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Crw0

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Greetings, dear traveler?
I am pleased to present to your attention the next chapter of the adventures of the ill-fated Sisters, Roses and the people around them!
And hope you enjoy it.
And why I wish you a pleasant viewing. ^_^


 

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Your feedback, comments and ideas are always welcome. ^_^
And may the force serve you well ?

 

26 Comments


Recommended Comments



Awesome Story!

And those color combos!

Hermaeus Mora vs Sanguine ?

That's like Pornhub against Shokushu Goukan (with books tho^^) ?

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41 minutes ago, donttouchmethere said:

Awesome Story!

And those color combos!

Hermaeus Mora vs Sanguine ?

That's like Pornhub against Shokushu Goukan (with books tho^^) ?

Yay! Thanks:D
I always try to make them colorful ^_^ And in this chapter, the contrast between pink (closer to purple) and toxic green is the main idea, as you notice ^_^
Shokushu Goukan? 

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8 minutes ago, Crw said:

Shokushu Goukan? 

I had to google that myself, I feared I'm the only one that doesn't know what that is ?

 

Shokushu Goukan = Tentacle erotica

 

Now I can't decide what side to take in your story ??

Again, well done ?

Link to comment

:O..... Oh! Nice! Looks like Herma Mora repoed her powers. :sweat_smile: She's done for now returning to her normal state.?The girls won't know till it's too late. :O

Link to comment
1 hour ago, Jayomms said:

:O..... Oh! Nice! Looks like Herma Mora repoed her powers. :sweat_smile: She's done for now returning to her normal state.?The girls won't know till it's too late. :O

Thanks ^_^ Oh yes, but we're not done with her yet ^_^

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Damn! Really great entry. The action was well shot and exciting and the stakes coming up in the end were intense! I love how these have been ending lately. There's solid conclusion with a bit of mystery for what's coming. Excellent!

Link to comment
3 hours ago, Crw said:

Thanks ^_^ Oh yes, but we're not done with her yet ^_^

I was hoping you say that :D More sexy time YAY!!! :love: I really like her character and with that hairstyle she's easily my favorite villain or villain turned ally if possible ;):thumbsup: 

Link to comment
6 minutes ago, Collygon said:

Damn! Really great entry. The action was well shot and exciting and the stakes coming up in the end were intense! I love how these have been ending lately. There's solid conclusion with a bit of mystery for what's coming. Excellent!

Indeed ;):thumbsup:

Link to comment
6 hours ago, Collygon said:

Damn! Really great entry. The action was well shot and exciting and the stakes coming up in the end were intense! I love how these have been ending lately. There's solid conclusion with a bit of mystery for what's coming. Excellent!

Many thanks, Collygon! ^_^ I myself really like how it looks, especially some badass Hella looks in some shots ^_^ Tho I feel that some stuff should be improved. For some reason I never see it, until I post it -_-

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6 hours ago, Jayomms said:

I was hoping you say that :D More sexy time YAY!!! :love: I really like her character and with that hairstyle she's easily my favorite villain or villain turned ally if possible ;):thumbsup: 

Sure! When did I miss the opportunity for the good ol fun? :D 

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Epic effects and choreography!! And of course super hot ladies! Your blog never ceases to amaze ?

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3 hours ago, WANOBI12 said:

Epic effects and choreography!! And of course super hot ladies! Your blog never ceases to amaze ?

Wow! Did I accidentally performed a secret ritual to summon a great Wanobi?! 

Many thanks! I'm really glad that you alive and back, and really honored that the first thing you do is comment to my blog! ^_^ many thanks once again Wanobi! And glad to read you once again ^_^

Link to comment

Noooooo....that cliffhanger!  But also - YESSS!! That cliffhanger! 

 

Seriously though, I both love and hate it at the same time. ? The whole episode is so action-packed and so wonderfully made and that ending really wasn't something I could foresee which makes it awesome. But on the other hand - I need to know more!!!! ? Hella is obviously extremely knowledgeable but without the protection of Hermaeus Mora I really do not see how she can survive the Pit and not have her psyche/mind damaged. By the looks of it that place is designed to turn anyone into a lust-crazed deviant. ? 

