Yet another SFM clip. Can you tell which character I like to look at all the time. Yeah. Also pretend he's on top of an enemy please I was lazy by the end and didn't wanna bother adding another model to this thing.

#dc comics#dc#batman#bruce wayne#batfam#dick grayson#tim drake#batfamily#dc fanart


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Yet another SFM clip. Can you tell which character I like to look at all the time. Yeah. Also pretend he's on top of an enemy please I was lazy by the end and didn't wanna bother adding another model to this thing.
Can't believe my friend Devi got me a video of Robbie Daymond saying "Viva Madrid, baby!" I'm sending this to every Madrid ttrpg circle I KNOW!!!
More SFM stuff! Still afraid to do full body movement right now but I'm getting there.
Trying to learn SFM! I always watched SFM videos when I was younger, and wanted to make some myself one day. Here's a small lip sync test. It's not much but I'm proud of it.
(This took like 4 hours help.)
in Spanish, “v” and “b” are both typically [β], the voiced bilabial fricative (or [β̞], the voiced bilabial approximant), but in English, they differ in both place and manner! “v” is /v/, the voiced labiodental fricative (upper teeth contact lower lip, air passes between teeth). “b” is /b/, the voiced bilabial plosive/stop (lips come together to completely stop airflow momentarily). /b/ does also occur in Spanish - [β] is actually considered an allophone (variant) of it - but afaik /v/ is not phonemic in Spanish like it is in English