Welcome to the page that got this tab changed from "OCs" to "Worlds"! Furryverse is, in itself, not even a world, but that's besides the point. This is my special little space to play toys with characters and medias I love, in a way that comes naturally to me! Click one of the buttons below to enter a specific furryverse, or scroll beyond the navigation to learn more about this multiverse.
Jujutsu Kaisen | RWBY | Fullmetal Alchemist | Tokyo Ghoul | Chainsaw Man | Marvel
In case you somehow haven't noticed yet, I'm a furry. I draw furries, I write furries, furries are what come naturally to me. When I discovered near the end of 2023 that drawing humans no longer appealed to me, it was a devestating blow to my fanart capabilities. What's a guy to do when so many of their favorite franchises are humans, but they don't enjoy drawing humans anymore? Furrify them, of course! Thus, the furryverse was born in early 2024, with the Jujutsu Kaisen furryverse.
The furryverse, being a vessel for fanart of several series, is not a connected multiverse. Rather, it is a catch-all term, as my various furry AUs held within the title have a nearly identical set of worldbuilding rules tied to them. The term furryverse for connecting these AUs didn't see use until the Marvel furryverse began proper development in late 2025 - until then, they were simply referred to as my various furry AUs.
Species, from a meta perspective, are simply chosen based on a character's vibes. Mysterio is a coyote for being a deceitful character, a trickster, as coyotes can represent in mythology; within the same universe is Eddie Brock, a coyote because he's a scrappy character with the vibes of a kicked stray, as coyotes can appear to be in modern environments. Some species are chosen for a character having ties to them, such as little red riding hood allusion Ruby Rose being a species of wolf. Other yet just look like their species - Satoru Gojo became a husky for his freaky blue eyes, as they're known for. Not every species even has thought behind it, though - Atsuya Kusakabe as a marsh deer quite literally came to me in a dream.
In-universe, this provides the unique challenge of making it make sense when, for example, a dog's father is a tiger. Thus, the realistic hybrid clause! Inter-species relationships are common, and seen as normal within furryverse societies. These couples are fully capable of having children! Their kids will inherit their species from either parent. To return to our earlier example, Yuji Itadori is a domestic dog born to a dog and a tiger. He inherited his mother's species. It's roughly a 60/40 chance, with the odds favorite the mother's species.
It is possible for hybridization to occur, though only in pairings that apply to the real animals as well. A dog and a tiger cannot hybridize in real life, so Yuji could not have been a hybrid. If his father had been another canine, like Megumi Fushiguro's, this could be different - Megumi is a wolfdog, as his parents were a siberian husky and a grey wolf. This, too, is only a chance; it's around 75/15/10 odds, with the most common being a hybrid, followed by the typical slight favoring of a mother's species over a father's.
There is one more potential species inheritance, though it is significantly rarer. With a roughly 1 in 100,000 appearance, is the granparent clause; that being that a child may rarely inherit their species from a grandparent, as opposed to their parents. This is the part where I'd give an example, but no character is currently using that clause because I changed my mind on the one I made it for. Whoops!
As we've established, the furryverse is for my ease of access. Because of this, I tend to stick to species I'm more comfortable drawing, the majority of which are mammals. The mammal clause states that these AUs feature solely land mammals as available species. It doesn't always see use, however - RWBY is a notable exception, with orchid mantis Lie Ren in the main cast. Unless otherwise stated, assume every furryverse follows this clause.
To make the limited coats of many species more easily molded into fitting designs for characters, I utilize the mutation clause. Genetic conditions that occur across several species are on the table for any character's designs, regardless of if the specific species has been doccumented with it or not. Natasha Romanoff, for example, is an erythristic arctic fox. The full list of these mutations is as follows: albinism, erythrism, leucism, melanism, piebaldism, psuedomelanism, vitiligo, and xanthochromism.
Lastly for this category is not quite a clause, but rather, my biases. Practically every AU has at least one token wildcat, which is a character I particularly like who gets to be assigned a wildcat because I like wildcats. Sometimes this is the only reasoning for their specific species, such as Andean mountain cat Choso; conveniently, I do tend to gravitate towards feline-adjacent characters anyway, such as the Pallas's cat-coded Bucky Barnes. Similarly, most furryverses have an emo boy wolf, but that's not even my fault emo boys just tend to be wolf-coded.
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