Actress Frances Kapstowne, 1911

No title available
🪼
Three Goblin Art

Janaina Medeiros
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Mike Driver
Jules of Nature
KIROKAZE
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Origami Around
Cosmic Funnies
Game of Thrones Daily
$LAYYYTER

Discoholic 🪩

⁂
occasionally subtle

Kiana Khansmith
Claire Keane
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
wallacepolsom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from Malaysia
seen from Colombia
seen from Colombia
seen from Colombia

seen from Colombia
seen from United States
seen from United States
@quasilou
Actress Frances Kapstowne, 1911
It still surprises me at how few people have seen Freak of the Week, and I love sharing it with friends because of the inevitable, “How the hell have I never seen this?” look of awe drawn out on their face.
And man, it really is gorgeous.
Directed by Juanjo Guarnido, it took the team about a year of hard work to hammer out this bloody masterpiece (which you can learn about in his video here) using a combination of 3D animation with the power of college interns skill of a team of artists to painstakingly re-draw the 3D elements they wanted in 2D frame-by-frame, not to mention the post processing and… everything else.
Even though it came out in 2014, it doesn’t seem to have ever garnered the attention it truly deserves.
I really wanna drive this point home, so to give you an idea, Ghost by Mystery Skulls, animated by MysteryBen27 has 18,147,263 views. Freak of the Week has only 2,271,121 views at the time I’m writing this. That’s fucking depressing for something so … phenomenal. I want more of this, and hell, maybe you do too. But we’re not going to see anymore simply because the right people haven’t seen it. In fact, it failed to reach a respectable level of Internet Popularity®, Juanjo himself even described it in the comments section as having ruined him because of how little attention it got.
So if you’re reading this and you’ve got some connections with a TV network or something, consider pulling some strings to get this video spoon-fed to the masses, because people ought to see this. I’m sure Juanjo would be all too happy to oblige. And hell, if you wanna buy the art book, you can get the link here for about $50.
Now, maybe you recognize the former Disney animator Juanjo Guarnido for his other work: Blacksad.
Which is a comic set in the late 1950′s about a hardboiled private investigator published originally by Dark Horse Comics that does… y’know, the …
… noir investigator …
… aloof ladies man…
… badass …
… detective story thing.
That I haven’t yet read but I TOTALLY NEED TO.
Look,
I guess I’m bringing up Freak of the Week because I was reading the comment section and, man, it kinda got me down.
Some of the best things things out there just haven’t been seen by the right people, I guess. But I suppose it’s also a depressing statement on the culture of the internet that the video makes.
This is depressing. If you haven’t watched this video yet PLEASE do, I was in awe and fell instantly in love with it when I first saw it and just assumed something is fantastic and detailed would become an Internet hit …
Apparently not.
Well it should be, I hope this gets to the right people and the video gets the attention it rightfully deserves.
Plague characters by Cheng Letian
STOP THIS
l;’knbjlhvkgcjfxdzyas54u6di7fogiho;j
I feel so called out
Fantasy humans are freaks
So, set aside all the speculation about what kind of scary aliens humans would be from the perspective of other species. Let’s talk fantasy for a second.
Everyone knows half elves, and we know the other half is human but we don’t call them half humans. Why? Because it’s assumed all half breeds are part human, since humans will fuck anything.
See it’s not just elves. In D&D, for example, there are half orcs, half angels, half demons, half elementals, half spirit-things, half snakes… humans are out there fucking whatever pops a tentacle through to the material plane.
And of course I’m not saying this is never consentual so the other races must have people that are dtf with humans but I don’t think they’re known for it. I think humans are the ones that initiate pretty much every time.