Unless there's a way to harness all that lust and passion and wield it somehow.  Maybe Sanguine was accumulating it there as a sort of weapon, or a power reserve. :classic_ph34r:   So many possibilities!!!

 

Absolutely cannot wait to learn more! Amazing episode! Thank you for sharing it with us. ?

Link to comment
9 hours ago, Devianna said:

Seriously though, I both love and hate it at the same time. ? The whole episode is so action-packed and so wonderfully made and that ending really wasn't something I could foresee which makes it awesome. But on the other hand - I need to know more!!!!

Many thanks, Devianna! Glad if you enjoyed that ^_^ 

And I'm glad that I still manage to intrigue, at least bit ^_^

 

9 hours ago, Devianna said:

By the looks of it that place is designed to turn anyone into a lust-crazed deviant.

 But ofcourse! For what other objective reasons someone might need a place like this! :D

And, speaking honestly, I want to use that absolutely harmless and definitely not dangerous place in my story way more then anyone might imagine :D

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Great work and I agree with what was said in previous comments, top notch effects! Especially the use of different colors for different characters helps a lot with the understanding of those scenes and clearance. 

Also I love the locations you built. :thumbsup:

 

Link to comment

How can I add to what's been said already ? Well... ?

Spoiler

I HAD long since remarked that in matters of conduct it is necessary sometimes to follow opinions known to be uncertain, as if they were not subject to doubt; but, because now I was desirous to devote myself to the search after truth, I considered that I must do just the contrary, and reject as absolutely false every-thing concerning which I could imagine the least doubt to exist. Thus, because our senses sometimes deceive us, I would suppose that nothing is such as they make us to imagine it; and because I was as likely to err as another in reasoning, I rejected as false all the reasons which I had formerly accepted as demonstrative; and finally, considering that all the thoughts we have when awake can come to us also when we sleep without any of them being true, I resolved to feign that everything which had ever entered my mind was no more truth than the illusion of my dreams.

But I observed that, while I was thus resolved to feign that everything was false, I who thought must of necessity be somewhat; and remarking this truth--I think, therefore I am--was so firm and so assured that all the most extravagant suppositions of the sceptics were unable to shake it, I judged that I could unhesitatingly accept it as the first principle of the philosophy I was seeking. I could feign that there was no world, I could not feign that I did not exist. And judged that I might take it as a general rule that the things which we conceive very clearly and very distinctly are all true, and that the only difficulty lies in the way of discerning which those things are that we conceive distinctly. After this, reflecting upon the fact that I doubted, and that consequently my being was not quite perfected (for I saw that to know is a greater perfection than to doubt), I bethought me to inquire whence I had learnt to think of something more perfect than myself; and it was clear to me that this must come from some nature which was in fact more perfect.

 

For other things I could regard as dependencies of my nature if they were real, and if they were not real they might proceed from nothing--that is to say, they might exist in me by way of defect. But it could not be the same with the idea of a being more perfect than my own; for to derive it from nothing was manifestly impossible; and because it is no less repugnant that the more perfect should follow and depend upon the less perfect than that something should come forth out of nothing. I could not derive it from myself. It remained, then, to conclude that it was put into me by a nature truly more perfect than was I and possessing in itself all the perfections of what I could form an idea--in a word, by God. To which I added that, since I knew some perfections which I did not possess, I was not the only being who existed, but that there must of necessity be some other being, more perfect, on whom I depended, and from whom I had acquired all that I possessed; for if I had existed alone and independent of all other, so that I had of myself all this little whereby I participated in the Perfect Being, I should have been able to have in myself all those other qualities which I knew myself to lack, and so to be infinite, eternal, immutable, omniscient, almighty--in fine, to possess all the perfections which I could observe in God.

