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Characters / Drawga The Devourer Pantheon

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Characters associated with the Devourers appearing in Drawga and other Drawfee works. (Warning, contains SPOILERS!)

To return to the Drawga character page, click here.

     Martin the Devourer 

Martin the Devourer

See his entry on the Season One Characters page.

     Porfo 

Porfo

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/porfo.png
The one and only.

  • The Cameo: Appears in many Drawfee episodes in various forms, sometimes as a background element, other times as a prominent part of the drawing challenge.
  • Canon Immigrant: Porfo debuted in the fifth episode of Drawfee's We Play Apples to Apples back in 2015, before becoming a Recurring Character appearing in many Drawfee challenges and finally being revealed as the Arc Villain in the Season 2 two-parter finale of Drawga four years later.
  • Cerebus Retcon: A mild case, given that Porfo was steeped in Black Comedy from the very beginning, but the reveal in Porfo's Solo Album that their music doubles as a mest tenderizer makes them being in a band seem less like a funny contrast to their nature and more like insidious manipulation on their part.
  • Composite Character: Sort of. In Artists Draw Dark Souls Bosses (That They've Never Seen Before), said artists draw a connection between Porfo and Aldrich, Devourer of Gods. However, their final design — basically an Eldritch Abomination Fat Bastard nerd — has little in common with the Porf.
  • Dark Messiah: Their Earthly followers — the Porfologists — both consider him to be a threat to their existence while also worshipping him as a god.
  • Did We Just Have Tea with Cthulhu?: Porfo has been in a rockband, performing alongside a trio of seemingly normal people named Zave, Trave and Dave. Porfo later wound up going solo after devouring them.
  • Earth Drift: Porfo was introduced as operating on Earth (or at least whichever strange alternate Earth Drawfee is set on.) Drawga takes them — and their Porfmas holiday — and transplants them to the Urban Fantasy land of Somewherica. Though Porfo is depicted as an interdimensional traveler, and the campaign ends with him drifting toward a planet implied to be Earth, meaning that Drawga might actually be a Prequel.
  • Happiness in Slavery: Porfo's followers are very enthusiastic about being devoured by him, even though it means eventually being pooped out as a mindless thrall.
  • Hijacked by Ganon: In Drawga, they're revealed to be a mere guise for Erasus.
  • My Future Self and Me: Thanks to a Time Portal, three Porfos manage to appear together in Drink N' Drawfee - Ultimately Springtime Edition.
  • One to Million to One: After being knocked out, they start breaking up into a horde of "porflings" which attack the LBC and their friends. This is apparently a defence mecanism inherent to their body.
  • Otherworldly and Sexually Ambiguous: Word of God is that Porfo is a genderless being.
  • Screw Yourself: Apparently. Porfo really wanted to travel back in time and bite his previous self's underwear. This wound up causing a Time Crash.
  • Sequel First: Several episodes featuring them were actually released before the one in which they were introduced and created, confusing many viewers.
  • Ships That Pass in the Night: In-Universe. If Drawfee Nights 2 is to be believed, they have slept with most of The Avengers.
  • Truly Single Parent: Porfo sprung fully formed from the head of the Elder Porf.
  • You Mean "Xmas": Has become the subject of a Christmas analogue celebrated on December 23 called "Porfmas", where people give each other gifts they have to eat before the end of the day, lest Porfo will consume them. All well and good if you're given some tasty food. Not so much if you're handed an X-box...

