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#dinosaur rpg
jorgeburgos8 · 2 months
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When the mountains were nothing more than rocks in the sand, the Eoraptor was already walking towards battle. With millions of years of experience it is ready for anything
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shadefish · 3 months
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March Of Robots Lancer Edition
Day 7
Ceratopsian Minotaur
ooo cool links for you to click on to support me
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therobotmonster · 1 year
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DinoFolk Character Tokens, Part 2 (pt 1 is here)
Another 10 Dinosaur-Folk tokens I made for the D&D game I’m playing in, to fill out the world that Albert Sauros, Noted Spiritualist, comes from. In this case a world of Victorian Dinosaurs. This set of character tokens was made with Midjourney v4.
In your game/head, they can be any fancy reptile-humanoids you like!  Use them for character portraits, game tokens, inspiration for a new PC (or OC) or tag yourself, as you like.
While these are all modified with cleanup and compositing, these are all free to use for anyone who wants to, thus I have not signed these pieces to make things easier.
Prompt format:
a <either dinosaur or specific species>-anthro <profession>, 18th century clothing (or other descriptor), character design, white background, fantasy character art, colored line art, in the style of 1st edition D&D, <artist/style references>
For style references I wound up mostly with a Tony Diterlizzi/Norman Rockwell mashup.
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2minutetabletop · 9 months
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The Monster Bone Map Assets
Just one of these monster bones assets will reshape a battle map, and we’ve got over 200! What sort of encounter do they inspire, GM? :)
→ Download them here!
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deepdreamnights · 1 year
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DinoFolk Character Tokens, Part 4 (pt 1, pt 2, pt 3)
the last 10 Dinosaur-Folk tokens I made for the D&D game I’m playing in, to fill out the world that Albert Sauros, Noted Spiritualist, comes from. In this case a world of Victorian Dinosaurs, this set being mostly maid staff and professors from the University. This set of character tokens was made with Midjourney v4.
In your game/head, they can be any fancy reptile-humanoids you like!  Use them for character portraits, game tokens, inspiration for a new PC (or OC) or tag yourself, as you like.
While  these are all modified with cleanup and compositing, these are all free  to use for anyone who wants to, thus I have not signed these pieces to  make things easier.
You can download all 40 here.
Prompt format:
a  <either dinosaur or specific species>-anthro <profession>,  18th century clothing (or other descriptor), character design, white  background, fantasy character art, colored line art, in the style of 1st  edition D&D, <artist/style references>
For style references I wound up mostly with a Tony Diterlizzi/Norman Rockwell mashup.
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demi-shoggoth · 3 months
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2024 Reading Log, pt 2
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006. Gardening Can Be Murder by Marta McDowell. I honestly thought that this book was going to be about something else. With the subtitle “how poisonous plants, sinister shovels and grim gardens have inspired mystery writers”, I thought it was going to be about, you know, that. True crime themed to gardens, discussions of poisonous plants, that sort of thing. The book is actually about the mystery books that have gardening as a theme. And while the author’s dedication to not spoiling anything (seriously, anything, even 150 year old stories like The Moonstone or “Rappacini’s Daughter”) is admirable in its own way, this leaves the book feeling like endless buildup without any payoff. Big fans of murder mysteries might enjoy this—especially the last chapter, which interviews writers about their gardens—but I found it more boring than anything else, and finished it only because it was very short.
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007. Antimony, Gold and Jupiter’s Wolf by Peter Wothers. This book is about how the elements got their names, and most of it deals with the early modern period, as alchemy transitioned to chemistry and then into the 19th century, when chemistry was a real science, but things like atomic theory were not yet understood. The book goes into fascinating detail, and has a lot of quotes from primary sources, as scientists then were just like scientists now, that is, opinionated and bickering with each other over their preferred explanations. And names! Many of the splits between elements and their symbols (like Na for sodium) are due to compromise attempts to appease two different factions with their preferred names. A book covering arcane minutia of history always has the risk of feeling like a slog, but this is a fast and fun read.
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008. Doctor Dhrolin’s Dictionary of Dinosaurs by Nathan T Barling and Michael O’Sullivan, illustrations by Mark P Witton. This book is an odd concept, but one that I was immediately on board with—a D&D book written by paleontologists with the intention of bringing accurate and interesting stats for prehistoric reptiles to the game. The fact that it’s mostly illustrated by Mark Witton definitely clinched my backing that Kickstarter. And this book is a lot of fun. So much so, that I read it all in a single sitting. I don’t know how accurate the stats are (like, a Hatzegopteryx has a higher CR than titanosaurs or T. rexes), but they seem like they’d be fun in play, and the writing does a good job of combining fantasy fun with actual education. Even for someone not running a 5e game, the stuff on how to run animals as not killing machines, and the mutation tables, could be useful. There are multiple types of playable dinosaurs, all of which seem like they’d work well at the table and avoid typical stereotypes, and a lot of in-jokes and pop culture references (like the cursed staff of unspared expense, which looks like Hammond’s cane in the Jurassic Park movie).
