Sodom

Sodom is a city that once existed in the Middle East in region currently occupied by Israel, Jordan, and the West Bank. It first appears in the book of Genesis as a city presumably founded by the descendants of Ham through the Canaanites. Abraham's nephew Lot and his family moved toward that location during their travels together with Abraham and his family through the territory of the Canaanites, eventually living in the city itself.

Sodom is infamously known in Scripture as a city full of unbridled lust, as its men were having inappropriate relations with each other, which is considered an abomination in God's sight. It is also as a city full of pride, abundance of food, idleness, and no concern for helping the poor and the needy.

Eventually God decided to bring judgment on the city for its sins. He sent two of His angels to the city to see if it was deserving of judgment. Lot took these angels into his house to offer a place to stay and eat, but during the night, the men of Sodom gathered around Lot's house, demanding for Lot to give them the men who were staying with him so that they could have sex with them. Lot tried to offer his two unmarried daughters to satisfy their desires in exchange for his guests' safety, but the men became aggressive and decided to do even worse things to Lot because, to them, he was now acting as a judge. The two angels drew Lot back into the house and struck the men assaulting him with blindness so that they could not find the door. Then the angels warned Lot to get his family and anyone else he knows out of the city immediately, because God was going to rain down judgment on it. With the angels' help, Lot, his wife, and his two daughters were brought out of the city and were told not to look back lest they would be judged along with the city. Lot and his two daughters traveled to the city of Zoar and were safe there before God rained fire and brimstone (burning sulfur) on the city as well as on Gomorrah, but Lot's wife looked back at the desolation and she became a pillar of salt.

Empath: The Luckiest Smurf stories
While the Smurfs never actually visit the city in any of their travels in the EMPATH: The Luckiest Smurf story series, Tapper constantly refers to its desolation in the Holy Scriptures in his condemnation of immoral behavior.