Deviant Friday – Caleb Cleveland Edition

Mr. Cleveland first came to my attention with the work he did in Kingdoms of Kalamar way back when. He is on DeviantArt as innerabove, with lots of new material as well. Always a good level of detail and a great eye for composition.

Four Legs in the Morning …

 

 

Doombrother

 

 

Female Assassin

 

 

Fury of the Sky Pony Tribe

 

 

Life Be Damned, I Want Jewels

 

 

Animal Empathy

 

 

The Girl from Halruua

 

 

Dryad

 

 

Guardin’ Gnome

 

 

Kobold Conversation

 

 

Buggin’ Elves

 

 

Aquatic Dragon

 

 

Sureshot

 

Deviant Friday – Ben McSweeney Edition

Ben McSweeney – InkThinker on DeviantArt – does some nice, professional work. I think it’s some of the best line work I’ve ever seen, and the detail is excellent. Check it out.

Spellbound Cover

 

 

Stun Jelly

 

 

Alleyway

 

 

Pummel o7

 

 

Tuning

 

 

Belkar Bitterleaf

 

 

Ringo Noyama

 

 

The Ronin Scroll

 

 

Dwarf Portrait

 

 

Fantasy Craft – Long Shot

 

 

Old Spell

 

 

Monkey vs. Snake

 

 

Fantasy Craft Cover
 

Eyebots, Horned Tigers & Space Princesses

A couple things today.

First – some cool sci-fi art harvested from the digital tides.

This one makes me think Traveller, but very ’70s slick sci-fi. From the Syd Mead Gallery.

These images are more Encounter Critical to my mind – the kind of game I’m probably way more likely to play than Traveler. To be completely honest, though, I’ve never played either game. I’ve rolled up characters, but never had the chance to play. Found at (like the image above) Super Punch!

Also …

So, I was perusing a blog that asked why sci-fi RPGs never hit it as big as fantasy RPGs. My take was that D-n-D (’cause when you’re talking about uber-successful fantasy rpg’s, you’re talking about D-n-D) was successful because it borrowed things from the fantasy genre without trying to emulate fantasy stories. Instead, it was a wargame set in a dungeon. That kind of game is easier to run than story emulation, and therefore it was more popular. So – my question – would a sci-fi game that attempts to be nothing more than, for example, “save the space princess from the starlord’s fortress” work. I think my next project that I promised I wouldn’t write was just born. And I think I’ll call it Space Princess.

Hmmm – Star Warrior, Scoundrel, Scientist and Psychic … this could be fun.

Update: Jay reminds me of X-plorers. I need to look into that game.

Update 2: In the meantime, I’m thinking about the concept of sci-fi heroes delving into star fortress, and here’s where my mind is wandering:

Four ability scores – Strength (bonus to hit, bonus to hit points), Dexterity (bonus to hit, bonus to defense), Mentality (for psychics) and Knowledge (for scientists) – simple bonuses and used for saving throws (maybe score x3 as a percent + 5% per character level?)

Four classes – As above; I’ve already written a scientist and psychic class that I could adapt, and the star warrior and scoundrel should be pretty easy as well.

Races – Human, Android, Alien – the alien rules would be a “build your own alien” concept – probably would resemble d20 race builds more than anything else. They would probably have a level limit and be able to take levels as star warrior or a multi-class based on whatever ability score they get a bonus to.

Scoundrel skills – Disguise, Defeat Security System, Hide Contraband, Avoid Notice, Fast Talk, Pilot Ship – percentage skills like a thief, except you get six columns with percentage changes and assign the skills yourself; maybe Star Warriors can choose a skill as well?

Would rules that assign levels to players by dice roll – a’la Young Hero (Luke), Experienced Heroes (Han and Chewie), Old Hero (Obi-Wan) – be any good? Maybe a fun option. Also – maybe just five levels with slow advancement in the middle.

Need rules for the space battle when you’ve escaped the space fortress and the minions are chasing you.

