This is an older piece of artwork that I did for Scotch hyena/gnoll back in the days when the majority of my art was done with traditional media. The character design was done by another artist that I can't recall but I copied the pose exactly and then added the garbage truck and background with pencils. The pencil work was inked and then colored with watercolor pencils before it was scanned into the computer. I found the original image file recently and had to upscale it so that some of the lettering and detailing could be altered or repaired to get this updated version of the original scene.
Scotch was a hyena/gnoll whose player loved to put their fursona in garbage dumps, waste facilities or run down places that had grit. In this scene I showed Scotch leaving their home at a big waste facility as he is heading off to start another day's work.
Scotch was a hyena/gnoll whose player loved to put their fursona in garbage dumps, waste facilities or run down places that had grit. In this scene I showed Scotch leaving their home at a big waste facility as he is heading off to start another day's work.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / General Furry Art
Species Hyena
Size 2413 x 1527px
File Size 873.8 kB
Listed in Folders
I think I met them in Yum Chat back around then, used to chat semi regularly but lately I haven't seen them around much. There were other pictures of him around at the time but a lot of them aren't around anymore, below I found one from May 2015.
https://www.furaffinity.net/view/16494401/
https://www.furaffinity.net/view/16494401/
I'm thinking that a lot of urchins and the street beggar class would probably be the biggest source of bodies collected by gnolls. The town guards would probably be unable to identify who many of them are so when they pass away they would be noted in the local record as a death with some notes added such as time of discovery etc. When I played a D&D Gnoll character a few years ago he wasn't above taking the occasional dead body and after the meat was gone used to snack on the bones much in the way we might chew gum.
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