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Bugust Day 13 [Team Slacker!]: Easy Decision 8.13.24
Done in 32 minutes
#daily drawing challenge#Bugust#Bugust 2024#fan art#Bug Fables#BF#Devourer#Team Slacker#Delilah#Stratos#comic#digital art#digital drawing#original work#Di30Mins
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getting this out of wip purgatory
#my art#ocs#devourer#rare#dnd#dnd5e#ttrpg#dragonborn#tiefling#been in wip hell for 30 years ima just post it
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Well, that was a very long pause. But you know, sometimes you just need time to gather your moral resources. I hope not to disappear again, because I really enjoy sharing stuff on this blog. Maybe sometimes there will be fewer words and letters when I'm in silent mode. In the meantime, need to finish posting my demon series. Aruru, the Visage of the Flesh.
Aruru is another kind of demon with a cute name and a cool purpose. They can literally mold bodies, change their chemical processes, relieve pain or, on the contrary, bring them to agony with a single touch. Actually, biological processes and were engaged in angels of flesh.
Kaftsiel. Bodmod lover, muscle spitter and just a tough man. One of my favorite looking demons. He used to have less piercings in his design, but I added as many earrings as possible, because without them I associated him with an elementary school teacher (yes, that's weird…don't ask). In the world of people, however, he is a really conservative-looking middle-aged man with a hunchbacked nose and stubble that almost never disappears. He is not an elementary school teacher, but quite a hard worker, also a builder by profession. In the society of the Fallen, he refers to himself as a Ravener faction.
#demon series#art#artists on tumblr#digital art#wod art#wod#ttrpg#ttrpg art#world of darkness#ttrpg oc#wod oc#dtf#dtf oc#demon the fallen#demon oc#demon art#monster#horns#fantasy art#fantasy#demoncore#mythical creatures#Aruru#rabisu#devourer#oc#oc art#original character
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Conflict in Literature + Necron Books
(Read more for titles and notes, watch out for spoilers)
Man vs. Nature - Devourer This is not the only necron vs. tyranid lit, but I thought the cover illustrated the conflict best. Out of all the horribad things in WH40K, the tyranids tend to be presented as the closest faction to a natural disaster; certainly in Devourer they do not logically justify their presence, nor can they be reasoned with, not by the Blood Angels or Anrakyr or the Tomb World he's trying to wake. Not mindless, but an amoral happenstance, like nature itself.
Man vs. Society - The Lords of Borsis Necron court intrigue played straight, with a sprinkle of delusion on the side. Since this story revolves entirely around the schemings and plottings of necron(tyr) society, with changes in dynastic hierarchy as the final objective, it fits best here.
Man vs. Technology - Indomitus This is an awkward placement, since Indomitus was not, well... a compelling story, with most of its tropes not being explored beyond their first introduction. But it is the most bare-bones way of describing this book's premise. Humans battling a robotic malignancy, albeit with a Bolivian Army Ending, which doesn't conclude the plot in either direction 😞
Man vs. Man - The Twice-Dead King: Ruin Ruin is an exceptionally deep novel, and fits every conflict listed here. It was the hardest one to place, because it's not so much choosing the one that goes best, rather crossing off every other conflict not central to the story. Both gods and the absence-of-gods are a problem in Ruin, as well as nature and technology, but they're not at the heart of Oltyx's problem. Society could be a big one, since Oltyx is an exile - but he’s not trying to antagonize his society throughout Ruin, he's trying to work with it, or at least save it from doom. Self and reality both count, but fit better with other stories in the Nate Crowley corpus. So man vs. man it is. His most important clashes are all with individuals ('man') - Djoseras, Unnas, Hemiun, arguably Yenekh in reserve - and by the end, his crownworld is overrun by the Imperium, who will become the antagonists for the second part of his tale. Man vs. 'Man', with a capital M.
Man vs. Self - The Twice-Dead King: Reign Again, this could have gone elsewhere. In man vs. reality, perhaps, or the god-related ones. But the self is where the conflict of Reign truly lies, since Oltyx's greatest obstacle is himself, and it is his inability to accept that which brings his dynasty close to destruction. Thank goodness he got over that one.
Man vs. Reality - Severed The emotional and philosophical core of this novella relies on it. Zahndrekh's inability to see the world as it is brings about the whole plot, and is at the centre of all of Obyron's musings. Interestingly, reality does not win at the end, at least not what necrons envision reality to be: a place of cold hard facts, with no room for emotion. Zahndrekh would rather dream the impossible dream, which might be the healthier way to deal with their situation.
Man vs. God - The Infinite and the Divine 🚨 𝔻𝕆 ℕ𝕆𝕋 𝔹𝔼 𝔻𝔼ℂ𝔼𝕀𝕍𝔼𝔻 🚨
Man vs. No God - Crusade: Pariah Nexus Not a novel, not 100% about necrons, not even out yet as of now (Dec 2023). This is an inherently problematic conflict for WH40K, because gods are very real and very present in that universe... here I'm only thinking about the necron perspective, and the civil war unfolding in their lore. They banded together in a shared purpose eons ago, destroying the Old Ones who oppressed them, and sundering the star gods who subjected them to biotransference. Now they are as antigod as they could be, and they did not retain their bonds, they have once again turned on each other. So it goes.
Man vs. Author - Codex: Necrons (10th Ed.) (Collector's Ed.) James Workshop knows what they did. 😑
#warhammer 40k#wh40k#trazyn the infinite#orikan the diviner#the infinite and the divine#essay#oltyx#the twice dead king#anrakyr the traveller#devourer#the lords of borsis#indomitus#nemesor zahndrekh#vargard obyron#severed#pariah nexus#codex: necrons#necron#necrons#conflict in literature
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Another fiend redesign.

