Man, please just let us get a Planescape book in that style again.![]()
I used to think a PS book would have to include his art, but the past is past. 5e can and will do its own thing.Not sure that's even possible. Yes Diterlizzi can be commissioned for a few pieces, but not the whole book; he's explained before how when doing Plescape, he was making art constantly and it wasn't a healthy pace. I don't think he'd want to be the sole artist on a new book release again.
And if the other artists are trying to mimic Tony, they're pieces would suffer... you can't beat the OG at this style!
So it'd be great to have a new Planescape book, with new pieces by Diterlizzi, but it shouldn't be the only style... otherwise it would probably suffer in quality.
One of the things I miss about older editions of D&D was how different artists did so much to differentiate the different worlds of play. The art in "Van Richtens" is more or less the same as that in "Tashas" or "Xanathars" - "Van Richtens" isn't a Ravenloft product, it's a D&D product that happens to take place in Ravenloft. I'm sure it would be the same for "Shemeshka's Guide to the Wheel", or whatever we call a theoretical "Planescape" book.Yes Diterlizzi can be commissioned for a few pieces, but not the whole book
I read that book in Middle School! I loved his giant Tardigrade art!I read The Search for Wondla to my daughter years back, and particularly liked his art in that. For instance:
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His website is pretty great, by the way; full of stuff to look at, read, listen to, and watch.
wait, I'm confused--didn't you downvote him in that thread?I wanted him in my final 2. Unfortunately politics got in the way.
Love his stuff though.
I did, because Frank Frazetta was being unjustly targeted.wait, I'm confused--didn't you downvote him in that thread?