Voronica Goes To Town- A Vore Adventure May 2026

Voronica eyed the ooze. “So, uh, you want to eat me?”
Grumble jiggled apologetically. “Only if you’re not busy. I’m just very empty today.”
“Fine, but I’m reading a book in there.”
“I’ll keep the acids off page 42.”

GulletGrimoire has teased a sequel, "Voronica Goes to War," in which the heroine must swallow an entire siege engine to save a besieged city. A prequel short, "The Gullet Gift: Young Voronica," is reportedly complete but unreleased, detailing how she discovered her ability by accidentally swallowing a bully’s entire bookbag.

The franchise has also inspired a tabletop RPG supplement: "Hollow Gullet: Adventures in Consumptive Fantasy," compatible with D&D 5e. It features Voronica as a pre-generated character and includes rules for "swallow-based skill checks." Voronica Goes to Town- a Vore Adventure

Step 1 – Arrive at the Soggy Bun
Talk to Belinda. If you flirt, she’ll offer a “sample” (light vore scene, no damage). If you decline, she gives you a map.

Step 2 – Cross Market Square
Pickle Pete runs up begging you to hide him from a hungry ogre. Options: Voronica eyed the ooze

Step 3 – Canal District
Grumble the Ooze blocks the bridge. He will let you pass if you either:

Step 4 – Temple of Full Bellies
The spice is kept in a stomach-shaped reliquary. Priestess Gula demands a “true offering”: you must swallow something valuable or be swallowed by her. If you swallow the reliquary key (temporarily), you can retrieve it later via burping or other means. GulletGrimoire has teased a sequel, "Voronica Goes to

Step 5 – Mayor’s Manor (finale)
Mayor Swallowton has the spice but will only trade if you pretend to eat him in front of his disapproving mother. This is a farce: fake swallowing with sound effects. Success yields the spice.

Endings: Return spice to Auntie Melba. She may reward you with a pie… or eat the pie, or you. Depends on your choices.

Beneath the playful surface, "Voronica Goes to Town" explores rich themes: trust, autonomy, and the ethics of consumption. Voronica never swallows anyone without consent (except the Baron’s corrupt guards, and even then, she releases them). She treats her stomach as a temporary ark, a place of safety rather than destruction. This subverts the usual predator/prey dynamic entirely.

The story also critiques capitalism. Baron Vane hoards the Gaping Stone, charging citizens for the right to "store" goods or people, creating artificial scarcity. Voronica’s solution—freely sharing the stone’s energy after defeating him—reads as a direct political statement. Many readers have interpreted her gullet as a metaphor for communal resource management. Yes, really.