My 2 covers for the TTRPG Blood Neon. Original game above and the upcoming Atomic Shock expansion below.
Click pics to know more!
112 notes
·
View notes
Making Christmas EXTRA sparkly … just discovered Liberace’s 1954 Christmas album is on Spotify.
101 notes
·
View notes
Happy Wednesday! YAY!! I’m so excited for you! I hope you have the most amazing time! Also, as someone who spent roughly 14 years with a marine biology special interest, I absolutely did not notice that you didn’t include the names of fish so you are so good haha. I’ve really been enjoying the aquarium scenes in baby Jean! I spent years watching documentaries about aquariums/aquarium construction/marine biology and begging for trips the the aquarium any time we were close to one. The little aquatic theme to baby Jean so far has been so fun for me!
When you have some time, could I please get some baby Jean? I hope you and your dogs are staying warm!! 🤍🤍🤍
prev | Baby Jean | WW 18.1.2024
Jean fought the urge to cry as he looked around himself for any hint of his family. Instead, he was surrounded by strangers. He leaned back against the glass of the exhibit and sat down, cradling his chin in his hands.
MASTERPOST
4 notes
·
View notes
A continuation from this drawing: https://www.tumblr.com/atomra/718241825351221248/yeah-idk-neuro-has-a-constant-grip-on-me-and-atom
I have absolutely no self control when it comes to neuro
9 notes
·
View notes
like jesus okay i’m basically anti war & certainly anti iraq & afghanistan and so i’m like 100% biased but this sort of television just. doesn’t make the military come off in any sort of good light. when television can’t come up with halfway decent justification for this shit that even me, as someone’s whose just studied law at the undergraduate level, can pick apart, it’s pretty pathetic. there are not justifications for war crimes & given both invasions were big fat war crimes, any sort of justification on television comes across as weak willed & pathetic.
1 note
·
View note
Robert Brode, one of the American physicists who had studied in Göttingen twenty years before, tried to describe his own feelings and those of some of his companions at Los Alamos at that time in the following terms:
We were naturally shocked by the effect our weapon had produced, and in particular because the bomb had not been aimed, as we had assumed, specifically at the military establishments in Hiroshima, but dropped in the centre of the town. But if I am to tell the whole truth I must confess that our relief was really greater than our horror. For at last our families and friends in other cities and countries knew why we had disappeared for years on end. They had now realized that we, too, had been doing our duty. Finally we ourselves also learned that our work had not been in vain. Speaking for myself, I can say that I had no feelings of guilt.
"Brighter than a Thousand Suns: A Personal History of the Atomic Scientists" - Robert Jungk, translated by James Cleugh
0 notes
Surely so great a shock would induce the committee to plead, at this eleventh hour, for a remission of the death sentence passed upon the prospective victims of the first atomic bombardment ever planned.
"Brighter than a Thousand Suns: A Personal History of the Atomic Scientists" - Robert Jungk, translated by James Cleugh
0 notes