Leia’s rad 1970’s hover bike, as seen in the comics (“Plif!”) and on the cover of a children’s read-along record and book set (“Planet of the Hoojibs”)
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from Portugal

seen from Sweden
seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Norway

seen from Bulgaria

seen from Bulgaria
seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from T1
Leia’s rad 1970’s hover bike, as seen in the comics (“Plif!”) and on the cover of a children’s read-along record and book set (“Planet of the Hoojibs”)
January 1982. Among the many unfairly maligned bits of the original STAR WARS comic are the hoojibs, a race of sentient telepathic creatures who look like little pink bunnies, and who feed on electrical energy. First seen in STAR WARS #55, by David Michelinie, Walt Simonson, and Tom Palmer, the hoojibs are native to an arboreal world call Arbra, where the Rebels set up a temporary base in the wake of their escape from Hoth — in a rare case of the comics creators (who were not privy to the story direction of the movies until it came time to prepare a film adaptation) successfully anticipating the next movie, which also featured the Rebels meeting cute furry creatures on a forest world.
Plif, pictured above with Chewbacca, was the hoojib "spokesmind," a very polite and thoroughly civilized fellow who accompanied Luke and Leia on a number of adventures through the rest of the series. He was a useful traveling companion: Because few people were familiar with hoojibs, he could usually be passed off as a pet, but not only was he a telepath, he could also drain the power packs of blasters and other portable equipment if he got close enough without being noticed.
There were of course also definite advantages for the hoojibs in befriending some relatively kindly bipeds:
Many STAR WARS fans still roll their eyes at any mention of hoojibs, but I have a soft spot for them. For one, they were characters, not just cute animal mascots, and in the lexicon of weird or silly STAR WARS aliens, they're really 80th percentile at most. For another, if you have any fondness at all for little furry animals, the idea of having a cute little creature you can talk to telepathically and who can occasionally do useful parlor tricks holds a definite appeal. A hoojib would make a good companion for a SW video game, and I think they'd be fun TTRPG player characters for the open-minded.
Incidentally, the issue that first introduced Plif and the hoojibs became one of a number of STAR WARS comics adapted as book-and-record sets by Buena Vista Records in 1983:
Star Wars 67, page 4. Marvel Comics, 1983. Layouts by Ron Frenz. Finishes by Tom Palmer.
PORGS PORGS PORGS PORGS PORGS … and an Ewok and a Hoojib, because all the “marketed to be cute” star wars aliens deserve each other.
Star Wars 55, page 1. Marvel Comics, 1982. Pencils by Walt Simonson. Inks by Tom Palmer.
Star Wars #63, page 10. Marvel Comics, 1982. Layouts by Walt Simonson. Pencils and inks by Tom Palmer.
Update 22nd November - Sherlock Holmes, Life Day, Hoojibs, win a voyage onboard the Star Cruiser, plus my favourite villains of all time
Check out this week's update on my blog - Sherlock Holmes, Life Day, Hoojibs, win a voyage onboard the Star Cruiser, plus my favourite villains of all time
Hello there! Happy Monday, my friends. Let’s dive headfirst into my news as if falling into a giant bucket of pure joy… Oh, and don’t forget that you can have these updates pop straight into your inbox by subscribing to my newsletter! MY WEEK I’m a firm believer in being as honest as possible when it comes to work. Sometimes words come easy. Sometimes words come hard. Last week definitely…
View On WordPress
star wars fans who don't like the ewoks are wrong. #starwars #ewoks #porgs #hoojibs #thelastjedi