I don’t know if I’ll go any further, but it’s fun to think about.

Deviant Friday – Ilias Kyriazis Edition

Some fun stuff today from iliaskrzs today – superheroes, fantasy and a wee bit o’sci-fi. One of the things I like best about Ilias – for the most part, the women he draws aren’t 50% silicon by volume. Enjoy, lads and lasses …

Stench

 

 

Wizard

 

 

Dragon

 

 

Destro and Baroness

 

 

EXTERMINATE

 

 

 

Amazing Space Stories

 

 

BLAST COMICS SKETCHES

 

 

so 90s

 

 

reverse goth

 

 

(these folks are going to show up somewhere in my HCCs – I just know it)
Hiro

 

 

boom

 

 

Doom Patrol

 

United States Robot Army … ‘Nuff Said

You have to love a blog title that sells itself. The USRA is the invention of Francesco Francavilla, one of my favorite comic book artists (from a guy who hasn’t purchased a comic book in 20 years). Besides doing lots of work for DC, Francesco is starting work on a series about the United States Robot Army.

Today, he posted some pictures of a bit of sculpture he’s working on that I thought gamers might be interested in. It immediately brought to my mind this great little CGI short of a WWII giant robot battle. Of course, the American ‘bot should have had sergeant’s stripes on its helmet, but that’s just a nitpick. There was also a neat website with giant robots from the Great War (WWI), but despite my best efforts I couldn’t find the link.

Anyhow – If you don’t already follow Francesco’s Pulp Sunday blog, check it out – lots of great art and sometimes links to old pulp stories and radio shows.

Deviant Friday – Ig Guara Barros Edition

igbarros does some really nice work – nice lines, nice colors. You can find many samples of his pencil skills in his DeviantArt gallery – check it out. I love his versions of the old DnD cartoon characters, and would love to see his takes on the rest of the cast. The image after the jump break is NSFW, by the way, so take care gentle traveler.

Tiamat Cover

 

 

DnD Bob

 

 

DnD Sheila

 

 

Venger

 

 

The Giant Slayer

 

 

fight

 

 

werethings

 

 

suicide sheila

 

Deviant Friday – Hito76 Edition

No post yesterday – I was tracking a big property auction here in Nevada – so I’m making up for it today with a few posts. We start with Deviant Friday, this one highlighting Hito76. When I was in junior high (Go Cannon Cardinals!), it came down that we were going to have to read Cyrano de Bergerac (and watch the movie) in English class. At the time, I was very into AD&D – heck, a friend who sat in front of me in class would prop open his briefcase (yes, every geek stereotype in the book) and work on dungeons) – but I was not into the whole feathered hats and thin swords thing. Not at all. And then, thankfully, I delved into the play, watched the movie, and discovered an immense love for feathered hats, thin swords, poetry and swagger deep inside me. Had I seen the art of Hito, I wouldn’t have waited so long. Enjoy – and a couple are probably NSFW, so beware!

The Thief

 

 

L’Iriquois

 

Karelle Wallpaper

 

 

Paula

 

 

Alexandre de Salviniac

 

 

Elise de Beauharnais

 

 

Frederic Lasserre

 

 

Gabriel Doligny

 

 

Pirates

 

 

Jaia Berserker

 

Deviant Friday – Julie Collins Edition

Julie Collins, AKA HeadFullofIvy, is another one of those quirky artists I’d like to see illustrate a RPG book – you know, hand them a copy of Swords and Wizardry and just say – intrepret this thing for me in 10 illustrations. Anyhow – enjoy the artwork …

A Much Needed Rest

 

Cricket Issue October 2009

 

 

Les Fettre Soeurs

 

 

Self Portrait with Monster 2

 

 

Affectations Can Be Dangerous

 

 

Elspeth

 

 

Fox Lady in Mourning

 

 

Mr. Baboon

 

 

The Frog Knight

 

 

Judge Elephantidae