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Everyone forgets the most important part of Transformers lore:
Optimus 'Orion Pax' Prime originally had lips so dreamy that he had to get a face plate to stop distracting his own troops on the battlefield.
@mattsylvester Only one way to find out...
@JDWasabi Thaaaaaanks, Jade! And yes, that dirge is one which I'll hold close to my heart, forever and ever, amen
In case you missed it...
Magic, mythology and monsters are back on the menu, as @sergiocalvet and I enter full production of Magic of Myths: Season three.
More come in due time, but here's one new character (taken from our Battle Cards set) who'll be putting in an appearance... https://t.co/gcJ4DxCoPo
@DawnMicaela Hahaha, thanks, they were pretty good (if I do say so myself).
I told them that even though they were not what I expected, I was a very proud daddy.
Before I consumed them with wide-eyed gluttony.
7: The horrible voices in Elan’s head which repeat “Misbegotten” and “Hideous”, are actually an anagram for the first thing she says in the story (and one of the thematic arcs): “I used to be something” - which becomes even more significant by the story's end.
5: Transient Blues was a spin on classic pulp sci-fi tales and serials, Flash Gordon in particular, with the desire to explore the theme of aging with an older woman protagonist (rarely used in fantasy and sci-fi fiction, so I was super happy to see @Housemarque's Returnal).
4: The Flower Girl’s origins came from a strange mental image of a fairy wielding a machine gun (which I swear I'll use), eventually evolving into something which lurks in the same space as Hellboy and Neverwhere.
Living in London at the time made the setting an easy choice.
3: The surface inspiration behind The Cure for Fire is a strange mixture of Zoids (...I know, I'm olllllld), and religious and D&D tropes, designed to contain a story about how society – especially a brutally toxic, warring and dogmatic one – badly treats their mentally ill.