Blue Orange
Gone to Texas
It's a stylized kamayari!Wait a minute, how is that guy using a halberd with a shield!?
It's a stylized kamayari!Wait a minute, how is that guy using a halberd with a shield!?
Wait a minute, how is that guy using a halberd with a shield!?
I mean, I can't be the ONLY ONE who plays the Plasmoids, Harengons, and Owlkin as Monster Girls when it comes to their looks.I wonder if the plasmoids and the harengon were created as a wink for the otaku community.
I know, right? When I saw the elf design I thought "Deedlit!"I knew the Record of the Lodoss War anime was based on a real D&D campaign in Japan but I'm surprised to see just how closely some of the character designs of the show match the style of these player class archetypes.
I don't think so. Otaku, by definition, don't play TTRPGs, particularly not in Japan.I wonder if the plasmoids and the harengon were created as a wink for the otaku community.
Japan tends to have a Beastfolk race which covers most animal niches.I don't think so. Otaku, by definition, don't play TTRPGs, particularly not in Japan.
If you're using otaku as a weird shorthand for "anime fans" (which it should not be used as, they're a distinct category), then I still don't think so, because D&D is still missing catgirls, which are the absolutely key race here, and no Tabaxi do not even slightly count, because they're not kemonomimi.
D&D is really weird about animal-people races, in that it has tons of them, but they're like, not what furries or certain anime fans want (scalies on the other hand that's a whole other discussion). D&D doesn't even have an official dog/wolf-person race is which just kind of wack (esp. given there are entire 3PP supplements, with their own range of expansion-supplements for precisely that).