Fair warning: this is a children’s cartoon. While it avoids explicit content, Seed of the Beanstalk leans heavily into the atmospheric unease of scale—body horror lite, if you will. Think The Borrowers meets Annihilation .

(e.g., Jack and the Beanstalk retellings, Into the BeanStalk by G.T.S., or a scientific paper on GT (gigaton) seeding or stomatal conductance (“GTS”) related to beanstalks/plants), please clarify, and I would be glad to search again.

While the original GTS Toons site is now defunct, much of the work, including Chapter descriptions for Mega Michelle , has been archived or preserved by fans on platforms like DeviantArt and specialized fiction wikis.

Once at her colossal size, the giantess interacts with the tiny world below. Unlike some purely destructive GTS content, Seed of the Beanstalk often plays with ambiguity—is she benevolent or vengeful? The "beanstalk" element comes full circle as her sheer height implies a connection between the earth and the sky, much like the fabled plant.

She knelt in the soft earth of her garden and pressed the seed into the soil. As her fingers brushed the dirt over it, a surge of static electricity bolted up her arm. The ground didn't just shake; it groaned.

. Most of their "Beanstalk" related content follows a chapter-based format, focusing on urban destruction and the "crushing" power of the giants. more specific chapters from the GTS Toons catalog or details on a different giantess character