 

PROPOSING to myself the geometer's subject matter, and then turning again to examine my idea of a Perfect Being, I found that existence was comprehended in that idea just as in the idea of a triangle is comprehended the notion that the sum of its angles is equal to two right angles; and that consequently it is as certain that God, this Perfect Being is or exists, as any geometrical demonstration could be. That there are many who persuade themselves that there is a difficulty in knowing Him is due to the scholastic maxim that there is nothing in the understanding which has not first been in the senses; where the ideas of God and the soul have never been. Than the existence of God all other things, even those which it seems to a man extravagant to doubt, such as his having a body, are less certain. Nor is there any reason sufficient to remove such doubt but such as presupposes the existence of God. From His existence it follows that our ideas or notions, being real things, and coming from God, cannot but be true in so far as they are clear 2and distinct. In so far as they contain falsity, they are confused and obscure, there is in them an element of mere negation (elles participent du neant); that is to say, they are thus confused in us because we ourselves are not all perfect.

 

And it is evident that falsity or imperfection can no more come forth from God than can perfection proceed from nothingness. But, did we not know that all which is in us of the real and the true comes from a perfect and infinite being, however clear and distinct our ideas might be, we should have no reason for assurance that they possessed the final perfection--truth. Reason instructs us that all our ideas must have some foundation of truth, for it could not be that the All-Perfect and the All-True should otherwise have put them into us; and because our reasonings are never so evident or so complete when we sleep as when we wake, although sometimes during sleep our imagination may be more vivid and positive, it also instructs us that such truth as our thoughts have will be in our waking thoughts rather than in our dreams. [WHY I DO NOT PUBLISH 'THE WORLD'] I HAVE always remained firm in my resolve to assume no other principle than that which I have used to demonstrate the existence of God and of the soul, and to receive nothing which did not seem to me clearer and more certain than the demonstrations of the philosophers had seemed before; yet not only have I found means of satisfying myself with regard to the principal difficulties which are usually treated of in philosophy, but also I have remarked certain laws which God has so established in nature, and of which He has implanted such notions in our souls, that we cannot doubt that they are observed in all which happens in the world. The principal truths which flow from these I have tried to unfold in a treatise (On the World, or on Light), which certain considerations prevent me from publishing. This I concluded three years ago, and had begun to revise it for the printer, when I learnt that certain persons to whom I defer had disapproved an opinion on physics published a short time before by a certain person (Galileo, condemned by the Roman Inquisition in 1633), in which opinion I had noticed nothing prejudicial to religion; and this made me fear that there might be some among my opinions in which I was mistaken.

 

I now believe that I ought to continue to write all the things which I judge of importance, but ought in no wise to consent to their publication during my life. For my experience of the objections which might be made forbids me to hope for any profit from them. I have tried both friends and enemies, yet it has seldom happened that they have offered any objection which I had not in some measure foreseen; so that I have never, I may say, found a critic who did not seem to be either less rigorous or less fair-minded than myself. Whereupon I gladly take this opportunity to beg those who shall come after us never to believe that the things which they are told come from me unless I have divulged them myself; and I am in nowise astonished at the extravagances  attributed to those old philosophers whose writings have not come down to us. They were the greatest minds of their time, but have been ill reported. Why, I am sure that the most devoted of those who now follow Aristotle would esteem themselves happy if they had as much knowledge of nature as he had, even on the condition that they should never have more! They are like ivy, which never mounts higher than the trees which support it, and which even comes down again after it has attained their summit. So at least, it seems to me, do they who, not content with knowing all that is explained by their author, would find in him the solution also of many difficulties of which he says nothing, and of which, perhaps, he never thought.

 

Yet their method of philosophising is very convenient for those who have but middling minds, for the obscurity of the distinctions and principles which they employ enables them to speak of all things as boldly as if they had knowledge of them, and sustain all they have to say against the most subtle and skilful without there being any means of convincing them; wherein they seem to me like a blind man who, in order to fight on equal terms with a man who has his sight, invites him into the depths of a cavern. And I may say that it is to their interest that I should abstain from publishing the principles of the philosophy which I employ, for so simple and so evident are they that to publish them would be like opening windows into their caverns and letting in the day.