I based the design on Great Jagras from Monster Hunter mixed with Shlep from My Singing Monsters, i honestly didn't like the design they showed in the episode.
(C) Devourer fiend and Making Fiends belongs to Amy Winfrey.
#devourer#devourer fiend#devourer fiend making fiends#making fiends devourer fiend#making fiends#makingfiends#making fiends fanart#fiend redesign#character redesign#redesign#inimigo#inimigos#redesenho de inimigos#not a vore fetishist#i hate vore#ibis paint x#illustration#digital#drawing#painting#collage#artist#artwork#art#myart#my art#myartwork#my artwork#interpretation#idea
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With a raging appetite, he consumes our entire galaxy, stars and planets combined, would not quell the hunger of the insatiable behemoth.
(Storm Volume 5 #7)
#storm#Galactus#silver surfer#norrin radd#devourer#insatiable#murewa ayodele#luciano vecchio#marvel comics#comics#2020s comics
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Devourers! They're undead? Demons? Both? depends on who you ask tbh. The book says they're 8 ft (2.4 m) or so, but that's an elf in that ribcage cavity so I'd guess this one's closer to 12 ft (3.7 m). Look, it's telepathic and devours souls while turning you into an undead. I think you get this thing's deal by looking at it. Look, I warned you a few times to flip on the "cw body horror" tags if you're squeamish, MPMM's got some weird ones.
#devourer#cw body horror#cw gore#dnd#dnd5e#DnD 5e#d&d#smash or pass#5e#monsters of the multiverse#mpmm#cw death
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Day 4 - Devourer
#my art#meshitober#inktober day 4#Inktober#winged lion#Lion dunmeshi#marcille donato#marcille dungeon meshi#marcille dunmeshi#delicious in dungeon#dunmeshi#Dungeon meshi#winged lion dungeon meshi#Devourer
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Why would I be just content with your fascinating mind, your dancing heart, your vibrant soul. These are very spiritual in its nature, something very untouchable, invisible. But since we have come all this way to this earthly existence, carved in flesh, adorned with skin, beautified and perfected with a physical form - why would I not choose to taste it as well? Who even brought the idea of abstinence when it comes to wild explorations of that perfect physical form of yours. Why would I choose to be an ascetic when I could even as well devour your body like a wolf that has been hungry for ages? Why would I draw borders for myself when I could ravish in the experience of entangling my limbs with yours? Why should I torture myself to be this thirsty when I could even as well choose to drink from the rivers gushing forth between your legs? Oh keep such false ideas of puritanism for the clergy. I'm a warrior by day and a hunter by night. Your body would definitely be my greatest conquest and your submission my greatest prize catch ever!
Random Xpressions
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*bothers you fruitily*
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Ninurtu, the Visage of the Wild.
I've told you about this demoness before. This is the first character I've ever made up in the D:tF setting. A rough and furious Earthbound that has riddled my players' nerves, heh.
Ninurtu are angels of plants in all their forms, from giant trees, to small blades of grass, to exotic whimsical flowers and weeds growing on mountains of slag. Specifically Imbert created iron trees in her time.
#demon series#art#artists on tumblr#digital art#wod#wod art#wod oc#world of darkness#ttrpg oc#ttrpg art#ttrpg#demon the fallen#dtf#nature#Ninurtu#Rabisu#Devourer#fantasy#fantasy art#forest#demon oc#demon art#horns#dtf oc#oc#oc art#my ocs#original character#Imbert
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Cursive Interview: Be More Eclectic