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009. Romaine Wasn’t Built in a Day by Judith Tschann. I’m a sucker for books about etymology. And this one, on food etymology, is a pretty breezy read. I had fun with it, and it even busted some misconceptions that I had, etymologically speaking. Like, there’s no evidence that “bloody” as an explicative originated from “God’s blood”? Wild. Etymology books tend to be written in a sort of stream-of-consciousness style, where talking about one word may lead down a garden path to the next one. The book also has a couple of little matching quizzes, which is something I haven’t seen in a book since like the 90s.
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010. The Lives of Octopuses and their Relatives by Danna Staaf. I was previously a little disappointed in The Lives of Beetles, another book in this series, but I knew I liked Staaf, who wrote the excellent book Squid Empire about cephalopod evolution and paleontology. I’m pleased to report that this book is also excellent. Staaf takes the “lives” part seriously, and the book is arranged by ecology, looking at different marine habitats, the challenges that they pose to living things, and the cephalopods that live there. Cuttlefish get slightly short shrift in this book compared to squids and octopuses, but that’s about the biggest complaint I had. I like how the species profiles cover more obscure taxa, and information about the best studied (like Pacific giant octopus and Humboldt squid) is kept to the chapters.
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viperpitsfilly · 5 months
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(👉Went thrift shopping the other day and found these old movies that peaked my interest. Anyone else seen them before? 👈 )
(👉 Can't find a childhood favorite you've been looking for? Let the thrift store know and I'm sure they'll search it for you 👈 )
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videogamepolls · 1 month
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Requested by anon
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probablyevilrpgideas · 7 months
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World that is full of steamy jungles and grassy plains, the major races are mostly saurians, with one or two small mammalian ones. Very ancient aesthetic, but otherwise a pretty typical D&D setting, just with a focus on non-metal materials for equipment.
The party is contacted by a druid who has foreseen a great calamity that covers the sky and will kill all but a dubiously fortunate few who will envy the dead.
Through the course of the quest, the party learns that it's a plot by a warlock who wants to overthrow the existing order and reshape the world such that their kind--one of the small mammalian races--rules the world.
Then they learn that the form of this plot is a mighty meteorite from the sky, seeped in fell energies that will destroy civilization's works and degenerate the people to mere beasts.
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jorgeburgos8 · 16 days
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Pteranodon is the undisputed master of the skies, flying through even the most intense storms and then commanding the winds to attack with all the fury of the skies.
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wormdramafever · 3 months
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Character designer Lucie Viatge's ArtStation shows content that was cut from Goodbye Volcano High. During the "Legends & Lore" segments, fights were going to be shown in the style of classic JRPGs like Final Fantasy.
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makenna-made-this · 9 months
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8Bit leghorn coming for your toes now with 100% more head flopper action
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shadefish · 2 months
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March Of Robots Lancer Edition
Bonus Day 32
Carnosaur Barbarossa
ooo cool links for you to click on to support me
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brettneufeld · 5 months
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Dinosaur Dragons. Commission work for Samurai Sheepdog.
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therobotmonster · 1 year
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DinoFolk Character Tokens, Part 3 (pt 1, pt 2)
Another 10 Dinosaur-Folk tokens I made for the D&D game I’m playing in, to fill out the world that Albert Sauros, Noted Spiritualist, comes from. In this case a world of Victorian Dinosaurs, this set being mostly professors from the University. This set of character tokens was made with Midjourney v4.
In your game/head, they can be any fancy reptile-humanoids you like!  Use them for character portraits, game tokens, inspiration for a new PC (or OC) or tag yourself, as you like.
While  these are all modified with cleanup and compositing, these are all free  to use for anyone who wants to, thus I have not signed these pieces to  make things easier.
Prompt format:
a  <either dinosaur or specific species>-anthro <profession>,  18th century clothing (or other descriptor), character design, white  background, fantasy character art, colored line art, in the style of 1st  edition D&D, <artist/style references>
For style references I wound up mostly with a Tony Diterlizzi/Norman Rockwell mashup.
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troythecatfish · 2 months
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youtube
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