 

But if they prefer acquaintance with a little truth, and desire to follow a plan like mine, there is no need for me to say to them any more in this discourse than I have already said. For if they are capable of passing beyond what I have done, much rather will they be able to discover for themselves whatever I believe myself to have found out; besides which, the practice which they will acquire in seeking out easy things and thence passing to others which are more difficult, will stead them better than all my instructions. But if some of the matters spoken about at the beginning of the Dioptrics and the Meteors [published with the Discourse on Method] should at first give offence because I have called them 'suppositions,' and have shown no desire to prove them, let the reader have patience to read the whole attentively, and I have hope that he will be satisfied. The time remaining to me I have resolved to employ in trying to acquire some knowledge of nature, such that we may be able to draw from it more certain rules for medicine than those which we possess. And I hereby declare that I shall always hold myself more obliged to those by whose favour I enjoy my leisure undisturbed than I should be to any who should offer me the most esteemed employments in the world

 

more or less...

 

Jokes aside, your added ambient coloring and the daedric lore you keep developing with your characters really combine into a synergic immersive setting for this episode. Even the background add to it. The fight, though not always perfectly clear, felt well brought, impressive and mastered. It simple, if Rose's past confrontation do look like an ObiWan vs Darth Maul, this feels like a Yoda vs Dooku, rule 34 + 33 daedric version. ^^ And the consequences were equally entertaining, with the multiple twists about Hella's nature and torture being slowly unraveled. And, instead of mentioning the decent grammar, I''d like to highlight the relatively constant humor you keep incorporating in your works (such as Sinetica thinking to Abigail ^^).  Very good work, Crw ! :smiley::thumbsup:

 

Malicia : « Rose lives in a very scary place... They all look like they have Chlamydia inside, uh. :classic_angel: »

 

 

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On 7/11/2020 at 2:50 PM, Alter Native said:

Great work and I agree with what was said in previous comments, top notch effects! Especially the use of different colors for different characters helps a lot with the understanding of those scenes and clearance. 

Also I love the locations you built. :thumbsup:

Many thanks Alter Native! Glad that you like it!
And yes, I do not get tired of reminding everyone that you are the one who inspired me to create this! :D

Link to comment
On 7/12/2020 at 2:06 AM, Tirloque said:

How can I add to what's been said already ? Well... ?

  Reveal hidden contents

I HAD long since remarked that in matters of conduct it is necessary sometimes to follow opinions known to be uncertain, as if they were not subject to doubt; but, because now I was desirous to devote myself to the search after truth, I considered that I must do just the contrary, and reject as absolutely false every-thing concerning which I could imagine the least doubt to exist. Thus, because our senses sometimes deceive us, I would suppose that nothing is such as they make us to imagine it; and because I was as likely to err as another in reasoning, I rejected as false all the reasons which I had formerly accepted as demonstrative; and finally, considering that all the thoughts we have when awake can come to us also when we sleep without any of them being true, I resolved to feign that everything which had ever entered my mind was no more truth than the illusion of my dreams.

But I observed that, while I was thus resolved to feign that everything was false, I who thought must of necessity be somewhat; and remarking this truth--I think, therefore I am--was so firm and so assured that all the most extravagant suppositions of the sceptics were unable to shake it, I judged that I could unhesitatingly accept it as the first principle of the philosophy I was seeking. I could feign that there was no world, I could not feign that I did not exist. And judged that I might take it as a general rule that the things which we conceive very clearly and very distinctly are all true, and that the only difficulty lies in the way of discerning which those things are that we conceive distinctly. After this, reflecting upon the fact that I doubted, and that consequently my being was not quite perfected (for I saw that to know is a greater perfection than to doubt), I bethought me to inquire whence I had learnt to think of something more perfect than myself; and it was clear to me that this must come from some nature which was in fact more perfect.

