How To Draw Madara'S Susanoo Easily?

2026-04-28 17:23:49 190

4 Answers

Jade
Jade
2026-04-29 10:05:42
Watching frame-by-frame breakdowns of Madara's fights helped me notice the Susanoo isn't symmetrical—that's what gives it movement. The left side always has more cracks and wilder energy wisps. I keep a sketchbook just for different hand positions; those giant skeleton fingers should look like they're grasping lightning. When stuck, I switch to charcoal for the smoky parts—erasers can pull off cool wisps. My early attempts looked like a radioactive jellyfish, but now they at least vaguely resemble Uchiha terror.
Isla
Isla
2026-04-30 01:37:17
Ever tried doodling the Susanoo during boring meetings? I perfected mine by focusing on silhouettes first. The key is that iconic horned helmet—make it asymmetrical with one broken horn for that battle-worn vibe. The legs are trickier; skip details and just draw two jagged energy streams. For the arms, remember Madara's version has those extra skeletal hands emerging from the elbows. I accidentally turned mine into a spaghetti monster once, but hey, practice makes less-terrifying.
Grayson
Grayson
2026-05-02 12:50:24
My art teacher would kill me for this, but here's my cheat sheet: trace a samurai action figure for pose, then mutate it. The Susanoo's layered armor works like onion skins—start light with pencil for the ghostly base form, then ink the outer plates thicker. The glowing eyes? Leave them white and smudge blue pencil around them. I wasted so much ink filling everything in until I realized less is more with ethereal constructs. Bonus: smudging the edges with your thumb gives that chakra haze effect.
Ulric
Ulric
2026-05-03 18:33:25
Breaking down Madara's Susanoo into simple shapes was a game-changer for me. I started with the ribcage—just a rough oval with vertical lines for bones. The skull? A flattened sphere with jagged eye sockets. The real magic happens when you layer the armor plates: think overlapping crescent moons for the shoulders and sharp triangles for the waist guard.

For the flaming sword, I sketch a wavy base first, then add uneven 'teeth' to the blade. Pro tip: use references from 'Naruto Shippuden' episode 322 when the Susanoo first manifests fully. The way the energy flickers around the edges is easier to capture if you draw quick, loose strokes instead of rigid lines. Mine always looked too stiff until I noticed how Studio Pierrot animates it with this chaotic, living-fire effect.
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