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I really like these illustrations for my video on how to write graphic novels, showing how objects can express emotions and physical transactions that underscore your dialogue's more nebulous permissions.
https://t.co/T6adDrsaOq
@LaRossa Hi Brian, I'm a cartoonist who specializing in wild adventures for kids with a humorous bent
💼https://t.co/MkFXN51lDv
Still thinking about Shaka doing stand up in last week's @RivalsWaterdeep. Imagined he used a Xanathar wand as a mic. Lots of good low-key character stuff this season.
@jaymakesbooks Hi Jay, MG and D&D are my whole vibe!
💼https://t.co/MkFXN51lDv
You're all onto Elden Ring, but I'm still catching up with Skyrim, having a ball sniping dragons, knocking them off the side of a mountain.
Zip would name everyone, making them more human, like "Holden" the Beholder who was just an angel trying to keep this library secret because it was his job.
When I had a chance, I loved to pre-draw the locations and monsters. Mix up the gestures with some final art. We say all art is canon though. Everyone's vision of a situation is valid.
Even though I'd planned to have the group fight a kaiju boss, I didn't have a plan to give them a mech until much later. I now realize it's the perfect anti-chimera. A bunch of creatures share a body but of their own will. Free to leave.
Another cool coincidence came from Boxy, their sentient "portable hole". I built in a downside, that he ate any gems put into him. But enough gems would make him evolve into a new form. The second form was a cat. The third was an enormous flying ooze.
I tried to give the PCs a chance to shine so Ysburiel got to compete in (and won) a roast battle against these folks. (I borrowed it from my Riddles, Puzzles and Mazes pdf). Fun trying to plan a way for everyone to have fun.