"You have to start with a combination of equipment or clothing, it can give shape-based character ideas," he continues. It is like Bob Ross, if Bob Ross preferred multiversal showdowns to snowy forest scenes. It is here where NemeZis will show you the exact magnitude of girth he injects into arms and legs, the exact shade of metallic blue for Saiyan power armor, the ideal positioning for a power scanner. If, for instance, you want to bring Dragon Ball Z's Bardock to the fold in SoulCalibur 6, you can follow along with the step-by-step guide on his YouTube channel. Still, the characters that do make it are phenomenal, and NemeZis is even kind enough to leave instructions for those wanting to dip their toes in his craft. (Recent examples include Donald Trump, and a Spongebob model who never managed to find the right weapon.) Those characters aren't uploaded to the channel, because NemeZis would "never want to post anything not proud of." Art is never finished, only abandoned. Sometimes, says NemeZis, he'll spend hours and hours trying to perfect a model in the lab, only for it to not come to fruition for being too uncanny, too vague, or just too weird. I trained a lot, I got used to use creation modes, it took me years and years, cause at the beginning my creations wasn't that good. I also take my inspiration from cosplay and fanart of characters from Marvel, Nintendo, or Mortal Kombat, then I try to find which character would be fun to create," he explains. "I try to find images from movies, videos games and stuff. NemeZis' process starts, as always, with a reference photo: Some screenshot of Goku or Deadpool, pruned from Pinterest or Google Images. "I'll keep trying my best for doing a better job and satisfy them." "I'm glad my subscribers are still here for me and enjoy my creations," he says via translation. Over the course of five years, he's increased his subscriber count on YouTube to a solid 6,000, and today stands as probably the most famous character creator on earth.