3 Answers2025-11-24 04:36:18
After rewatching a pile of series and skimming a few character lists, I realized that the specific combo 'plus-size' + 'femboy' is pretty rare in mainstream anime. People often use different words — 'okama', 'crossdresser', 'androgynous', or 'feminine-presenting male' — and that muddies searches. If you want characters who are clearly male, present femininely, and have a bigger or more muscular build, the most consistent examples I keep coming back to live in 'One Piece'. Bentham (Mr. 2 Bon Clay) is flamboyant, proudly feminine in dress and manner, and not slight in stature; he reads to a lot of fans as a larger-bodied, gender-nonconforming figure. Emporio Ivankov is another: huge, theatrical, and explicitly a gender-bender with a larger frame.
I try not to jam labels on them that the series itself doesn't, though — the original Japanese term 'okama' has its own connotations and isn't identical to Western 'femboy'. Outside of 'One Piece', a lot of characters who get called femboys online—like Kuranosuke from 'Princess Jellyfish' or Felix Argyle from 'Re:Zero'—are slimmer, so they don't match the plus-size part. There are also older, bulkier characters who crossdress or flirt with femininity as a comic beat (think some side characters in long-running shonen), but they usually aren't presented in that gentle, cute femboy way that fandom loves.
Representation-wise it's interesting: anime gives plenty of gender-variant characters, but the niche of a visibly plus-size young man who deliberately leans into a cute/feminine aesthetic is scarce. If you want to explore similar vibes, look at how 'One Piece' treats its okama characters — they get depth, loyalty, and strong moments — which feels rarer and refreshing compared to throwaway gags elsewhere. I personally appreciate when a show treats gender play with warmth rather than cheap laughs.
3 Answers2025-11-24 19:49:13
Lately I’ve been digging through weird little corners of manga and stumbled across what you’re asking about: the most notable mainstream example that flirts with a giantess-as-body-motif is 'GIGANT' by Hiroya Oku. It’s not a pure fetish book, but one of the main characters can grow to enormous size and the series often frames her physicality — breasts, limbs, and yes, her rear — as a visual and narrative focal point. Oku’s art doesn’t shy away from zoomed-in, cinematic panels of the human body; those images are sometimes used to provoke, sometimes to shock, and sometimes to comment on fame and spectacle. That gives the giantess imagery a recurring presence rather than a one-off gag.
If you’re looking for works where a giantess rear is intentionally the central fetish motif, most of those come from the doujin and erotic side of things rather than serialized mainstream manga. On Pixiv and doujin shelves you’ll find artists tagging their work with 'giantess' or 'macrophilia' and centering specific body parts. So for mainstream narrative with giant-woman scenes check out 'GIGANT', and if your interest is strictly fetish-focused, those niche doujin circles are where that motif is explicit and consistent. Personally, the way 'GIGANT' balances social commentary with lurid imagery is oddly fascinating — it’s equal parts uncomfortable and visually compelling to me.
3 Answers2025-11-07 04:33:30
I've kept a running mental list of femboy characters across anime for ages, and when someone asks about big, showy examples I automatically think of a few that blend size or presence with overt feminine aesthetics.
If you mean physically large and flamboyantly feminine, the best-fit classics are Bon Clay (Mr. 2) from 'One Piece' and Puri-Puri Prisoner from 'One Punch Man'. Bon Clay is muscular, bold, and performs in a theatrical, effeminate style while still being one of the toughest fighters in the Baroque Works arc; his emotional loyalty and choreography make him memorable. Puri-Puri Prisoner is pretty much the archetype of a bulked-up, pretty-boy fighter who subverts macho expectations by embracing sparkle, hugs, and fanservice — and the show plays that for comedy and heart rather than fetish alone.
Beyond those, there are plenty of beloved characters often labeled femboys who vary in size: Grell Sutcliff from 'Black Butler' is tall and dramatic rather than bulky; Envy from 'Fullmetal Alchemist' is androgynous and can shift shape; Astolfo from 'Fate/Apocrypha' is famous for being very feminine but not physically large. Then you've got more subtly coded examples like Kaworu Nagisa from 'Neon Genesis Evangelion' and Nagisa Shiota from 'Assassination Classroom' who lean androgynous but not imposing in build. Fans debate definitions all the time, but for a truly large, flamboyant vibe Bon Clay and Puri-Puri are where I’d start — they stick with you, both for the laughs and the surprisingly moving moments they bring. I still grin thinking about their entrances.
3 Answers2025-11-07 10:55:49
I've dug through a lot of anime for cheeky fanservice moments, and honestly the truth is a little boring: there isn't a super-famous mainstream show that centers on a femboy whose large rear is the explicit focus of the series the way some comedies center on a girl's breasts or butt. What you do get are a handful of characters who are very feminine-looking males and get occasional butt-focused shots or fanservice moments. For example, people point to 'Fate/Apocrypha' for Astolfo — he's a male who dresses and behaves in an overtly cute, feminine way and lots of fanart hones in on his assets, including his backside. It's more a fandom obsession than a narrative edge in the anime itself.
