I'm hoping to run a themed pathfinder game within the setting of my comic Xiro Myth.
I'd be running it every other weekend, though the day is flexible to best meet the needs of the majority.
I'm running it online, and would love to see if people have interest!
Done as an answer to what is inside the Guarri, and to satisfy my own need to figure out what the young of the Suien and Djitar look like.
Guarri
Suien
Djitar
Not included here is the child version of a Rakekk, but that is because their children appear as just humans with brightly coloured hair.
This was an interesting experiment in making a little comic/series using the same background for all of it. Some of it is a little rougher than others, and this definitely took a lot longer than I had imagined. It was the most fun drawing the faces as silly as I could.
Lost in the desert in a sandstorm only to come across a migration of Guarri.
Man the Guarri have gone through quite a bit of change through time, more solidifying of the idea, etc. The oldest image I have drawn of them, -And- an attempt to make them match.
The Guarri are a distant relative to the Pandorans, descended from the same creature/plant species. Where the Pandorans gained more human like features, the Guarri developed a stronger more resilient body.
They are a gender-less species, reproducing through pollination of sprouts. They are capable of living in many climates, but prefer the desert. They try to keep their distance from people, to avoid being blamed for the harm their needles cause. Guarri who do choose to live with people purposely rub off their needles, and don basic clothing.
The insides of a Guarri have confused many people, being that they look like a hollow shell with glowing eyes. Some proclaim that they are spirits inside the cactus husk, while others say they are goblins wearing a suit of cactus armour.
Their insides are actually a sticky black goo containing their vitals. It can go from dry to wet used to attract more insects to increase the chance of reproduction. When a sprout is pollinated, it falls off of the parent's back and follows them around until it gets big enough to grow it's own sprouts.