| RolandStJude |
KissMeDarkly wrote:In what issue of Dungeon (or possibly Dragon) did I see this weapon? For the life of me I just can't seem to find the issue it's in. All HELP appreciated.It was in "The Obsidian Eye" in issue 120. The monk charater (Mio?) uses it.
Right, it's in the sidebar on p.35 of Dungeon 120. My wife, being a longtime long hair wearer, thought this was an awesome idea. I assume she meant for her character - at least I hope she did.
Heathansson
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Nicholas Logue: women's fashion trendsetter AND roleplaying author. Somewhere in the distant future, women all over Manhattan are wearing blades in their braided hair, and Mr. Logue has been kind enough to bring that style back to the temporal podunk tide waters of the early 21st cy. with his time machine. What a philanthropist of ginormous proportion.
| Nicolas Logue Contributor |
Nicholas Logue: women's fashion trendsetter AND roleplaying author. Somewhere in the distant future, women all over Manhattan are wearing blades in their braided hair, and Mr. Logue has been kind enough to bring that style back to the temporal podunk tide waters of the early 21st cy. with his time machine. What a philanthropist of ginormous proportion.
Well...I do what I can for us all. ;-)
| The Jade |
Heathansson wrote:Nicholas Logue: women's fashion trendsetter AND roleplaying author. Somewhere in the distant future, women all over Manhattan are wearing blades in their braided hair, and Mr. Logue has been kind enough to bring that style back to the temporal podunk tide waters of the early 21st cy. with his time machine. What a philanthropist of ginormous proportion.Well...I do what I can for us all. ;-)
Haven't read it yet but I'm heading over to rectify. It the braid blade like one of those long machu braids with a blade in it that they can whip around like in a certain old kung-fu film I saw?
That was uber neat. My hair is that long but if I tried any such attempt they'd find me neatly julienned atop my boots.
In NY, back in the 80's, they'd show two ninety minute kung-fu films back to back on a show called Drive-In theater. Even as a kid, it was a test of will to try to pay attention to three hours of the stuff.