Test Of Faith -derpixon- Official
If you follow adult animation or niche indie creators, the name Derpixon needs no introduction. Known for a distinct, fluid art style and surprisingly deep character work, Derpixon has carved out a space where mature themes meet genuine artistic merit.
The 2021 short, Test Of Faith, is arguably their most talked-about work. On the surface, it fits a specific genre category (summoning/ritual). But to dismiss it as mere shock value misses the point entirely. Here’s why Test Of Faith stands out as a unique piece of animated storytelling. Test Of Faith -Derpixon-
At its core, Test Of Faith is deceptively simple. The film features a classic fantasy trope: the holy Paladin or Cleric—a warrior bound by oaths of chastity, devotion, and divine law. However, unlike traditional narratives where the hero fights a physical monster, the antagonist here is intangible: desire. If you follow adult animation or niche indie
The story follows a male cleric who finds himself in a liminal, ethereal space. He is confronted by a demonic or fey entity—a classic Derpixon archetype: mischievous, omniscient, and overwhelmingly seductive. This entity does not wield a sword or cast a fireball. Instead, she proposes a test. The rules are ancient and familiar: resist temptation, uphold your sacred vow, and you may return to your order. Succumb, and you are damned. On the surface, it fits a specific genre
The genius of Derpixon’s narrative is that there is no violence. The "battle" is waged entirely through eye contact, proximity, and psychological erosion. The entity does not force herself upon the cleric; she invites him to fall, using logic, wit, and supernatural allure to dismantle his faith piece by piece.
Derpixon is famous for "smear frames" and morphing techniques—animation tricks that make movement feel elastic and organic. In Test Of Faith, this reaches a crescendo. The entity’s form is never static. Hair becomes smoke; limbs stretch in impossible, Escher-like geometries; her expressions flicker from innocent curiosity to predatory hunger in a single frame.
This instability visually represents the cleric’s crumbling mental state. The world itself seems to melt around him. Derpixon uses color grading shifts—from cool, divine blues to warm, infernal reds—to signal the progression of the test.