my partner doesn’t use pet names nearly as much as i do, which is very funny because i will crack my gay little knuckles and say some shit like “good morning my sun and moon, my loveliest boy, my baby my sweetheart my darling dearest” and he will reply “hello adrian”
[ID: a digital drawing with rough linework of a neon green and white renamon boy with huge boobs and thick thighs. he sits with a nonchalant expression against a blue background, holding up a peace sign. he has a black bob hairstyle and wears a black cropped shirt that says "eat sleep game repeat", cat-ear headphones, and frayed short shorts. markings on his arms and thighs resemble the power-on symbol. /end ID]
Here's what I've been working on for the month of November! I thought it would only be apt to work on a JoJo's Bizarre Adventure styled animation featuring almost all of the Dungeons and Dragons characters I've played in some connected campaigns I've done over the past 5 years, since the campaign that started it all is having its last session soon! Hopefully everyone enjoys this!
been spending the past few days obsessed over having a personal synth chassis i could work on and maintain on my own and upload into to have a second body when i want a different presentation from 4 foot tall bunny rabbit.
had to get a pic, and @jimbohusky knocked it out of the fuckin park. thank you so much
You know, an interesting tumblr transformation that's happened gradually, and which I've seen no one talk about: ask-culture has essentially dropped off to nothing.
By which I mean, asks used to be WAY more of the tumblr economy. They used to be more common to send, and receive, and see. They were integral to the collaborative, forum-like behavior of old tumblr communities, not even to speak on the HUGE number of ask-blogs that used to exist to only be interacted with in ask-form.
I'm not saying this in a vying-for-attention way but instead in an observational way: I used to get way way more asks in like 2015, even with a fraction of my follower count. I wonder if it's due to the homogenization of social media sites? There's a lot more of this divide between "content creator" and "consumer" instead of just a bunch of peer blogs who would talk to each other. "Asks" aren't really a thing on twitter, are they? And as I understand it, the closest thing to an "ask" on instagram or tiktok would be a creator screenshotting some comment and responding to it in a new reel or video or whatever those content mediums are. Are asks just too tumblr-specific? Is that aspect of the site culture dying out as more and more people converge to using all their social media sites in the same way?