A robotic arm gripping a microphone puts Tari from the Friday Night Funkin’ mod roster into a category of her own, and this step-by-step guide on how to draw Tari from FNF Meta Runner walks through all the details that make her look like herself. She crosses over from the Meta Runner animated series into the FNF universe, and that mix of mechanical and casual design gives the drawing some real texture to work with.
What to Expect From This 34-Step Walkthrough
The tutorial runs 34 steps and ends on clean black and white line art, so every step is focused on confident linework rather than color fills. The character is posed as a singer, microphone raised, which means the left and right sides of the figure carry different visual weight. The robotic arm on one side and the relaxed jacket on the other create an asymmetry that takes some attention to balance on paper.
Tari’s Key Design Features
- Medium wavy hair with heart-shaped ahoge
- One visible eye, confident expression
- Casual jacket with pendant necklace
- Flared pants and open-toe sandals
- Robotic right arm holding a microphone
If you enjoy drawing FNF crossover characters, Papyrus from FNF: Indie Cross is a good one to try next, and the Week 5 standing GF covers a more standard FNF pose if you want to compare the figure structures. For another character that blends a familiar face with the FNF art style, Tails from FNF: Secret Histories is worth a look too.
Understanding the Color Coding in the Step Images
Each step image uses a three-color system to show exactly what to draw and when:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Tari – FNF Meta Runner: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished Your Tari Sketch? Show It Off
Once the line art is done, drop your finished drawing in the comments below. Seeing how different people handle the robotic arm and the hair detail is always worth the look. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they publish, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes live every day, and Pinterest stays updated regularly if that is your preferred spot to save references. For more FNF crossover practice, Selever from Mid-Fight Masses and Cuphead from FNF: Indie Cross are solid next steps. If you want to help keep new tutorials coming, you can support the project on Patreon, where unique hand-drawn coloring pages are available to supporters.