 

For other things I could regard as dependencies of my nature if they were real, and if they were not real they might proceed from nothing--that is to say, they might exist in me by way of defect. But it could not be the same with the idea of a being more perfect than my own; for to derive it from nothing was manifestly impossible; and because it is no less repugnant that the more perfect should follow and depend upon the less perfect than that something should come forth out of nothing. I could not derive it from myself. It remained, then, to conclude that it was put into me by a nature truly more perfect than was I and possessing in itself all the perfections of what I could form an idea--in a word, by God. To which I added that, since I knew some perfections which I did not possess, I was not the only being who existed, but that there must of necessity be some other being, more perfect, on whom I depended, and from whom I had acquired all that I possessed; for if I had existed alone and independent of all other, so that I had of myself all this little whereby I participated in the Perfect Being, I should have been able to have in myself all those other qualities which I knew myself to lack, and so to be infinite, eternal, immutable, omniscient, almighty--in fine, to possess all the perfections which I could observe in God.

 

PROPOSING to myself the geometer's subject matter, and then turning again to examine my idea of a Perfect Being, I found that existence was comprehended in that idea just as in the idea of a triangle is comprehended the notion that the sum of its angles is equal to two right angles; and that consequently it is as certain that God, this Perfect Being is or exists, as any geometrical demonstration could be. That there are many who persuade themselves that there is a difficulty in knowing Him is due to the scholastic maxim that there is nothing in the understanding which has not first been in the senses; where the ideas of God and the soul have never been. Than the existence of God all other things, even those which it seems to a man extravagant to doubt, such as his having a body, are less certain. Nor is there any reason sufficient to remove such doubt but such as presupposes the existence of God. From His existence it follows that our ideas or notions, being real things, and coming from God, cannot but be true in so far as they are clear 2and distinct. In so far as they contain falsity, they are confused and obscure, there is in them an element of mere negation (elles participent du neant); that is to say, they are thus confused in us because we ourselves are not all perfect.

 

And it is evident that falsity or imperfection can no more come forth from God than can perfection proceed from nothingness. But, did we not know that all which is in us of the real and the true comes from a perfect and infinite being, however clear and distinct our ideas might be, we should have no reason for assurance that they possessed the final perfection--truth. Reason instructs us that all our ideas must have some foundation of truth, for it could not be that the All-Perfect and the All-True should otherwise have put them into us; and because our reasonings are never so evident or so complete when we sleep as when we wake, although sometimes during sleep our imagination may be more vivid and positive, it also instructs us that such truth as our thoughts have will be in our waking thoughts rather than in our dreams. [WHY I DO NOT PUBLISH 'THE WORLD'] I HAVE always remained firm in my resolve to assume no other principle than that which I have used to demonstrate the existence of God and of the soul, and to receive nothing which did not seem to me clearer and more certain than the demonstrations of the philosophers had seemed before; yet not only have I found means of satisfying myself with regard to the principal difficulties which are usually treated of in philosophy, but also I have remarked certain laws which God has so established in nature, and of which He has implanted such notions in our souls, that we cannot doubt that they are observed in all which happens in the world. The principal truths which flow from these I have tried to unfold in a treatise (On the World, or on Light), which certain considerations prevent me from publishing. This I concluded three years ago, and had begun to revise it for the printer, when I learnt that certain persons to whom I defer had disapproved an opinion on physics published a short time before by a certain person (Galileo, condemned by the Roman Inquisition in 1633), in which opinion I had noticed nothing prejudicial to religion; and this made me fear that there might be some among my opinions in which I was mistaken.

 

I now believe that I ought to continue to write all the things which I judge of importance, but ought in no wise to consent to their publication during my life. For my experience of the objections which might be made forbids me to hope for any profit from them. I have tried both friends and enemies, yet it has seldom happened that they have offered any objection which I had not in some measure foreseen; so that I have never, I may say, found a critic who did not seem to be either less rigorous or less fair-minded than myself. Whereupon I gladly take this opportunity to beg those who shall come after us never to believe that the things which they are told come from me unless I have divulged them myself; and I am in nowise astonished at the extravagances  attributed to those old philosophers whose writings have not come down to us. They were the greatest minds of their time, but have been ill reported. Why, I am sure that the most devoted of those who now follow Aristotle would esteem themselves happy if they had as much knowledge of nature as he had, even on the condition that they should never have more! They are like ivy, which never mounts higher than the trees which support it, and which even comes down again after it has attained their summit. So at least, it seems to me, do they who, not content with knowing all that is explained by their author, would find in him the solution also of many difficulties of which he says nothing, and of which, perhaps, he never thought.

