
Comic commission for
Azimuth, page 3! Nall's attention is momentarily distracted by the appearance of an Awesome Flooftail... and Ermine makes a move for the glowing egg!
Side note: one of the interesting things to me about TF fandom is the general preference for clothes-ripping transformations, even in situations where the character isn't really changing in size :P. And I do get it - the whole "bursting out of the clothes" thing really speaks to the idea of unleashing some inner beast. But the first time I saw - and was immediately fascinated by - TF stuff was watching Roald Dahl's "The Witches" when I was young, where a boy is turned into a mouse; that shrinking-down kind of TF is fun too, and underrepresented in the fandom IMO. Small furry critters ftw!

Side note: one of the interesting things to me about TF fandom is the general preference for clothes-ripping transformations, even in situations where the character isn't really changing in size :P. And I do get it - the whole "bursting out of the clothes" thing really speaks to the idea of unleashing some inner beast. But the first time I saw - and was immediately fascinated by - TF stuff was watching Roald Dahl's "The Witches" when I was young, where a boy is turned into a mouse; that shrinking-down kind of TF is fun too, and underrepresented in the fandom IMO. Small furry critters ftw!
Category Artwork (Digital) / Transformation
Species Mustelid (Other)
Size 1024 x 1280px
File Size 593.9 kB
Listed in Folders
Shrinking or same size transformations always seemed to make more sense to me. A transformation would have to take a lot of energy, and if one wishes to follow laws of conservation of matter and energy, turning into something larger would be much more difficult.
You could always just say "Magic" and write it off, but I think it's more fun to try to imagine applying at least some real-world logic. Any transformation spell should at least have a high cost of energy, some of which could come from transformed matter, so becoming something smaller could be easier. You should at least need an exponentially huge cost of matter and/ or energy and more advanced/ powerful magic to transform into something larger.
You could always just say "Magic" and write it off, but I think it's more fun to try to imagine applying at least some real-world logic. Any transformation spell should at least have a high cost of energy, some of which could come from transformed matter, so becoming something smaller could be easier. You should at least need an exponentially huge cost of matter and/ or energy and more advanced/ powerful magic to transform into something larger.
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