Cursive at Riot Fest 2024
BY JORDAN MAINZER
"I saw our future and I want to go back," sings Tim Kasher on "Consumers", a standout track from Devourer, Cursive's first album in 5 years and their Run For Cover debut. The line, and song in general, feels especially prescient today, given the results of this week's U.S. Presidential Election; "A billboard sells the rich to the poor," he sings earlier. It's also exemplary of the Omaha sextet's continued ability to deliver big ideas. If early albums like Domestica and The Ugly Organ took the structure of a concept album to communicate their grandiose themes, Devourer expands its reach to other genres and mediums, namely horror, to understand the world we live in. The band has said the album's title refers to consumption, in multiple denotations and connotations of the word, from our taking in of art and online spheres to literal eating. In other words, while watching films, listening to music, and reading books is nurturing, engaging in self-righteous echo chambers can be harmful. And eating and drinking is gross: "Your gut's an old garbage can / Liver's a purple bruised punching bag," Kasher sings on the forward-lurching math rock of opener "Botch Job".

When Devourer presents surreal or heinous imagery, you're more horrified by the context behind it. On "The Avalanche of Our Demise", the narrator can't fit the titular disaster, or recognizing the climate crisis in general, into his busy schedule. "Never mind the ticking clock / Besides, you’re totally swamped today," Kasher sings. “Life’s an abscess or apple pie / So shut those demons up / And devour your slice,” he sneers on "Bloodbather", his vices overtaking his desire to self-improve, Pat Oakes' drums propelling the song along as if to encourage Kasher like the devil on his shoulder. On "What Do We Do Now", a beached whale ends up on a neighbor's curb, and the narrator is mostly concerned with reporting it to his homeowner's association. Throughout Devourer, the characters attempt to reconcile their own importance with that of the world at large, man and nature. We can see they'll eventually come up empty.

Of course, the band itself, especially on stage, continues to blare inspirationally. At this year's Riot Fest, they performed the Devourer songs expressively, Patrick Newbery banging on the keys during "Botch Job". They had played Reggie's the night before, their first time playing "Bloodbather", "Imposturing", and "Up and Away", and the first two of those got a blistering Riot Fest treatment the next day. Still, at the festival, with Devourer out for a mere week at the time, Cursive prioritized older material, which sounded just as urgent. After a plea with the crowd to vote, Kasher yelped throughout "Dorothy at Forty", Newbery's horns and Megan Siebe's cello the chaos elements. When Kasher announced how excited he was to see Mastodon and Slayer, for a moment, you could view them as three loud, rhythmically complex bedfellows.

I caught up with Kasher after Cursive's set for an interview, during which we discussed Devourer, playing live, horror films, and social media. (Halfway through the interview, fittingly, Lamb of God's set started, a sonic explosion in the background.) Tomorrow night, Cursive plays Empty Bottle; I can't think of a better place to channel post-election rage than screaming along to songs from an album whose twisted world may soon resemble our reality.
Read our conversation below, edited for length and clarity.

Since I Left You: Was last night the first time you played the new songs live?
Tim Kasher: Three of them, yeah. There are two songs off the record we toured around last year, but that's it.
SILY: Was the approach to adapting them to a live stage any different than for the songs from your previous records?
TK: It was an interesting week of rehearsals. It occurred to us, looking at one another, that we prepped them for the studio but didn't know how to play them live. Despite us having a lot of instrumentation and getting a little ornate, we also have six band members, so we have a cello, trumpet, and keys with us. We're actually able to pull off quite a bit of what we do on the album live. It's not verbatim, but that's also not necessary. We're not really interested in that. So over the week of rehearsals, we were making those executive decisions, of why things would work better certain ways, little things here and there. I think they translate pretty well.
SILY: Marc Jacob Hudson, who co-produced it, also does your live sound. Did that help?
TK: Yeah, I think it helped a ton. We kind of had organic pre-production. We wouldn't even call it pre-production; it was literally just us sitting on the bus talking about music, talking about the record, getting ready together to ask ourselves, "What do we want to do? What do we want to get out of this? What do we want it to sound like?" Marc was awesome. He really came across as an additional member, which is the best way to feel about a producer.

