Had a bunch of technical difficulties on Sunday for my art stream but here's some of the stuff I drew!
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Had a bunch of technical difficulties on Sunday for my art stream but here's some of the stuff I drew!
Marvel Rivals T-Rex Marvel Rivals T-Rex Marvel Rivals T-Rex Marvel Rivals T-Rex Marvel Rivals T-Rex Marvel Rivals T-Rex Marvel Rivals T-Rex
Chapter One: A Case for Reinvention
Gwen Stacy never believed in running away—until now.
The California sun had a way of making everything feel slower, like time stretched just a little longer in the golden hour glow. She leaned against the railing of her new dorm’s balcony, watching the Pacific waves crash against the cliffs. Back in New York, things moved fast. Peter Parker was always chasing something—some villain, some formula, some answer. Mary Jane and Felicia Hardy had gone off to college together, their lives tangling in ways Gwen didn’t fully understand anymore. And then there was Gwen, standing in the spaces left behind.
She thought leaving for California Marvel Academy would feel like a fresh start. A clean slate.
Instead, it just felt like another kind of waiting.
“California Marvel Academy, where the most brilliant minds and powerful heroes train for the future.” That’s what the brochure had said. Gwen had no powers, no mutant genes, no enhanced reflexes. But she had something else—an ability to see the cracks in a case before anyone even knew it was broken.
She just needed a mystery to prove it.
The first day of classes was a blur of introductions and overenthusiastic professors. Moon Girl—Lunella Lafayette—stood out immediately, sitting at the front of the room with her arms crossed, clearly unimpressed with the syllabus. Gwen had read about her—one of the smartest people on the planet, probably smarter than Tony Stark. Maybe smarter than Reed Richards. Devil Dinosaur, her enormous red-scaled companion, wasn’t allowed on school grounds during lecture hours, but she could feel his presence just outside, lurking in the shadows.
Then there was Elenore, a girl with sharp eyes and a sharper wit, someone who carried herself like she knew more than she let on. “Elenore” wasn’t even her real name—Gwen could tell. But it was the kind of name someone chose when they wanted to be remembered.
By the time their first detective studies class ended, Gwen had already made a mental map of the people she needed to know.
“So, what’s your deal?” Elenore asked as they walked toward the next hall. She had a careful way of observing, measuring Gwen up like a puzzle missing just one piece.
“My deal?” Gwen echoed, raising an eyebrow.
“Yeah. People like you don’t just end up here by accident.”
Gwen smirked. “Maybe I just wanted a change of scenery.”
Elenore hummed, clearly unconvinced. “Or maybe you’re looking for something.”
Gwen didn’t have an answer for that. Not yet.
The first real mystery came at the end of the week.
A girl had gone missing. Not just any girl—one of the elite students, someone connected to powerful families. But there was no news alert, no police report, no one even whispering about it in the hallways. That was the first sign that something wasn’t right.
By the time Gwen, Moon Girl, and Elenore stumbled upon the truth—that someone wanted this case buried—the game had already begun.
And Gwen?
She was finally ready to play.
In the moonlit corridors of California Marvel Academy, with mysteries unfolding and friendships forming, Gwen Stacy took her first steps toward something more than a fresh start.
A purpose.
And maybe—just maybe—a way to prove that you don’t need powers to be a hero.
Chapter One: A Case for Reinvention
Gwen Stacy never believed in running away—until now.
The California sun had a way of making everything feel slower, like time stretched just a little longer in the golden hour glow. She leaned against the railing of her new dorm’s balcony, watching the Pacific waves crash against the cliffs. Back in New York, things moved fast. Peter Parker was always chasing something—some villain, some formula, some answer. Mary Jane and Felicia Hardy had gone off to college together, their lives tangling in ways Gwen didn’t fully understand anymore. And then there was Gwen, standing in the spaces left behind.
She thought leaving for California Marvel Academy would feel like a fresh start. A clean slate.
Instead, it just felt like another kind of waiting.
“California Marvel Academy, where the most brilliant minds and powerful heroes train for the future.” That’s what the brochure had said. Gwen had no powers, no mutant genes, no enhanced reflexes. But she had something else—an ability to see the cracks in a case before anyone even knew it was broken.
She just needed a mystery to prove it.
The first day of classes was a blur of introductions and overenthusiastic professors. Moon Girl—Lunella Lafayette—stood out immediately, sitting at the front of the room with her arms crossed, clearly unimpressed with the syllabus. Gwen had read about her—one of the smartest people on the planet, probably smarter than Tony Stark. Maybe smarter than Reed Richards. Devil Dinosaur, her enormous red-scaled companion, wasn’t allowed on school grounds during lecture hours, but she could feel his presence just outside, lurking in the shadows.
Then there was Elenore, a girl with sharp eyes and a sharper wit, someone who carried herself like she knew more than she let on. “Elenore” wasn’t even her real name—Gwen could tell. But it was the kind of name someone chose when they wanted to be remembered.
And then, there was Kate Bishop.
Gwen had only heard of Kate in passing—Hawkeye, the sharp-shooting vigilante with a sarcastic streak as deadly as her aim. Kate wasn’t a student here officially, but she had been “invited” to audit courses after a particularly messy mission involving a stolen Stark prototype. Whether the Academy wanted to keep an eye on her or was genuinely offering her a place to hone her skills was still up for debate.
By the time their first detective studies class ended, Gwen had already made a mental map of the people she needed to know.
“So, what’s your deal?” Elenore asked as they walked toward the next hall. She had a careful way of observing, measuring Gwen up like a puzzle missing just one piece.
