Just like in scale, if you were to draw, if you were to draw, like, a building or whatever, and that's essentially the same idea. This would be, like, the chest area. You could draw it in. And draw in the shoulders. Like I said, this will take some time, like a lot of practice. You know, things will get a lot smaller in the distance. You draw the backbone and then draw in the legs. As they get smaller and you've got your knee caps and your feet. So, that's essentially how you would break it down. Your just essentially taking that eight head stacked, you know. You're taking, start with that head, basically you're just taking that and just flipping that on it's side and then this is kind of what you get. You know take that, take what you've learned about boxes and perspective and draw seven in a row and just make them slowly decrease in size. Just like, how I taught you how to break them up. I mean doing the x-factor, if you want to, you know, and slowly decrease them. Even though, you know, you're keeping them the same size, that's how you would do it. And, from that point, I mean that's all you need. The more extreme you make him, you make the character look, the more intense or big and small, he's going to be like, you know this guy's head looks huge, you know, so. Draw in some eyes or whatever. And find the center of his face. Then his neck. And like I said, it's just like last time, and drawing in those body parts, just fill them out. You know, it does get tricky because you got to figure out what this kind of looks like when it's tipped, you know. What do the muscles look like. Like I said the best thing you can do is reference your own body. Go and look in a mirror and figure out, you know, what your arm looks like. Put your hand out and look at it from the mirror. So you can get an idea of what things look like in perspective and, you know, just start practicing, and get to it. Use the circle template I talked about to draw your guy. From there, you know, build in those muscles. But you just got to remember, the foreshortening. The whole idea of, you know, foreshortening and how it gets smaller, the body gets smaller as it goes through space.