So I feel like in fantasy when someone is like “oh I’m the cursed offspring of a magic cow and a -” everyone will just cut them off and be like “ - human, yeah, fucking a magic cow sounds about right for those horny bastards.”
old people really need to learn how to text accurately to the mood they’re trying to represent like my boss texted me wondering when my semester is over so she can start scheduling me more hours and i was like my finals are done the 15th! And she texts back “Yay for you….” how the fuck am i supposed to interpret that besides passive aggressive
Someone needs to do a linguistic study on people over 50 and how they use the ellipsis. It’s FASCINATING. I never know the mood they’re trying to convey.
I actually thought for a long time that texting just made my mother cranky. But then I watched my sister send her a funny text, and my mother was laughing her ass off. But her actual texted response?
“Ha… right.”
Like, she had actual goddamn tears in her eyes, and that was what she considered an appropriate reply to the joke.I just marvelled for a minute like ‘what the actual hell?’ and eventually asked my mom a few questions. I didn’t want to make her feel defensive or self-conscious or anything, it just kind of blew my mind, and I wanted to know what she was thinking.
Turns out that she’s using the ellipsis the same way I would use a dash, and also to create ‘more space between words’ because it ‘just looks better to her’. Also, that I tend to perceive an ellipsis as an innate ‘downswing’, sort of like the opposite of the upswing you get when you ask a question, but she doesn’t. And that she never uses exclamation marks, because all her teachers basically drilled it into her that exclamation marks were horrible things that made you sound stupid and/or aggressive.
So whereas I might sent a response that looked something like:
“Yay! That sounds great - where are we meeting?”
My mother, whilst meaning the exact same thing, would go:
‘Yay. That sounds great… where are we meeting?”
And when I look at both of those texts, mine reads like ‘happy/approval’ to my eye, whereas my mother’s looks flat. Positive phrasing delivered in a completely flat tone of voice is almost always sarcastic when spoken aloud, so written down, it looks sarcastic or passive-aggressive.
On the reverse, my mother thinks my texts look, in her words, ‘ditzy’ and ‘loud’. She actually expressed confusion, because she knows I write and she thinks that I write well when I’m constructing prose, and she, apparently, could never understand why I ‘wrote like an airhead who never learned proper English’ in all my texts. It led to an interesting discussion on conversational text. Texting and text-based chatting are, relatively, still pretty new, and my mother’s generation by and large didn’t grow up writing things down in real-time conversations. The closest equivalent would be passing notes in class, and that almost never went on for as long as a text conversation might. But letters had been largely supplanted by telephones at that point, so ‘conversational writing’ was not a thing she had to master.
So whereas people around my age or younger tend to text like we’re scripting our own dialogue and need to convey the right intonations, my mom writes her texts like she’s expecting her Eighth grade English teacher to come and mark them in red pen. She has learned that proper punctuation and mistakes are more acceptable, but when she considers putting effort into how she’s writing, it’s always the lines of making it more formal or technically correct, and not along the lines of ‘how would this sound if you said it out loud?’
the linguistics of written languages in quick conversational format will never not be interesting to me like it’s fascinating how we’ve all just silently learned what an ellipsis or exclamation mark implies and it’s totally different in different communities or generations or whatever
List of Important Adventure Time Episodes
With the series finishing up with a total of 283 episodes, I decided to go through the seasons and make a list of all the episodes that are significant to either the story or have call backs throughout the series. If you find I’m missing an episode you think has importance, please use the google docs link down below to suggest what should be added and I’ll add it ASAP.
