Some events entertain you, some impress you, but very few stay with you. Comic Con Africa 2025 will definitely stay with me.
I’ve been to my fair share of Cons and I thought I knew what I was walking into. The gaming halls, the cosplay, the panels and the celebrities. Yes, All of that was there, bigger and louder than ever. But what struck me was not the spectacle, but rather the feeling. It was how human the whole experience was.
The organizers say around seventy thousand people came through the doors. That’s an impressive figure indeed, but it does not explain what it was like to stand in the middle of it. It does not explain the buzz of cosplay central, the faint smell of markers and coffee hanging in the air at Artist Alley, as artists sketched and laughed with strangers who felt like friends. It does not explain the sudden eruption of cheers from the esports stage that sounded like a stadium rather than a hall, or the quiet joy on a child’s face when they spotted their favourite character come to life.
It’s about people, moments and memories.

One of my most unexpected highlights was Tattoo Tannies & Sonder Ink. I walked in curious and left with a tribal star inked on my neck. The design is bold and I love it, but the real story is Shirley Coburn, the hype queen. She has this energy that draws you in instantly. Sharp humour, endless wit, and laughter that fills the space. You forget about the needle because you are too busy laughing. That tattoo is no longer just ink. It is a memory I will carry as long as I carry the mark itself.
The entire weekend felt like a patchwork of moments. Handmade cosplay that showed hours of effort and personal pride. Families introducing their kids to a world they grew up with. Collectors were clutching rare finds like treasure and complete strangers traded compliments in queues. Yes, the celebrities were there. Jessie T. Usher, Dan Fogler, Misha Collins, and they certainly added sparkle, but they were not the centre of gravity. The people were.
Comic Con Africa 2025 reminded me that fandom here is no longer niche, but has grown into something larger, something cultural. For four days, fandom became a shared language, a reason for people from every background to gather and feel at home.
I left exhausted, overstimulated and a neck that was still stinging, but with a sense of gratitude. Grateful for the reminder that fandom is not just about the shows we watch or the games we play. It is about connection. It is about finding yourself in a crowd of strangers and realising you belong.
Comic Con Africa 2025 wasn’t just bigger, it was more human. And that’s what made it special. As it grows, the challenge will be to keep that heart intact. Because although the numbers and the spectacle matter, without the heart, it is just an event.