Eating anything and spitting it back as explosive projectiles makes this Gourmand a walking artillery system. This tutorial shows how to draw Upchuck from Omniverse Classic, featuring the small round alien with his big bulging eyes and multiple stomach tongues ready to consume whatever gets too close. Upchuck Omniverse Classic keeps that chubby body shape but adds the angular Omniverse styling with visible head sprouts and a stubby tail. His side profile stance with one arm raised shows off that large belly where all the eating magic happens.
Drawing Upchuck Omniverse Classic Style
This guide contains 24 steps that walk you through Upchuck from his sprouted head down to his clawed feet, capturing that stocky side-facing pose.
Upchuck Omniverse Design Features
- Round head with four sprout bumps on top
- Large circular eyes with small pupils
- Wide mouth with visible square teeth
- Horizontal wrinkle lines on forehead
- Thick neck blending into round body
- Large protruding belly
- Omnitrix symbol on stomach center
- Short arms with three-clawed hands
- Small stubby legs with clawed toes
- Short rounded tail with tip
Sketching Upchuck Omniverse Classic requires focus on round shapes and that distinctive belly proportion. For another small alien, check the Grey Matter Omniverse Classic tutorial. The Big Chuck Biomnitrix guide shows what happens when Upchuck fuses with another transformation, and Juryrigg Omniverse Classic offers practice with another compact-sized alien.
Color Guide for Steps
Track each stage with these color markers:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Upchuck Omniverse Classic: Complete Tutorial
























Post Your Upchuck Drawing!
That wraps up this guide on how to draw Upchuck from Omniverse Classic. Did the round belly and head sprouts turn out correctly? Leave a comment sharing your results or post a link to your artwork online. Drawing chubby aliens with simple shapes is good warmup practice, and community feedback helps everyone improve at capturing these cartoony proportions.