How I got started with Vore

So, if you’re curious about how I got into vore, let me take you on a little journey. It started as pure morbid curiosity—like, “What even is this?”—but then I got hooked on the visuals. I’m not big on role-playing (introvert here), and honestly, I’m more of a “sit in the corner and draw” type. I don’t actively engage much; I’m more of a voyeur. What I really enjoy is creating scenarios and bringing them to life through art.

Oh, and if any random normies happen to stumble across this—chill. Everything you see here is pure fantasy. Don’t go full conspiracy theorist like that dude who found the Zambian Meat website and thought it was real-life cannibalism and trafficking. Relax, okay?

Anyway, vore has always kind of been lurking in the background of media, even if unintentionally. I mean, there’s the Bible story about Jonah getting swallowed by a whale (and somehow living), and Pinocchio rescuing his dad from inside a whale’s stomach—like, how even? Stuff like that stuck with me as a kid. I’d doodle little scenes of people being swallowed by animals, nothing too deep.

Fast forward to the late ’90s, when the internet came along and basically exploded with every fetish you never knew existed. Textbooks can’t keep up, honestly. I remember stumbling across Japanese fetish art—lots of characters with big bellies—and being like, “Huh, okay, weird flex.” But I didn’t really think much of it at the time because, well, life.

Then the pandemic hit, and while working on a comic project, I had this chapter where a character gets swallowed by a snake. I was googling references and kept seeing all these images of women in fishnet stockings being eaten by snakes. It was oddly specific, and there were so many. Naturally, curiosity took over, and I started digging deeper. That’s when I found vore subreddits and realized there’s a whole community of people into this stuff.

Eventually, I ended up on Eka’s Portal. The logical next step? Make an account and start sharing my art. The feedback was amazing—it really motivated me to keep going. And here I am now, still creating and enjoying the process.

That’s it for now. Thanks for reading!

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