Jared is a writer, editor, and Communications Studies graduate who loves popular nerd culture (almost anything to do with Marvel, DC, Star Wars, or The Lord of the Rings) and the interactive storytelling medium. Jared's first console was the PS1, wherein he fell for Spider-Man, Spyro the Dragon, and Crash Bandicoot.
Any comic book readers who hopped onto Matt Fraction and Jorge Jiménez’s mainline Batman run as a relaunch, and without much or any knowledge of the lore it inherits from the last decade, may not be aware that Alfred Pennyworth has been dead for a long time. Killed by Bane in Tom King’s “City of Bane” arc seven years ago, it’s surprising that Alfred’s death hasn’t been retconned or reversed since.
Alfred has since appeared to Bruce Wayne as a hallucination/spiritual guide in issue #98, as part of Batman’s “Joker War” arc, but his most recent appearance is much more curious. Matt Fraction’s run began in September 2025 and hasn’t changed Alfred’s status quo, though that doesn’t mean he isn’t present, with Batman possibly speaking to him from beyond the grave as if he’s a Force ghost from Star Wars.
Batman’s Ongoing Run Has a Force Ghost Alfred
Alfred hasn’t been around too frequently yet, and his unannounced presence has been subtly cryptic and notable as it appears to be either ghostly, technological, or mentally projected in nature. It still hasn’t been made definitively or explicitly clear what readers are seeing when Alfred appears in Batman’s ongoing run, but series writer Matt Fraction has at least clarified what it isn’t in an AMA:
“he’s the jimminninninny cricket on batman’s shoulder, a mirror, a trampoline, a long bright needle for his darkest balloon. and he’s not an AI hologram? at all. he’s neither of those things. and he won’t be. so… not ai! not a hologram!”
The natural conclusion, then, is that this Alfred is akin to Star Wars’ Force ghosts, appearing to Bruce in his time of need, helping him navigate a moral issue or mystery, or keeping him company. Plus, the AI or hologram theory was debunked when no reader-friendly description label—similar to a video game prompt or pop-up—accompanied Alfred’s appearance, like they do when Batman and Robin use gadgets and equipment for the first time.
Fraction’s Batman Has Its Growing Pains
Matt Fraction and Jorge Jiménez’s Batman run is only five issues in, but Alfred’s manifestations may never be fully addressed in-text if they haven’t already. Rather, perhaps someone will catch Bruce talking to himself at some point, or maybe it’ll be addressed more plainly if Bruce ever wears Dr. Annika Zeller’s Crown of Storms.
Frankly, the theory that the Alfred readers see, and whom Bruce interacts with, is some sort of AI or hologram wasn’t unfounded. Batman has been soaked in a blue, technological glow, paired nicely with Batman’s blue-and-grey costume, and Alfred was briefly depicted in what looked like a semi-transparent, blue glow in the first issue. Either way, it is fantastic that Bruce has a means of conversing with his oldest companion.
Created By Bob Kane, Bill Finger
Alias Bruce Wayne
Alliance Justice League, Outsiders, Batman Family
Race Human
Franchise D.C.
.png)








English (US) ·