SILY: You didn't do a typical record release show, but you presented the album and its music videos in 5.1 Dolby Surround Sound. It's a cool way to present something as artistically intended in a format that not everybody has access to.
TK: I'm proud of how it all turned out, just because it was kind of ambitious. Doing the 5 genre videos was ambitious. It was a lot of extra work we didn't need to do. As recently as the last couple albums, we had kind of a negative attitude about the videos, because you put all this money and labor into it, and it just sits on YouTube, and what's the big deal? This time around, we had this initial cocktail napkin idea of doing a lot of horror genre videos. I've gotten to know a decent amount of horror directors, so I thought I would reach out to see if they were interested. The responses were awesome, so we decided to do it. We did a real 180 and embraced videos this time. Because we did 5, and made them not just promo material but their own thing, with VHS tapes, it's its own project, connected to the album, but different to the album. We did lyric videos for the rest of the songs. I'm really excited about it. Ultimately, we're going to have them all up on YouTube, and I'd encourage people to consume it in that way. If you want to put it on your TV and watch, it's not the worst idea.
SILY: The album is very cinematic, and my favorite type of horror films are, at their heart, social tales that use horror to say something else. Similarly, on this record, you use horrific imagery to talk about climate anxiety and late capitalism. Was that your intention going into it?
TK: I'm still figuring that out. [laughs] When a record comes out, it's an opportunity for me to start understanding a little bit better what the record is about. Everybody is taking it in and giving me their reactions, which informs me. I wanted this album to be more eclectic. I put some extra effort into listening to the whole catalog, and it reminded me that 20-25 years ago, our MOs was to be eclectic. We didn't want to put out a heavy album, pop album, or mellow album. The last few Cursive records--and it's not a bad thing--lean pretty heavy, which is my growth as a writer getting more excited about louder, heavier music. I want to be a part of it. When I was listening to this album, thinking what it was about, what the title should be, I kept thinking to myself, "Damn, this is still pretty aggressive, loud, and angry, so thankfully we have these eclectic, poppy, quiet songs. But this is more pissed off than I realized it was." An early album title I had for it was Bruiser because the album seems like a bully to me. It's got a bad attitude. Devourer ended up being a variation on that. It's the type of title that does fit in with the horror genre. The best analogy is humanity devouring this planet, but with the artwork, I think of it in more sci-fi and horror elements, or a suggestion of the planet turning on us.
SILY: As much as the album sounds hard and heavy, you have the horns and cello to balance it out. You might be the only band with a cello to ever play Riot Fest.
TK: I don't know. I bet not.
SILY: It took me until yesterday to see an acoustic guitar. Horns, though, there's enough ska here to go around.
TK: [laughs]
SILY: I really like the line at the end of "The Avalanche of Our Demise" where you're talking about the apocalypse having to wait because you're too swamped. I feel like the album has a lot of themes of you balancing personal crises with the world's crises. Is that something you think about pretty often?
TK: A song like that gets pretty snarky. I'm not being hard on any specific person, but on a lot of social media, there's a lot of virtue signaling. You see a lot of, "I'm really down for the cause, and I've got some time between 11 and 2 on Saturday." There's hypocrisy in all of us, me included. It's important people understand I'm wagging the finger at myself. I don't want to be like that, but sometimes, you're slammed, and you mean well, but you're coming across like a fucking asshole.
SILY: You touch on that on "Imposturing" as well.
TK: I probably shouldn't be too hard on myself...I just don't want to be virtue signaling, myself.
SILY: I love the image of a beached whale on a sidewalk curb on "What Do We Do Now", how you're worried about what the HOA will think. You do have to laugh at it all. You can have these genuine feelings of concern and empathy for causes while also recognizing that people often post on social media out of the desire to gain social capital.
TK: I wanted to go surreal with that song. I was imaging, "What if some of the world's big crises landed at your doorstep?" How would people react?
SILY: Do you foresee these songs evolving as you play them live?
TK: Absolutely. There's already songs that I think were a little bit too slow on the album.
youtube
#live picks#live music#interviews#cursive#riot fest#matt maginn#ted stevens#run for cover#empty bottle#reggies#marc jacob hudson#devourer#tim kasher#run for cover records#domestica#the ugly organ#pat oakes#patrick newbery#megan siebe#mastodon#slayer#lamb of god
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Meet Kheir's two main canonical pets. These are the two he graduated fahrar with.
Rockburrow, the Whiptail Devourer and Silktrap, the Jungle Spider.
They are both excellent at hiding themselves and springing traps alongside their owner. Rockburrow will dig around the ground and make uneven land for targets, while Silktrap will, well, entrap them in silk.
Kheir is the assassin of the trio, his two pets acting as diversions and debilitators while he lands the killing strikes.
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On the left is a gnomish clockwork digging robot! Typically made to be somewhere in the 4-8 ft (1.2-2.4 m) range, and can understand/follow orders. It can also zap people, and those eyestalks are telescopic! Like all the clockworks, they're often modded by their owner. Voice boxes, waterproofing, enhancements to durability or speed, suction, self repairing, you name it! So I'd argue it's perfectly reasonable to have the tail spike swapped with something more blunt.
On the right, the devourer! They're undead? Demons? Both? Depends on who you ask tbh. The book says they're 8 ft (2.4 m) or so, but that's an elf in that ribcage cavity so I'd guess this one's closer to 12 ft (3.7 m). Look, it's telepathic and devours souls while turning you into an undead. I think you get this thing's deal by looking at it.
#clockwork bronze scout#devourer#cw body horror#cw death#5e#dnd5e#DnD 5e#D&D 5e#mpmm#smash or pass
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