Combining Grey Matter’s intelligence with Ripjaws’ aquatic ferocity produces this bizarre Biomnitrix hybrid. This tutorial shows how to draw Grey Jaws from Biomnitrix, featuring the fusion alien with his oversized fish-like head, massive teeth, and compact armored body covered in fin-like protrusions. Grey Jaws Biomnitrix appears in the Ben 10 series as one of the stranger fusion combinations possible through the dual Omnitrix device. His crouched stance with those huge eyes and claw-tipped fins shows a creature built for underwater ambush tactics.
Drawing Grey Jaws Biomnitrix Style
This guide consists of 32 steps that cover Grey Jaws from his wide fish head down to his webbed clawed feet, capturing that odd mix of brainy and beastly traits.
Grey Jaws Biomnitrix Design Features
- Wide elongated head shape like a hammerhead
- Huge oval eyes with horizontal pupils
- Massive underbite jaw with pointed teeth
- Thin neck connecting to armored torso
- Fin-like shoulder protrusions
- Biomnitrix symbol on chest center
- Jagged fin extensions on back and arms
- Claw-tipped fingers with webbing
- Compact hunched body
- Webbed feet with spread claws
Sketching Grey Jaws Biomnitrix requires balancing that massive head against the smaller armored body. For the original brainy alien, check the Grey Matter Omniverse Classic tutorial. The Ripjaws Omniverse Classic guide shows the aquatic source alien, Big Chuck Biomnitrix offers another fusion design, and Chromastone Biomnitrix gives more practice with hybrid transformations.
Color Navigation for Steps
Use these colors to track each stage:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Grey Jaws Biomnitrix: Full Tutorial
































Share Your Grey Jaws Drawing!
That finishes this guide on how to draw Grey Jaws from the Biomnitrix fusions. Did the fish head and fin details come together correctly? Leave a comment with your thoughts or post a link to your artwork online. Drawing fusion aliens with mismatched proportions helps develop understanding of character hybridization, and community feedback assists everyone in mastering these unusual combination designs.