     Erasus the Undoing 

Erasus the Undoing a.k.a. Idiot Bingus

  • Evil Is Hammy: Speaks in a boisterous Tone reminicent of an old-school Doctor Who villain, contributing to his Laughably Evil qualities.
  • Fantastic Racism: Thinks the inhabitants of the multiverse deserve to die, as they are inferior to the beings he plans to create.
  • God Is Evil: Is worshipped as the Big Good throughout Somewherica, with festivals, churches and even a city created in their honor. However once they actually do arrive, they're unveiled as the cold, uncaring Eldritch Abomination they truly are, and begins their attempted consumption of the world.
    • Of course, it is also states that there are other gods, and that the Devourer would get in real trouble if ever caught on the act. They are more akin to a hacker spreading malvare and viruses in other people's computers.
  • Heel Realization: Our heroines eventually convince him that he's not being very nice, leaving him to rethink his life for a few millenia.
  • I Have Many Names: Allows people to call him whatever they please. Our protagonists take the opportunity to call him "Bingus the Idiot" which he accepts without complaint, not knowing what the words actually mean.
  • It's All About Me: He is trying to destroy other universes and rebuild all of creation in his own image, after all.
  • Lack of Empathy: Both of the cognitive and the compassionate kind. He thinks nothing about mass murder, casually listing it among his other interest. He's also Sarcasm-Blind, and claims to not understand what happiness and friendship even is. Moreover, he seems to have a difficult time grasping basic human interaction, and is constantly confused by the behaviour of our heroines.
  • The Man Behind the Man: Erasus is the creator of all the Devourers, essentially making him the Arc Villain of the first two seasons as a whole.
  • Mundane Wish: After seeing Legzi's breakfast drawing, he becomes obsessed with trying out butter, which he's somehow never eaten or even heard of before, despite being a fan of food and even other diary products like cheese.
  • Symbiotic Possession: It's not entirely clear how distinct Porfo and the Undoing are. On one hand, the former seems mostly like a suit for the latter to wear. On the other hand, Erasus refers to the Devourer in third person, and mentions that there are more than one of them. Not to mention that Porfo is seemingly still sleeping even as The Ladies Book Club have their conversation with "Bingus".
  • This Is Your Brain on Evil: Played With. He really enjoys destroying cosmic bodies, claiming it to be like drugs for him. Then he clarifies that he also takes plain old normal drugs.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Tricked Darryl and Francis into letting him into their world by playing with their emotions.
  • Meaningful Name: His original name clearly beings an eraser to mind (as does his appearance.) Quite fitting for a destroyer deity from an animated universe.
  • Omnicidal Maniac: Wants to destroy all of creation to replace it with his own.
  • The Sociopath: Comes pretty damn close to this, but it is shown that given enough convincing, he can start to care about people.

     Harold 

Harold

  • Affably Evil: Much like his master, he's very casual about his actions.
  • Decomposite Character: Sort of. The artists couldn't decide at first if he was Porfo in another form or a spawn of him. Given that they were eventually pictured together, it's probably safe to say that he's the latter.
  • The Dragon: Serves as this for Porfo.
  • Horse of a Different Color: Has a noodle-arm man (who also appeared in another drawing in the same episode) riding on his back. Though it's likely that he's not actually in control and just along for the ride.
  • Hybrid Monster: He has the neck and horns of a dragon, the rest and back legs of a horse, two hairy human legs and the face of... Porfo?
    • The artists actually invoked this trope by drawing one third of him each, not looking at what the others had drawn until they were all done.
  • No Name Given: Initially. He was only named in his second appearance.
  • Our Dragons Are Different: The artists described Nathan's head-and-neck section as a "Dragon-Porf."
  • Schrödinger's Canon: It's not clear if and in that case where he fits into the canon of Drawga. He was introduced in the Drawfee Break episode Exquisite D&D Monster, which was also where Nathan Yaffe discussed the idea of turning The Ladies Book Club into an actual series. However, Harold never appeared when this actually happened. It is possible that he's one of the unseen devourers though. And if you view them all as different aspects of one being then the LBC did technically face off against him, just not in that form.
  • Shout-Out: Julia Lepitit has Said that she based him in No-Face from Spirited Away and the evil hog from Princess Mononoke.
  • Tom the Dark Lord: Despite looking like a more monstrous version of Porfo, he has an even more normal-sounding name.
  • Villains Out Shopping: He has performed with Porfo as a backup singer, and enjoys watching movies together with him.

     Creez 

Creez

  • Adapted Out: Possibly, since he never appears in Drawga.
  • Bad Powers, Good People: He's a genuinly Nice Guy despite collaborating with an Omnicidal Maniac of a god.
  • Crystal Dragon Jesus: His name is obviously a play on "Christ", but his role is more akin to that of an angel.
  • Pals with Jesus: He basically shows up and hangs around with Porfo's intended victims a few days before they are to be devoured, doing things like playing video games and going out for hamburgers.
  • Portent of Doom: His coming preceeds the arrival of the Big Porf himself.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: Creez is not at all a bad person. Rather, he's a chill dude who simply happens to be a messenger of doom.
  • Stop Worshipping Me: Played With. There are cults which have sprung up in his name, and while he doesn't really care whether people worship him or not, he knows that Porfo doesn't like to be forgotten.
  • Thicker Than Water: The reason why he's working with Porfo. They are brothers, after all.
  • Token Good Teammate: While many members of the devourer pantheon are Affably Evil, Creez seems to be the only one who never does anything monstrous at all.

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