Hey i'm Lobo, a Pixel and fiber artist slowly getting into gamedev. 25, they/them ๐ฒ๐ฝ
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Photo
Big Toothy Grin
For RolexDragon!
Posted using PostyBirb
408 notes
ยท
View notes
Text
Tumblr has been rightfully holding me hostage using dungeon meshi art on a stick
And Iโm gonna make sure it stays that way
So hereโs Marcille art I did 2 months ago
6K notes
ยท
View notes
Text
[ID from ALT: A digital piece of Leo and Chase from the Echo visual novel dancing. The wolf and otter pair stare at each other smiling, with Leo sporting a hungry look in his eyes. Leo's left arm is wrapped around Chase's upper back while his other arm is grasping Chase's left hand, in a waltz pose. Leo wears his signature black shirt and pants while Chase wears his blue shirt. END ID]
---
"If I taste you, will we know? If love kills or makes you whole? Tears you open, takes you home?"
Good grief these two. I haven't finished any body else's routes besides Carl and Leo- and fuck man, sending 10 lightning strikes to Leo. These two are not good for each other I fear.
Something a little bit more loose cause I keep getting stuck in the endless loop of refining and rendering (which almost happened here lol)
332 notes
ยท
View notes
Text
Little icon I made as a birthday present for an argonian friend Enjoys-The-View! Based off their Elder Scrolls Online character
#pixel art#pixel illustration#argonian#eso oc#the elder scrolls#elder scrolls#scalie#artwork#aseprite#Enjoys-the-view#tes online
61 notes
ยท
View notes
Text

A spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta) relaxes in Madiwke Game Reserve, South Africa
by flowcomm
551 notes
ยท
View notes
Text


My first attempt at a peyote stitch project, it was so fun to make.
The way the Delicas snap together into such a solid formation was so satisfying, I'm obsessed
2 notes
ยท
View notes
Text


My first attempt at a peyote stitch project, it was so fun to make.
The way the Delicas snap together into such a solid formation was so satisfying, I'm obsessed
2 notes
ยท
View notes
Text


The way it's eyes are shaped at the bottom looks like it's smiling :'-]
4K notes
ยท
View notes
Text
European stag beetle (Lucanus cervus). The Natural History of Insects; In Two Volumes. Vol. II. 1835.
Internet Archive
2K notes
ยท
View notes
Text

