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10 yrs ago
SCOTLAND FOREVER
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Bio

I'm a fungi.

I draw.

Most Recent Posts

Right, methink it be time to update Logos's AND Elysium's theme for both of them.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1db-tvVoNAA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nd_FpKwGkTs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lb-Omg1pry8

So time to vote votes. Which of these melodies fits better with the Logos and Elysium you've come to see: their past, their present, and their potential?


I feel like the first, and last songs are all far too serious in my eye, I do love the melodies of Over the Garden Wall, though, as they manage to have a sort of playful expression to them while remaining dreary.

I take Adelaide


ohi angry marines
<Snipped quote by Kho>

Bah, I was never Casper.

I DID want to be Marley's Ghost from A Christmas Carol, however. I bet I could make some sick beats from raddling those chains.



You certainly got the friendly part down
This aint Jvan week no more, boy

This is TOBIA week.
<Snipped quote by poog the pig>

I know this is really a nitpick on wording but it becomes a little iffy to put something like that between sentient and non-sentient life categories as if there is a sliding scale. A servant intellect would be a removed category from both, because it is missing categories from both.

For one instance, a sentient creature and a non-sentient creature both have a self-preservation instinct. Cornerstone does not.

Really it's a stretch to say that Cornerstone has any intelligence. It would be like saying a stalagmite has intelligence because it builds upon itself.


Which is why I thought of the Servant-intellect, it has no self-preservation, but is capable of maintaining itself at the whims of its master.
<Snipped quote by Kho>

Depends on your definition of life.

It doesn't consume or defecate, it doesn't respire, it doesn't evolve or even reproduce, and it doesn't have intelligence of any kind except the imperative to replenish itself and to be a conduit for Toun's influence.

Take that how you will.


I feel like there should be a third definition of intelligent thought.

Somewhere in between non-sentient and sentient, there should be a servant intellect where the creature doesn't exist for itself, or has any type of self-awareness, but rather functions under a god's whim. For example, Toun's Fortress, or the Muses (in a very technical manner.)
<Snipped quote by Double Capybara>

Yes.

Yes you can.


Don't wait for Kho to answer, just go do it! Quickly!


Lifprasil intends to do that. Eventually.
I feel like Lifprasil week would be pretty self explanatory, which is when he starts his conquering.
Finally finished this faery sheet that had me down for ages. It makes for much drier reading than Vec's dragons, but it may yet become relevant.



Alright, so... These guys break physics in a pretty noticeable way, and there's a good reason I invested a whole might point into them even though a free point or free action would be quite sufficient to get me the body, blade and ink.

Many high fantasy scenarios have that one mysterious species that's immune to the magic of that world. Wheel of Time has the Gholam, Harry Potter states that giants and dragons reflect most spells, and the Star Wars EU includes force-immune species like rakata and tarentatek. Sculptors were always meant to be my high-order sentient race, but considering their low numbers and lack of any special capabilities other than an optimised body and high intelligence that tends to go unused, there's nothing yet that really sets them apart from other sentient species like humans and hain other than their behaviour and reproduction.

Early on I thought that it might be fun to make them into that one magic-immune race that needs to be fought conventionally, with swords, clubs, guns and catapults, but just arbitrarily incorporating that into their paltry one-might budget fit in neither mechanically nor thematically. So I did what Jvan does and made a functional creature rather than a power. Faeries basically serve one purpose other than being free resource fodder for any race that needs ink and sharp implements but can't craft them yet (you're welcome), and that is to shield Sculptors from several destructive forms of magic, primarily those involving fire, light, plasma, electricity, gravity, pressurised fluids and so on. They're effectively a joint species. Science-wise, I don't think I can explain it much better than I have in the sheet, because the fact is that it doesn't make a lot of sense. Some magic still affects them even before the buffering swarm has been destroyed by arrows and such- Popsicle People and ice dragons especially, Allure too- but I just really wanted to experiment with making the Sculptors more susceptible to conventional weaponry and armour than to the magic we'll soon see going on, and with putting a race's powers in control over a species rather than in magic.

So yeah, butterfly-mancy. I'm gonna be gone for a few hours but I'll read criticism when I come back.


Looks sick, dude!
<Snipped quote by Dawnscroll>

I'm not really a going out person. And considering I'm only 20 so not allowed to drink in the US, I don't think that bars would be my thing. However, would you say that Manhatten is safe enough for a late-evening stroll?


Probably not.

Source: I got family living there.
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