Two scowling faces, two microphones raised, and a rap battle attitude applied to the most familiar duo in gaming history: the step-by-step guide to how to draw Mario and Luigi in their Friday Night Funkin’ forms puts that instantly readable contrast between short-and-hunched and tall-and-pointing at the center of every construction step. The FNF art style strips away the usual cartoon softness and replaces it with something more confrontational, which changes how you approach the proportions from the start.
Two Characters, One Tutorial, 42 Steps
Drawing two characters in a single composition is the main challenge here, and the tutorial handles it across 42 steps with each figure built up independently before the two are balanced against each other. The contrast in height and posture is the core visual problem to solve, so the walkthrough spends real time establishing the different silhouettes before any detail work begins. The result is clean line art with no color fills, which keeps the focus entirely on confident linework and shape control.
What Mario and Luigi Look Like in FNF Style
- Short stout frame, cap with M emblem
- Tall slim frame, cap with L emblem
- Both figures holding microphones
- Shorter figure hunched with scowling expression
- Taller figure pointing with crossed arms
If you enjoy drawing crossover versions of classic game characters in the FNF style, the guides for Anais Errr Watterson and Glitched Legends Peashooter cover similar territory with strong pose work. The Tails from FNF: Secret Histories tutorial is also worth checking out if the crossover character format is what you are after.
How the Step Colors Work in This Guide
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 Mario and Luigi: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished the Drawing? Show It Off
Once the line art is complete, drop your version in the comments below. Seeing how different artists handle the height contrast and the pose energy is always useful, and it helps other people working through the same steps. All new tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are published, a new YouTube drawing video goes live every single day based on existing guides, and Pinterest stays regularly updated too. If you want more FNF crossover content, the walkthroughs for Shaggy in FNF God Eater form and Kenny from FNF vs Kenny are solid next choices. Supporting the project on Patreon keeps new tutorials coming and gives you access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages as well.