One-Punch Man built its villain roster around speed, ego, and sharp edges, and Speed-o’-Sound Sonic fits that pattern precisely. This guide walks through how to draw Speed-o’-Sound Sonic in a close-up portrait format, which keeps the focus on his face and upper torso rather than spreading across a full body pose. You can find more characters from the One-Punch Man drawing collection on the site.
What This Portrait Sketch Covers
The tutorial runs 9 steps and ends on clean line art with no color pass. The close-up framing means the detail work concentrates on his facial expression and the diagonal line of the sword crossing behind him, which adds some compositional geometry to manage. Because the view cuts off below the chest, proportions are less of a challenge than usual, but getting the swept hair and the weight of the scarf to read correctly takes some care with line direction.
Speed-o’-Sound Sonic: Key Features to Sketch
- Medium-length hair swept across face
- Sharp narrow eyes, intense expression
- Large scarf wrapped around neck
- Sword crossing diagonally over shoulder
- Stern, closed-off facial expression
If you want more One-Punch Man practice after this, the Garou in motion tutorial covers a full action pose with more complex body work, and Metal Bat gives you a solid breakdown of clothing and stance. For another sharp-featured character to compare against, the Tatsumaki guide is worth a look.
Reading the Step Colors in This Tutorial
Each step image uses a three-color system to show what is new and what came before:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Speed-o’-Sound Sonic: Step-by-Step Tutorial








Finished the Sketch? Show It Off
Drop your finished Speed-o’-Sound Sonic drawing in the comments below. Every new tutorial gets posted to Facebook and Telegram as soon as it goes live, a new YouTube walkthrough based on existing guides goes up every day, and Pinterest stays regularly updated too. If you want to keep building the One-Punch Man roster, the King full body tutorial is a good contrast to this portrait format, and Mumen Rider is worth trying for a completely different character energy. If these guides have been useful, consider supporting the project on Patreon, where hand-drawn coloring pages are available as exclusives.