Lord Fyre RPG Superstar 2009 Top 32 |
Courtney! |
Courtney! wrote:The art for the Calistrian priestess is nifty, too, so kudos to the artist.... And surprisingly modest. :(
By just showing a bit of skin here and there, she's really being more seductive by teasing the viewer with glimpses of things to come, inviting them to come investigate further.
Also, those boots and the collared bodice dealie are rad. I had a male inquisitor of Calistria that wore something similar. ...er, sans dress, that is...
W. Kristoph Nolen |
Great story ... fun read.
But there's something more important at hand here. Who the heck is the artist! I really like that illustration (and I am an art-student geek) and I can't read that tiny little signature in the image! Give a credit up there with the author, or *something*!!
honestly, I was shocked. Paizo is marvelously renown for always crediting their artists ... I haven't ever been able to not find out who
the artist is!
So ... here's hoping someone will read this, and put the artist's name up.
Gururamalamaswami |
Lord Fyre wrote:Courtney! wrote:The art for the Calistrian priestess is nifty, too, so kudos to the artist.... And surprisingly modest. :(By just showing a bit of skin here and there, she's really being more seductive by teasing the viewer with glimpses of things to come, inviting them to come investigate further.
Also, those boots and the collared bodice dealie are rad. I had a male inquisitor of Calistria that wore something similar. ...er, sans dress, that is...
That's all well and good but doesn't quite match the narrative regarding the size of the bosoms being displayed. The author's description left me thinking more along the lines of post-enhancement Pamela Anderson. Just how big was that giant bumblebee anyway?
Courtney! |
Courtney! wrote:That's all well and good but doesn't quite match the narrative regarding the size of the bosoms being displayed. The author's description left me thinking more along the lines of post-enhancement Pamela Anderson. Just how big was that giant bumblebee anyway?Lord Fyre wrote:Courtney! wrote:The art for the Calistrian priestess is nifty, too, so kudos to the artist.... And surprisingly modest. :(By just showing a bit of skin here and there, she's really being more seductive by teasing the viewer with glimpses of things to come, inviting them to come investigate further.
Also, those boots and the collared bodice dealie are rad. I had a male inquisitor of Calistria that wore something similar. ...er, sans dress, that is...
Hahaha, okay, fair enough. Truthfully, I find the notion of a giant bumblebee a bit unnerving, so if the art of a prostitute's breasts reduces its dimensions, so be it. Still, you are correct; it's a dear price to pay. :)
Aaron aka Itchy |
More Kevin Andrew Murphy? Yay!! Interesting story thus far.
Orrin is definitely sounding like a haunted oracle. I'll have to direct my GM and the player who is playing a haunted oracle in our game to this story. Even if that's not what Orrin IS, this is a great description of what it could look like.
The biggest thing that I picked up on was that the Knitting Women have directed that nobody grow flowers, only vegetables; yet the Knitting Woman they are lodging with is named Madame Eglantine. That seems to be an interesting choice for her name. Eglantine is a type of rose, so we COULD call her Madame Rose in a country where roses are banned.
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
Glad everyone is enjoying the story thus far and is happy to see the return of Norret and the introduction to Orlin. Ditto glad that everyone liked TSotR&G so well. It's been fun to come back to the characters.
Getting on to questions, I can't/won't comment on spoilers/possible spoilers because guessing is half the fun of any mystery and I don't want to say what's foreshadowing or a clue and what's a deliberate red herring. I'll be happy to discuss it all, however, once the last chapter is unveiled.
With Mistress Philomela's illustration, I'm as pleased as everyone if not more so since she's my character. Carlos Villa did a stunning job of portraying her. I particularly like that she's looking right at the viewer like Manet's "Olympia" and her gown, boots, and the collared bustierre are appropriately Galtan. Plus the slit skirt makes the outfit much more practical for the riding of pony-size wasps. And oiled silk is clingy stuff, so if you look carefully at draperies, you'll notice some other details....
With the size of her other assets, there's a bit of leeway with all descriptions. Orlin first mistakes Honeybun for a muff, a fashion accessory that can vary in size, and later describes him as the size of a lapdog, which again can vary in size. But an extremely petite teacup poodle or a dainty mitten-size fashion muff would both be smaller than what's depicted here. Envisioning her like Pam Anderson? Also not wrong.
