Xxx-comics - Dofantasy - Pony Girl Horror May 2026
As Alex delves deeper into illustrating Lunaria's tale, they begin experiencing terrifying hallucinations. The lines between reality and the comic book world blur. Characters from the comic start appearing in real life, and the horrors that Lunaria describes begin to manifest. The more Alex illustrates, the more they realize that Lunaria's story is a curse, not a blessing.
Lunaria reveals that her true form is that of a malevolent entity from another realm, brought to Earth centuries ago. The only way to stop her terror is to complete the comic book with a dark, final chapter. However, Lunaria has other plans. She intends to use Alex as the main character in her twisted tale, forcing them to live through the horror they've been illustrating.
While not strictly equine (the victim is surgically transformed into a walrus), Tusk establishes the template: a human abductor (Howard Howe) forcibly mutilates a man into a zoo animal. The film’s horror logic—surgical dehumanization, feeding from a trough, learning to “perform” animality—directly parallels Pony Girl narratives. Had the victim been female and the transformation equine, the film would be indistinguishable from Pony Girl horror. Tusk reveals the subgenre’s mechanics without the fetish veneer. XXX-COMICS - dofantasy - Pony Girl Horror
Fans of psychological horror, fantasy, and comics. The story is designed to appeal to readers who enjoy a blend of mystery, terror, and the supernatural, with a unique twist on traditional fantasy creatures.
Dofantasy has long been a haven for artists who refuse to draw safe content. Their "Horror" line specifically exploits the tension between elegance and disgust. A typical page from a Pony Girl Horror comic by XXX-COMICS features hyper-detailed, almost classical linework contrasting with brutal subject matter. As Alex delves deeper into illustrating Lunaria's tale,
Consider the seminal one-shot “Mare of the Mire.” The protagonist wakes up in a Victorian-era bog, fitted with a perpetual gag and a saddle embedded with glass. The antagonist is not a man, but a "Groom"—a faceless entity made of straw and mud. The horror is cyclical: the pony girl runs through the forest, but the forest is made of whips. She jumps a hurdle, but the hurdle is made of bone.
This is where XXX-COMICS excels. They utilize the comic panel as a "training ring." Repetitive frames show the pony girl performing the same humiliating gait over and over, while subtle details in the background (a rotting apple, a collapsing barn) signal the world is ending around her. Note: This paper is a scholarly analysis of
Note: This paper is a scholarly analysis of horror tropes and does not endorse non-consensual acts. All media examples are fictional.