so yeah i hired this fuckin thing to stare at u
498 notes
ยท
View notes
Text
I love Izutsumi. She's got a great design, she's a fun addition to the main party, she adds some new tension, and she's honestly one of the reasons I read dungeon meshi in the first place. I mean, "the most cat to ever girl" is an extremely appealing hook to anyone who loves cats and girls (me, I love cats and girls).
However, while I have always liked Izutsumi, I finished the story kind of feeling like I didn't really get her. I felt like I had a decent grasp on her character an character arc (she's a traumatized teen given space to feel safe and open up, and because of that she realizes that she can't grow without letting go of the coping mechanisms she once needed). But I didn't feel like I really understood her role in the story as a whole.
She follows the group of her own accord, after a coincidental meeting and a misunderstanding of what they can do for her. She's never super invested in saving Falin, at least not compared to the rest of the group. Though they do help her escape Maizuru's shackles, and are clearly good for her in general, she doesn't really have a healing Moment with the group the way that Senshi does with the hippogriff soup.
And yet, she gets an entire chapter, the third-to-last chapter, dedicated to exploring her growth and future. She's the one who frames much of the falling action, who lets us check in with everyone. She's the one who helps talk Laios into accepting his role as king. She may join the story part way through, but she is there for most of it. So Izutsumi! What's your deal!?
Well, I think I've come up with an answer, at least for myself, that I really like. Two of them, even! Though they both really work together to form the overall point - Izutsumi is the character that most helps the story face towards the future. Here's why I think that.
So the first of these "ah-ha" moments was when I realized that Izutsumi really is the best supporting evidence for Laios' point about the good things that wouldn't have happened if Falin hadn't died.
If Falin hadn't been eaten by the dragon, Izutsumi probably would still be a slave. It was because of Shuro and Laios' parties both being in the dungeon to rescue Falin, as well as Marcille's use of ancient magic in the resurrection, that she got the chance to escape. None of that would have been the case if Falin hadn't died. Shuro wouldn't have separated from the group and joined up with his retainers, Marcille wouldn't have revealed her knowledge of ancient magic, and Izutsumi never would have even met any of them. They are only part of her life because of Falin's death.
Though this isn't explicitly pointed out by Laios or Izutsumi in the scene, I do think you can very much feel the presence of it. For one, when Marcille reflects on the journey and how much it made her realize she didn't want to lose everyone, her relationship with Izutsumi is prominent:
It's the main original group at the top and center, but when you read it right to left, itโs Izutsumi and Marcille who might catch your eye first. And it's specifically Marcille and Izutsumi's relationship on display here, not just Izutsumi's presence in the group in general.
Also, after Laios' statement about how none of their adventure would have happened without Falin dying, it is Izutsumi who gets the final word:
Izutsumi is also the one here who is the most forward-facing. Chilchuck is trying to correct Laios, Senshi is focused on the immediate future, and Izutsumi is talking about her new goal.
And I want to talk about that goal in general as well, because itโs also interesting how it comes up. In that moment, everyone is trying to remind Marcille of her less destructive desires - to eat food, to share it with them, and to meet Chilchuck's family. All of which are previously established, existing desires. When prompted by Chilchuck to join in, however, Izutsumi offers something new:
That's interesting, isn't it? It's kind of funny, of course, to see her rambling on about a completely new thing, her own personal motive, in the middle of everyone working together to reach out to Marcille. Izutsumi doesn't even know who Yaad is! But at the same time, itโs kind of meaningful. Amidst the focus on desires that everyone already had, she adds a completely new one to the mix. Itโs even the final bridge that lets Laios reach Marcille.
It is, in fact, even an idea that comes back later to help out another lord of the dungeon. The idea of finding new goals and feeling new desires... this is exactly how Kabru reaches out to Mithrun, after the Winged Lion is gone
So yeah, Izutsumi's presence here, both in what she's actively choosing to say as well as what she represents of the consequences of Falin's death, supports the story's ideas of moving forward. Of accepting the past, and finding new reasons to live.
Which is all really good, and that alone works pretty well as an answer to what Izutsumi's role in the story is.
But oh, oh. There's more. Something I realized after having thought of all this, because I still couldn't let go of the feeling that there was still something I was missing.
And as I reviewed the things I loved about Izutsumi - her sometimes unhealthy ways of coping with trauma, her struggles with isolation, her skill with fighting, her selfishness contrasted with the ways she grows to care for and protect the group, her perpetually guarded nature, born from the seeming impossibility of ever fitting in or finding a safe place to just be herself - I realized something.
Izutsumi...
is a foil to Falin.
Where Falin copes with isolation and trauma by being eternally caring and struggling to say no to people, Izutsumi copes by constantly saying no to everything she can. Falin is often considered selfless, but does have selfish desires that she canโt easily express until a moment of crisis. Izutsumi is delightfully selfish, but chooses to stick by her friends when they need her. They are both transformed, against their will, into partly monstrous hybrids, and they both will have to live with that - there is no undoing what has been done to them.
Falin anchors the group in the past. Izutsumi pulls them towards the future. Neither would find freedom without the other - it is Falin's death that leads to Izutsumi joining the party, and likewise, it is Izutsumi who inspires the realization of how they can save Falin.
And Falin is her future, as much as Izutsumi is Falin's. Both learn to be a little more like each other, even though they never meet. Falin gets a little more selfish. Izutsumi gets a little more willing to bend.
In this context, I feel like I have finally started to understand just how important Izutsumi is to the story. She is a proof that they cannot just go back, and she is a clawed, happy-to-scratch-anyone-who-pisses-her-off reminder, at that. In any conversation about what the group wishes would have happened with Falin, she cannot be ignored or brushed aside.
She is a reminder that, even in the midst of a tragedy so big it feels like a shadow you will never escape, you have yet to met all the people you will love. Hell, some of those people might even be catgirls. We should all be so lucky.
4K notes
ยท
View notes