
The un-shrunk-for-viewing version of page #11, for those who don't want to miss any details~
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 2000 x 2614px
File Size 6.23 MB
I'm surprise the hay building in the first panel didn't burn down yet while being so close to a camp fire. You'd think a Yinglet would under estimate the strength of the stick holding his meal making it snap from the weight mid-cooking, causing the fish fall into the fire; The yinglet would then panic and try to unwittingly pick the fish up while it's in the fire only to reflexively throw the fish (or juggle it) with it's now burning skewer towards the building.
Such an event might just be another average day for the enclave tho.
I bet that watch tower yinglet is thinking about that right now ! Look at him, looking at the general direction of that scav next to the fire. He knows what's going to happen, and he got the best spot to watch the events unfold.
Such an event might just be another average day for the enclave tho.
I bet that watch tower yinglet is thinking about that right now ! Look at him, looking at the general direction of that scav next to the fire. He knows what's going to happen, and he got the best spot to watch the events unfold.
Ohhhh, a bit of column A, a bit of column B. They treat their dens similar to pack rodents; it takes a combined effort to create a living area, so each den (of this size) typically houses 4-6 each. They're not really big on the concept of personal space, since they're so used to living, working and sleeping in groups they're familiar with. As for their relationship habits... well, you're about to learn a lot about that along with Kass here.
Well hey, it's never too late to start if you want to learn to draw, especially with all the online resources available these days! I seriously had never drawn anything above a stick figure until I started learning about 6 years ago. And a lot of that 6 years was spent mucking about and generally not practicing and/or letting my skills degrade via inactivity.
It really is like learning any language, skill, strength, and the like; it really just comes down to doing it again and again and again until your brain starts solidifying the neural pathways you use when you're drawing and you get better at it. It's definitely a commitment and can be discouraging at first, but I'm so, so glad I went through with it, because I can now make stuff like this!
It really is like learning any language, skill, strength, and the like; it really just comes down to doing it again and again and again until your brain starts solidifying the neural pathways you use when you're drawing and you get better at it. It's definitely a commitment and can be discouraging at first, but I'm so, so glad I went through with it, because I can now make stuff like this!
Comments