Anyway, again, glad that everyone's enjoying the tale so much and is looking forward to next week's installment.
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
James Sutter Contributor |
I read the first story with these guys.
Who exactly was Galt at war with? Or was it an internal conflict.
Also in their shoes I would have already have gotten out of Galt as fast as my feet would take me.
Not much of a story that way though.
Oh and who is "Blackfingers?"
Galt's more or less at war with itself, these days--it's been in a perpetual French-Revolution-style upheaval for many years at this point.
And Blackfingers is another name for Norgorber, who among other things is the god of poison.
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
Also in their shoes I would have already have gotten out of Galt as fast as my feet would take me.
Not much of a story that way though.
If you also check where Dabril is on the map, it's a border town. Across the river to the west lies Kyonin, home of xenophobic elves. To quote the Inner Sea World Guide, "As a result, the elves’ natural tendency toward isolationism continues to hold sway in Kyonin, and its closed borders are patrolled with deadly effectiveness by wraithlike bands of rangers."
Of course, you could also go north. The nearest neighbor to Dabril, just across the border into the River Kingdoms, is the picturesque (not really) town of Riverton, which is run by cultists of Hanspur, the Water Rat. It's like visiting the Manson Family but with less sex and rock music and more drowning.
Compared to the neighbors, Galt is a portrait of sanity and a model democracy.
Aaron aka Itchy |
DW is currently reading The Gulag Archipelago by Alexander Solzhenitsyn. The more she tells me about it, the more I see similarities between the USSR of the 50's and Galt. There was a lot of top-down arrests, but even more bottom-up arrests.
Stalin decided who (people and groups) was going to be targeted (top-down), but the common people brought forward their neighbors and fellow citizens as traitors (bottom-up). Different provinces had more or less people accused (and thus tried and convicted because there was no defense) by their fellow citizens. If you were fortunate to live in a province where people didn't turn each other in, you had a better chance of survival.
A big difference between the two is that in the USSR they used firing squads and labor camps to kill their prisoners instead of guillotines.
Apostle of Gygax |
I have a sneaking suspicion as to what the Knitting Women are...
** spoiler omitted **
And I just purchased and DL the past PF Tales, so I want to find out more about Orrin too...this is an interesting way of describing the Oracle.
Cheapy |
sunbeam wrote:Also in their shoes I would have already have gotten out of Galt as fast as my feet would take me.
Not much of a story that way though.
If you also check where Dabril is on the map, it's a border town. Across the river to the west lies Kyonin, home of xenophobic elves. To quote the Inner Sea World Guide, "As a result, the elves’ natural tendency toward isolationism continues to hold sway in Kyonin, and its closed borders are patrolled with deadly effectiveness by wraithlike bands of rangers."
Of course, you could also go north. The nearest neighbor to Dabril, just across the border into the River Kingdoms, is the picturesque (not really) town of Riverton, which is run by cultists of Hanspur, the Water Rat. It's like visiting the Manson Family but with less sex and rock music and more drowning.
Compared to the neighbors, Galt is a portrait of sanity and a model democracy.
Couldn't they have taken a boat down to Taldor? I suppose not if that's where Norren was soldiering...but hm. It did make me go "Huh?!" when I found out they were still in Galt.
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
Kevin Andrew Murphy wrote:Couldn't they have taken a boat down to Taldor? I suppose not if that's where Norren was soldiering...but hm. It did make me go "Huh?!" when I found out they were still in Galt.sunbeam wrote:Also in their shoes I would have already have gotten out of Galt as fast as my feet would take me.
Not much of a story that way though.
If you also check where Dabril is on the map, it's a border town. Across the river to the west lies Kyonin, home of xenophobic elves. To quote the Inner Sea World Guide, "As a result, the elves’ natural tendency toward isolationism continues to hold sway in Kyonin, and its closed borders are patrolled with deadly effectiveness by wraithlike bands of rangers."
Of course, you could also go north. The nearest neighbor to Dabril, just across the border into the River Kingdoms, is the picturesque (not really) town of Riverton, which is run by cultists of Hanspur, the Water Rat. It's like visiting the Manson Family but with less sex and rock music and more drowning.
Compared to the neighbors, Galt is a portrait of sanity and a model democracy.
Galtans are raised on tales baby-eating nobles. Given that, what Galtan would want to go anywhere near Taldor where you can't swing a dead cat without hitting a member of the aristocracy?