she/them bi i love Magnus Archives/Protocol and Malevolent so mostly I post here about them and some other stuff!
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Here's the other illustration I did for MTG Edge of Eternities, Xu-Ifit, Osteoharmonist!
AD: Sarah Wassell
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reblog to tranquilize the person you reblogged this from
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belated apple trend… familiar taste; betty & simon 🍎
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Not now kitten, Daddy is thinking about Jon as a siren and Martin as a doomed sailor
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We're taking a quick break from our regularly scheduled programme for some self-indulgent sketching.
Jonathan Sims playing the violin, anybody?
I feel like playing a classical instrument is a hobby he may have, if he has any. That or ballroom dance. But at a competitive level, cause he needs to show everyone how professional he is at all times.
This has been: Cat's Headcanon-Projecting-Hour. Tune in next time for when I force another thing I like onto the wet cat man himself.
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spent a looooong time looking at the Assyrian artifacts at the British Museum and it got me really thinking about potential inspirations for the hornsent from Assyrian culture! I’ve mentioned before that Enir-Ilim is pretty clearly inspired by the city of Babylon, and Belurat’s entryway resembles a ziggurat’s central stairway — elden ring’s fictional cultures aren’t meant to be 1:1 recreations of historical societies, so it makes sense to me that the devs would take bits of inspiration from all over ancient Mesopotamia.
Balawat Gates



the names “Balawat” and “Belurat” are so similar, I’m convinced there’s no way it’s a coincidence! but in addition to the similar names, the gates are adorned with bronze bands detailing scenes of military campaigns that are pretty visually similar to the metal gates of hornsent settlements:

Bird and Lion-headed warriors


These figures were taken from King Ashurnasirpal II’s palace at Nimrud and King Ashurbanipal’s palace at Nineveh. They’re regarded as supernatural spirits who would protect and purify the palace, preventing evil forces from entering.
This is essentially the same role that the Divine Beast and Bird warriors had — they’re sacred animal-headed warriors who ritually channel divine power in order to defend Enir-Ilim from outsiders.


Sacred Tree

The guardian spirits of Assyrian palaces are often depicted alongside a “tree of life” motif. The idea of a sacred spiraled tree is pretty important to hornsent culture as well, and features on stone tablets around Belurat.

Lion Hunt

These reliefs are from King Ashurbanipal’s palace at Nineveh and depict the royal lion hunt, understood as a ritual act that represented the king’s role as a protector, vanquishing forces of danger.

Divine beast heads appear to be actual lion heads that have been turned into theatrical costume heads for the ritual lion dance… I wouldn’t be surprised if there was a similar hornsent tradition of ritually hunting lions to use for the lion dance and to commune with the divine beasts of the heavens. In any case, the importance of the lion in Assyrian culture seems like a pretty likely influence on the hornsent’s culture!
I can’t be 100% sure if all these pieces of art were actually referenced by the devs when creating the hornsent culture, but I think the similarities speak for themselves!
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mag67 but i accidentally made jon more dramatic than he sounded
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is anybody going to talk about how noelle’s mom is hellish combination of all the beta kids guardians
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