
Drifella III #1160 (Detail) (2025) is a single-panel close-up from a Drifella III room by Evil Biscuit in which the underlying Pokémon-base figure is more visible than the maximalist standard.
Close looking
A loosely sketched square, framed all around by a rosy decorative border patterned like cake paper, holds a central figure that the painting has almost — but not quite — buried. The figure is a large, dark-furred, cat-like creature with two wide pink eyes and a thin grin of ragged teeth, its silhouette rendered in soft pixel-edges so that the body itself is half-resolved, half-fuzzed. In its arms it cradles a stamped-on cartoon mouse — a Pikachu-adjacent yellow figure with red cheeks — which sits like a sticker on the chest, then trails downward into a black coiled tail in the lower centre. The background is a wash of cobalt and warm grey, scribbled across with blocks of red, faint snowflake shapes, and a row of small green coins; in the upper third a glitched grid of yellow tiles flashes near the figure’s ear, then dissolves. The whole palette holds at a low-key cobalt and ochre, with the yellow mouse and the red blocks doing all the high-key work. Reads first: the dark cat-figure with the bright stamp on its chest, the Crucifella silhouette translated into maximalist fur and a borrowed mascot — the inherited Mifella body now cradling a Pokémon-base citation as compositional structure. Reads last: the snowflakes and the coin row, the ambient trait-noise stacked over the wash that the room never bothers to resolve.
See also
- Evil Biscuit — the artist
- Drifella III — the parent collection
- Traitmaxxing — the layering logic that buries the base
- Drifella + Drifella 2 lineage detail — the earlier states of the same figure
