A straightforward access to 2-unsubstituted imidazole <i>N</i>-oxides with subsequent deoxygenation by treatment with Raney-nickel followed by <i>N</i>-benzylation opens up a convenient route to lepidilines A and C. Both imidazolium salts were used to generate in situ the corresponding imidazol-2-ylidenes, which smoothly reacted with elemental sulfur, yielding imidazole-2-thiones. These reactions were performed either under classical conditions in pyridine solutions or mechanochemically using solid Cs<sub>2</sub>CO<sub>3</sub> as a base. The structure of lepidiline C was unambiguously confirmed by X-ray analysis of its hexafluorophosphate. An analogous protocol toward lepidilines B and D and their 4,5-diphenyl analogues is less efficient due to observed instability of the key precursors, i.e., the respective 2-methylimidazole <i>N</i>-oxides. Comparison of cytotoxic activity against HL-60 and MCF-7 cell lines of all lepidilines, as well as their selected structural analogues (e.g., 4,5-diphenyl derivatives and PF<sub>6</sub> salts), revealed slightly more potent activity of the 2-methylated series, irrespectively of the type of counterion present in the imidazolium salt. Remarkably, the well-known 1,3-diadamantylimidazolium bromide (the "Arduengo salt"), known as the precursor of the first, shelf-stable NHC representative, and its adamantyloxy analogue displayed the most significant cytotoxic activity in the studied series.