakes culinary mysteries.[178] Unlike more structured tabletop adaptations, this RPG prioritizes freeform storytelling and player-driven scenarios to capture the comic's blend of humor, horror, and foodie culture.[180] The core book, spanning 225 pages and featuring art by series co-creator Rob Guillory, provides comprehensive rules for character creation, cibopathic powers, and faction interactions.[178] Supplements include The CHEWniverse, a 250-page expansion detailing additional agencies, locations, and antagonistic factions to deepen campaign settings, as well as an erasable Investigative Campaign Corkboard (19" × 29") for plotting ongoing mysteries.[178] In 2024, the game received the ENNIE Award for Judge's Spotlight, recognizing its innovative adaptation of the source material into a cohesive RPG experience.[181]

References

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