The Friday Night Funkin’ mod roster has pulled in characters from all corners of pop culture, and Peter Griffin fits that tradition perfectly, arms out and smug as ever. This guide walks through how to draw Peter Griffin in his FNF battle pose across 27 steps.
Peter Griffin in FNF: What the Tutorial Covers
The drawing is full-body line art with no color, so all 27 steps focus on building clean outlines and confident linework. The pose is the main challenge here. Both arms raised, a wide stance, and cross-hatch shading on the cheeks and pants give the figure a lot of detail to manage in the later stages. The shading marks are not hard, but they require a light hand to avoid muddying the lines.
Key Features of This Character Design
- Short hair with jagged top strands
- Round glasses, furrowed brow, smug expression
- Button-up shirt, open at chest
- Black belt, baggy pants, large shoes
- Arms raised in confident stance
If you enjoy drawing cartoon characters adapted for the FNF mod universe, Cleveland Brown from the FNF x Pibby crossover covers similar territory with a corrupted twist. The Kenny from FNF vs Kenny tutorial is another solid follow-up if you want more character-from-another-franchise mod practice. Both share the same full-body line art format used here.
Reading the Step Colors
Each step in the tutorial uses a three-color system to show exactly 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 Peter Griffin: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished the Drawing? Share It
Drop your finished Peter Griffin sketch in the comments below. It is always good to see how different people handle the shading marks and the raised-arm pose. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are published, a new YouTube walkthrough based on existing guides goes live every day, and Pinterest stays updated regularly too. If you want more from the FNF mod lineup, Pibby Corrupted GF and Nonsense from FNF are worth checking out next. Supporting the project on Patreon helps keep new tutorials coming and gives you access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages as well.