“My deal?” Gwen echoed, raising an eyebrow.
“Yeah. People like you don’t just end up here by accident.”
Gwen smirked. “Maybe I just wanted a change of scenery.”
Elenore hummed, clearly unconvinced. “Or maybe you’re looking for something.”
“She’s definitely looking for something,” Kate chimed in, falling into step beside them. “Trust me, I know the type.”
Gwen shot her a glance. “And what type is that?”
Kate shrugged. “The kind that doesn’t know how to sit still.”
The first real mystery came at the end of the week.
A girl had gone missing. Not just any girl—one of the elite students, someone connected to powerful families. But there was no news alert, no police report, no one even whispering about it in the hallways. That was the first sign that something wasn’t right.
By the time Gwen, Moon Girl, Elenore, and Kate stumbled upon the truth—that someone wanted this case buried—the game had already begun.
And Gwen?
She was finally ready to play.
In the moonlit corridors of California Marvel Academy, with mysteries unfolding and friendships forming, Gwen Stacy took her first steps toward something more than a fresh start.
A purpose.
And maybe—just maybe—a way to prove that you don’t need powers to be a hero.
Chapter Two: The Vanishing
The air at California Marvel Academy carried an eerie stillness that night. The kind that settled into your bones, whispering that something wasn’t right.
Gwen Stacy tightened the strap of her bag, glancing at the others. Moon Girl, Elenore, and Kate Bishop flanked her, each with their own brand of determination in their eyes. They weren’t just a group of students anymore. They were investigators now, pulled into something far bigger than a missing person’s case.
“Alright, let’s go over this again,” Gwen said, her voice low but firm. “Amara Cortez. Last seen at the dorms three nights ago. No record of her leaving campus, no security footage of her at any exit points.”
“She didn’t just disappear,” Kate muttered, arms crossed. “Someone made her disappear.”
Moon Girl adjusted the goggles perched atop her head. “And whoever did it had the resources to cover their tracks. That’s what bothers me. If she was just another student, someone would’ve noticed. But the fact that there’s no buzz, no social media panic?” She tapped the side of her goggles. “That screams control.”
Elenore sighed, leaning against the stone railing of the Academy’s observation deck. “So what’s our move?”
Gwen exhaled. “We start with her room.”
The hallway was quiet when they slipped inside. Most students were at late-night study groups or asleep, giving them the cover they needed. Kate moved with practiced ease, her hand instinctively brushing against the bow slung over her shoulder, even though she hadn’t brought arrows. Just muscle memory, Gwen figured.
Moon Girl, ever the tech genius, took out a small device and waved it over the door’s lock. It blinked twice before clicking open. “No security alarms. Someone disabled them.”
Gwen’s stomach twisted.
Inside, the room was undisturbed—too undisturbed.
Bed made. Desk clear. Closet doors slightly ajar but nothing out of place. It was like Amara had never been there.
Kate walked over to the window, peering outside. “It’s staged.”
Gwen nodded. “Exactly. No student keeps their room this clean. Not naturally.”
Elenore stepped toward the bed and placed a hand on the pillow, frowning. “This is cold. She hasn’t slept here in days.”
Moon Girl’s device beeped. “Hold up. There’s something under the floorboards.”
Gwen and Kate crouched beside her as she pried one up, revealing a small flash drive tucked away in the empty space beneath. Gwen picked it up, turning it over in her fingers. “If someone went through all this trouble to erase her existence, why leave something behind?”
Kate arched a brow. “Maybe they didn’t know it was here.”
Gwen glanced at the others. “Only one way to find out.”
Moon Girl pulled out a tablet and plugged the drive in. The screen flickered to life, revealing a folder labeled ‘Project Eclipse.’
Elenore muttered a curse under her breath. “That doesn’t sound good.”
The files were incomplete—corrupted video logs, redacted documents, audio recordings that cut off mid-sentence. But one thing was clear: Amara had been looking into something dangerous. Something connected to the Academy.
And now, she was gone.
Gwen’s grip tightened on the drive. She had come to California to reinvent herself, to find a purpose beyond being the girl left behind.
Now, it seemed like the mystery had found her instead.
And she wasn’t backing down.
Chapter Two is now set up with intrigue, deepening the mystery of Amara's disappearance. Let me know if you want any adjustments or expansions!
Patron request sketch 164
"I would like to request devil Dino knocking out Venom" and D does it with the cue-test smile
Why can't I hug Devil?
Why?
:(
I want to kiss his little nose ❤️
Hey everyone! For Halloween I'm putting Devil-Dino in a bowler hat so we can go as characters from "Meet the Robinsons".
Twelve year old who is really proud of his little peach fuzz mustache Stephen.
They even somehow made the kink suit look sweet instead of a leather cat suit that is ridiculously hot.
Fin Fang Foom is here... and it doesn't seem like Devil Dino is F2P friendly... what were the odds... sigh. Hercules, this fucking guy asks for 22 Golden Pterodactyls. TWENTY. TWO. YOU KNOW WHO TO BLAME. Fin Fang Foom is taking it like a Real Boss now, he can fight both the giant Mech (Which looks awesome in its final form, nice work Tony!) And our fighters at the same time. You only need to beat him 5 times for the Shards though. Like last time, there's a new set of scrolls, yellow ones, so start gathering those up! Lastly... There's all kinds of weird stuff in the store to make things easier... I guess. Woo? I'm just gonna wait and pray for a Currency crate after they threw in TWO Premium crates.