Another place this crop of imagery shows up is in shows that play with cross-dressing or male idol/fanservice tropes. 'Re:Zero' has Felix Argyle, who is presented in a maid outfit and gets a few teasing moments; 'Cute High Earth Defense Club LOVE!' treats its cast like magical girls, with deliberate male fanservice that sometimes includes rear-centric gags. If you want something explicit where male bodies — and butts — are deliberately emphasized, a lot of that lives more in BL / adult-targeted series or doujinshi rather than prime-time TV anime.
So if your interest is seeing the trope in a mainstream series, check out 'Fate/Apocrypha' and some of the magical-boy comedies for suggestive, playful shots. If you're comfortable with adult material, BL titles and doujin circles are where the imagery becomes more pronounced and intentional. Personally, I find the fandom creativity around characters like Astolfo way more interesting than the handful of on-screen moments themselves.
3 Answers2025-11-07 02:51:20
When I'm tackling a curvy, feminine-presenting rear for a femboy character, I start with the silhouette — that's where the read of gender and volume happens instantly. I block out simple shapes: a slightly wider pelvis box than the ribcage, two soft spheres for the glutes, and cylinders for the thighs. Paying attention to the pelvic tilt and the spine curve is everything; a subtle anterior tilt makes the cheeks pop and creates that natural separation between lower back and butt. I like to exaggerate just a touch to sell the form, but keep the hip bones and femur connections believable so the pose doesn't look like a sticker slapped on.
Next, I think about anatomy under the surface. The gluteus maximus is the primary mass, but fat pads, the sacrum area, and where the thigh meets the butt all influence how light and shadow read. For a femboy look I often blend a slightly narrower waist with wider hips and softer transitions — less blocky muscle, more rounded flesh. Thigh placement matters: compressed inner thighs change the crease placement and create tension lines. I always use reference photos and quick life-study poses — even 3D mannequins help dial in foreshortening.
Finally, clothing and texture sell the personality. Tight leggings, stretched denim, or lace underwear will change creases, highlight seams, and add reflective highlights. For rendering I use soft rim lights, subtle specular highlights on the upper curve, and careful edge control so the silhouette stays readable against backgrounds. It’s a mix of anatomy, silhouette, fabric physics, and a dash of stylized exaggeration — and I always tweak until it looks like the character could actually move that way. It never fails to feel satisfying when it clicks.
3 Answers2025-11-07 00:22:28
You'd be surprised how much a tiny change in waistline placement can transform a character's whole vibe. For a femboy character with a larger rear, I lean into balancing curves with structure: high-waisted bottoms that nip in at the smallest part of the waist and then flare or taper over the hips are golden. Think high-rise skinny jeans, tailored cigarette pants, or a high-waisted skater skirt — they emphasize the waist and let the hips read as intentional shape rather than accidental bulk. Back yokes and well-placed darts make cheeks look rounded and neat instead of saggy, and a slightly longer back rise avoids any awkward pinching at the crotch.
Fabric choice and seams matter just as much. Medium-weight stretch denim, ponte, and soft twill give support without clinging to every fold. Seams that curve over the butt (princess seams, contour panels) visually sculpt; avoid big, square patch pockets on the cheeks unless you want the attention there. Cute peplums, short bustle details, or a cropped jacket that stops at the waist create a flattering ratio. For more playful or romantic designs, velvet, satin, or a soft pleated skirt add movement so the rear reads like part of a silhouette, not a single focal point.
For accessories and finishing: a waist-defining belt, vertical side stripes, or color-blocking that keeps the back darker than the front can slim the hips while still celebrating them. Shoes and posture complete the image — heels or platform sneakers shift weight and change how the rear sits in silhouette. I love combining a soft, round bottom with crisp tailoring for contrast; it reads lovingly and deliberately, which is exactly the vibe I aim for when sketching outfits. It always makes the character feel confident and stylish to me.
3 Answers2025-11-07 01:53:14
I get excited just thinking about where to hunt for niche fanart — there are so many corners of the internet for this! If you want femboy-focused art with an emphasis on larger rear aesthetics, my go-to starting points are Pixiv and DeviantArt. On Pixiv I search with both English tags like 'femboy' and Japanese tags such as 'オトコの娘' or 'お尻' — mixing languages often surfaces artists who tag in one language only. DeviantArt has a lot of stylized, character-driven works and a healthy tagging system too.
Reddit can be surprisingly useful: look for communities that center on femboy art or broader queer/art niches, but do respect subreddit rules and always check the sidebar for NSFW policies. Imageboards and booru-style sites (Danbooru, Gelbooru, Safebooru) are tag-heavy and excellent when you want very specific combinations like 'femboy + largeass' — just be mindful that these sites can host explicit content and may require toggling safe search.
I also follow individual artists on Twitter/X, Pixiv, and platforms like Fantia or Patreon where creators post exclusive pieces. Supporting artists directly is the best way to see more of the exact themes you enjoy and it keeps the art community thriving. Oh, and whenever I find a piece I love, I try to re-share it properly credited or bookmark the artist — nothing beats having a curated folder of favorites. Happy exploring — my gallery is fuller every week because of these finds!