The entertainment in My Neighbor 4 is auditory, even on the page. Letterer Sam “Echo” Tran uses onomatopoeia like a DJ uses samples. A single from upstairs is drawn as a seismic shockwave. A CREAK of floorboards becomes a suspenseful six-panel sequence rivaling any horror comic.
For fans of the Jab Comics app (which now syncs haptic feedback to panel turns), reading My Neighbor 4 with headphones on is a revelation. The “silent issue” (Chapter 3, where Aria and Dex communicate entirely via notes slipped under the door and facial expressions through the peephole) has already gone viral on social media as a “masterclass in tension.” Jab Comics My Hot Ass Neighbor 4
Jab Comics leverages “lifestyle branding” here without a single ad read. Dex’s apartment is a shrine to hustle-culture maximalism (neon lights, a rack of energy drinks, a peloton he doesn’t use). Aria’s is soft-girl minimalism (beige everything, a single monstera plant, a candle labeled “Serenity”). The conflict isn’t good vs. evil—it’s curated Instagram aesthetics vs. chaotic TikTok energy. The entertainment in My Neighbor 4 is auditory,