Google Docs Link
Season 1
1.01 Slumber Party Panic
1.02 Trouble in Lumpy Space
1.03 Prisoners of Love
1.04 Tree Trunks
1.05 The Enchiridion!
1.07 Ricardio the Heart Guy
1.09 My Two Favorite People
1.10 Memories of Boom Boom Mountain
1.12 Evicted!
1.15 What Is Life?
1.16 Ocean of Fear
1.18 Dungeon
1.20 Freak City
1.22 Henchman
1.25 His Hero
Season 2
2.01 It Came from the Nightosphere
2.08 Crystals Have Power
2.10 To Cut a Woman’s Hair
2.12 Her Parents
2.17 Death in Bloom
2.18 Susan Strong
2.24 Mortal Folly
2.25 Mortal Recoil
Season 3
3.03 Memory of a Memory
3.05 Too Young
3.09 Fionna and Cake
3.10 What Was Missing
3.13 From Bad to Worse
3.14 Beautopia
3.15 No One Can Hear You
3.19/3.20 Holly Jolly Secrets
3.25 Dad’s Dungeon
3.26 Incendium
Season 4
4.01 Hot to the Touch
4.02 Five Short Graybles
4.04 Dream of Love
4.05 Return to the Nightosphere
4.06 Daddy’s Little Monster
4.10 Goliad
4.15 Sons of Mars
4.16 Burning Low
4.19 Lady & Peebles
4.20 You Made Me
4.22 Ignition Point
4.25 I Remember You
4.26 The Lich
Season 5
5.01 Finn the Human
5.02 Jake the Dog
5.05 All the Little People
5.06 Jake the Dad
5.09 All Your Fault
5.11 Bad Little Boy
5.12 Vault of Bones
5.14 Simon & Marcy
5.15 A Glitch Is a Glitch
5.23 One Last Job
5.28 Be More
5.29 Sky Witch
5.31 Too Old
5.32 Earth & Water
5.34 The Vault
5.38 Red Starved
5.44 Apple Wedding
5.45 Blade of Grass
5.47 The Red Throne
5.48 Betty
5.50/5.51 Lemonhope
5.52 Billy’s Bucket List
Season 6
6.01 Wake Up
6.02 Escape from the Citadel
6.04 The Tower
6.06 Breezy
6.12 Ocarina
6.15 Nemesis
6.16 Joshua & Margaret Investigation
6.19 Is That You?
6.22 The Cooler
6.24 Evergreen
6.25 Astral Plane
6.26 Gold Stars
6.27 The Visitor
6.29 Dark Purple
6.33 Jermaine
6.35 Graybles 1000+
6.38 You Forgot Your Floaties
6.41 On the Lam
6.42 Hot Diggity Doom
6.43 The Comet
Season 7
7.01 Bonnie & Neddy
7.02 Varmints
7.06-7.13 Stakes Mini-Series
7.23 Crossover
7.25 Flute Spell
Season 8
8.01 Broke His Crown
8.05 I Am a Sword
8.06 Bun Bun
8.07 Normal Man
8.08 Elemental
8.09 Five Short Tables
8.10 The Music Hole
8.12 Preboot
8.13 Reboot
8.14 Two Swords
8.15 Do No Harm
8.20-8.27 Islands Mini-Series
Season 9
9.01 Orb
9.02-9.09 Elements Mini-Series
9.10 Abstract
9.11 Ketchup
9.14 Three Buckets
Season 10
10.01 The Wild Hunt
10.04 Bonnibel Bubblegum
10.05 Seventeen
10.07 Marcy & Hunson
10.08 The First Investigation
10.10 Jake the Starchild
10.11 Temple of Mars
10.12 Gumbaldia
10.13-10.16 Come Along With Me
Saiid Kobeisy “Wings Of Eternity” Fall 2018 Haute Couture Collection
Day 8: Element
A nautical misfit who is not happy about all this “chosen one” nonsense.
A date
Homosexuality no longer a crime in India, Supreme Court ends controversial Section 377.
October Gold - Franklin Carmichael, 1922.
Canadian, 1890-1945
Oil on canvas, 119,5 x 98 cm.
Make sure the system you use matches the kind of players you have, for an optimal experience
Admin Note: This is part of the ongoing series called “D&D isn’t the only TTRPG if you don’t want fantasy play another goddamn game!”
