Ancient Egyptian style meets alien mummy in this Thep Khufan design. This tutorial covers how to draw Snare-oh from Omniverse Classic, featuring the bandage-wrapped alien with his pharaoh headdress and flowing strips that can extend and grab enemies. Snare-oh Omniverse Classic combines horror mummy elements with regal Egyptian aesthetics, creating a tall imposing figure draped in layered bandages. His narrow glowing eyes peering from beneath the headdress give this alien a mysterious presence.
Drawing Snare-oh Omniverse Classic Style
This guide breaks into 38 steps that take you through Snare-oh from his ornate headdress down to his wrapped feet, capturing that tall floating stance with bandages draping everywhere.
Snare-oh Omniverse Design Features
- Pharaoh-style headdress with pointed crown
- Angular face with glowing narrow eyes
- Striped nemes cloth framing head
- Layered collar piece on shoulders
- Torso wrapped in horizontal bandage lines
- Omnitrix symbol on belt buckle
- Long flowing bandage strips from arms
- Zigzag patterns running down bandages
- Three-fingered hands with pointed tips
- Lower body wrapped in vertical strips
- Tattered bandage ends at feet
Sketching Snare-oh Omniverse Classic requires attention to the many flowing bandage layers and repeated patterns. For another horror-themed alien, check the Ghostfreak tutorial. The Whampire Omniverse Classic guide shows another creature-based transformation, and Zs’Skayr Classic Omniverse offers practice with a similarly eerie design from the same series.
Step Color Guide
Track your progress with these color indicators:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Snare-oh Omniverse Classic: Complete Tutorial






































Share Your Snare-oh Drawing!
That finishes this guide on how to draw Snare-oh from Omniverse Classic. Did the headdress details and bandage patterns come together well? Leave a comment with your experience or post a link to your finished artwork online. Drawing wrapped characters with flowing fabric elements takes practice, and community feedback helps everyone improve at handling these layered designs.