It is a really great picture. It comes from concept art by Tim Collier posted on the Reaper Miniature page. For reasons unknown to me, the picture in question is no longer linked from that page, but it's obviously still there. I colored and edited it for my own purposes.Hafrogman - That picture you're using for Tristan is awesome! Where did you find it? That chest symbol reminds me of Erdrick's symbol in Dragon Warrior. Also, maybe you could post that picture in Tristan's wiki page (not a bad idea for anyone with a pic, actually).
If it's hosted somewhere else you can use the image tagHey,
How do I put an image in a post?
I've got a sketch of Palindrome in all his--er--averageness. But I don't know how to stick it on the page.
Thanks.
I think Graf was planning on judging the Captain's Caper, since at the time it started he was the only judge not playing in it. Dunamin has since come on, though.
If need be I could take on judging either, I suppose. However, when skimming through feedback on Ere's adventure I caught sight of a comment which was about to reference something from the Closed Eye. So I stopped reading since I'm playing in that adventure (pretty much insta-closed all windows by instinct).And don't forget E13's game which is coming online.
From the brief outline it sounds great, Halford! Would be nice to see some applied principles for the gods in the setting.Well I now have Brudd attempting to write the Bible of Hadeys, which he calls "A Guide to the Proper and Profitable Worship of Hadeys", and contains such useful and instructional information as a beginner's guide to money lending, how to be a respectful tomb robber, and a treatize upon gambling as well as fables and tales of the god and his exemplars. Of course this will not be finished anytime soon, but might be an interesting plot device later on. I have also added a slight spin to the tale of how Hadeys acquired Obolus - the black coin. This need not be the definitive version of course.
The gist is that the bet between Hadeys and Vulkar was that Hadeys could not procure a single gift for Peresefa(sp?) which was both finite and potentially eternal, and which had infinite potential. Vulkar bet his prized hammer Sky Thunder and Hadeys bet his wife Peresefa - he is the god of gambling afterall - Hadeys gave Peresefa the Shadar-Kai, a race being a single thing with each member being finite, but the race itself potentially eternal.
Hadeys won the bet, but angered Peresefa. A distraught Vulkar was forced to put a part of his essense the crafting of Obolus, which he exchanged for Sky Thunder.