I already reblogged this once but this is important:
Like I run a D&D blog. I understand that D&D is the most well-known and popular RPG in the world. But a lot of the time I see people going like “Hey I want to run a D&D campaign and throw out all the D&Disms and here’s all the notes I have for running a campaign about courtly romance and chivalry in a historical setting” and I’m just like STOP YOU DON’T NEED TO RUN THIS USING D&D
There’s a sort of a mistaken assumption that because D&D is the biggest game on the market and that it’s fantasy that it should be the go-to fantasy game but look it’s not D&D isn’t a generic fantasy game it’s a very specific kind of fantasy all of its own, one that steals liberally from swords & sorcery and high fantasy and adds fucking extradimensional cube robots for good measure
So next time you’re thinking about a fantasy campaign in a decidedly non-D&Dish setting consider instead of jamming the square peg that is D&D into a round hole trying to find a system that actually supports what you’re trying to do
And this is not to say that you shouldn’t play D&D: D&D is hella fun. But there’s a lot of genres and styles that D&D does a piss-poor job of doing, and because of that it’s so good we’ve got other games
*cracks knuckles*
All right then. I’ve been meaning to dust off my own D&D sideblog for a while, so here we go with providing some examples. I’m limiting this specifically to other types of fantasy outside of the standard high fantasy and sword & sorcery millieu.
Courtly Romance and Chivalry
There are a number of options for this, and they range from standard secondary world fantasy to more historical and mythological settings. My list here shouldn’t be treated as fully extensive.
Blue Rose - based on the romantic fantasy subgenre, specifically as seen in the works of Tamora Pierce and Mercedes Lackey. A lot of courtly drama and intrigue and swashbuckling, based in a fictional world.
Pendragon - naturally based off of Arthurian mythology, and having a lot of stuff given over to the court of Camelot and the chivalric adventures of the various knights. The same company also has a kickstarter for a spin-off called Paladin: Warriors of Charlemagne that might be worth checking out.
Historical Fantasy
This one’s a bit more prominent as historical settings serve as an inspiration for a variety of fantasy worlds and games, and this of course invariably extends to settings that actually use historical settings with a degree of fantasy elements thrown in. Note that I’m going to emphasise Europe here simply due to greater familiarity with games in that millieu, and as a European myself I’m ill-equipped to judge how accurate or respectful games using other settings actually are.
Because of this, feel free to add other examples in reblogs
Chivalry & Sorcery - one of the early tabletop games inspired by D&D, taking a more pseudo-historical approach. It’s based on 12th century France and strives for a degree of historical accuracy and medieval politics.
World of Darkness, Dark Ages (including Vampire and Mage) - while the World of Darkness has earned some negative attention lately (and for good reason), the dark ages RPGs are still an old favourite of mine. Also worth checking out is Mage: The Sorcerer’s Crusade, set during the Renaissance. The Mage stuff has a really cool open-ended magic system worth checking out.
Ars Magica - this exists along very similar lines to the dark age material above, based around mages and magic-users in a ‘Mythic Europe’ setting. It also has a really cool open-ended magic system, and one of my personal favourites.
Awwww shit heck yes I might want to add to this list but this is a really good starting point
I’d like to take this opportunity to plug GURPS (which stands for ‘generic universal roleplaying system’) if that’s all right. It starts with a basic set that allows you to build a campaign in virtually any setting, and includes many, many expansion books that can help with a specific genre (sci-fi, superheroes, magic, for example). They also have books for RPing games set in already-existing fictional universes (Discworld and the Vorkosigan Saga, which are two of my all-time favourite series). This was the system I was raised on (my dad has GM-ed games for my family since me and my brother were small), so I’m a little biased towards it, but I do think it’s a really good, adaptable system, and definitely allows for a far wider range of worlds than DnD.
Also, if you visit that link there is a download for a free version of the rules! (It is very stripped-down, but you can still play with it to try it out before committing to buying books!)
Day 3: Sun/Moon
Absolutely radiant!
Day 1: Plant || Day 2: Weather
In the regions where it grows, the creosote bush (larrea tridentata) is often associated with the smell of rain.