 

Yet their method of philosophising is very convenient for those who have but middling minds, for the obscurity of the distinctions and principles which they employ enables them to speak of all things as boldly as if they had knowledge of them, and sustain all they have to say against the most subtle and skilful without there being any means of convincing them; wherein they seem to me like a blind man who, in order to fight on equal terms with a man who has his sight, invites him into the depths of a cavern. And I may say that it is to their interest that I should abstain from publishing the principles of the philosophy which I employ, for so simple and so evident are they that to publish them would be like opening windows into their caverns and letting in the day.

 

But if they prefer acquaintance with a little truth, and desire to follow a plan like mine, there is no need for me to say to them any more in this discourse than I have already said. For if they are capable of passing beyond what I have done, much rather will they be able to discover for themselves whatever I believe myself to have found out; besides which, the practice which they will acquire in seeking out easy things and thence passing to others which are more difficult, will stead them better than all my instructions. But if some of the matters spoken about at the beginning of the Dioptrics and the Meteors [published with the Discourse on Method] should at first give offence because I have called them 'suppositions,' and have shown no desire to prove them, let the reader have patience to read the whole attentively, and I have hope that he will be satisfied. The time remaining to me I have resolved to employ in trying to acquire some knowledge of nature, such that we may be able to draw from it more certain rules for medicine than those which we possess. And I hereby declare that I shall always hold myself more obliged to those by whose favour I enjoy my leisure undisturbed than I should be to any who should offer me the most esteemed employments in the world

 

more or less...

 

I did it. He even outlined a couple of extremely useful (as it seems to me) verbal constructions.
 

On 7/12/2020 at 2:06 AM, Tirloque said:

Jokes aside, your added ambient coloring and the daedric lore you keep developing with your characters really combine into a synergic immersive setting for this episode. Even the background add to it. The fight, though not always perfectly clear, felt well brought, impressive and mastered. It simple, if Rose's past confrontation do look like an ObiWan vs Darth Maul, this feels like a Yoda vs Dooku, rule 34 + 33 daedric version. ^^ And the consequences were equally entertaining, with the multiple twists about Hella's nature and torture being slowly unraveled. And, instead of mentioning the decent grammar, I''d like to highlight the relatively constant humor you keep incorporating in your works (such as Sinetica thinking to Abigail ^^).  Very good work, Crw ! :smiley::thumbsup:

Wow! Thank you very much for your positive assessment and for comparison with Star Wars! I understand what you mean, but still very nice ^_^
Additionally, I did some analysis and realized that depending on the segment of the Internet, various interpretations of the "rules" may occur.
Here are the ones I found.

Spoiler

1) One positive comment about Japan and you are a wap-kun.
2) Lurk more — it's never enough.
3) Rule 1: Do not talk about rules 2-33.


To Malicia: 
latest?cb=20150115044552 « I've been looking for you. Got something I'm supposed to deliver - your hands only. Lets see... »

 

Spoiler

Inv.thumb.png.b47712a7470180a365e44bc6cf03aea4.png

 

Link to comment
5 hours ago, Crw said:

I did it. He even outlined a couple of extremely useful (as it seems to me) verbal constructions.
 

Wow! Thank you very much for your positive assessment and for comparison with Star Wars! I understand what you mean, but still very nice ^_^
Additionally, I did some analysis and realized that depending on the segment of the Internet, various interpretations of the "rules" may occur.
Here are the ones I found.

  Reveal hidden contents

1) One positive comment about Japan and you are a wap-kun.
2) Lurk more — it's never enough.
3) Rule 1: Do not talk about rules 2-33.

 

Well if you like Descartes no wonder your characters have a good philosophy. :D

 

And kudos for that message for Malicia, that's as awesome as unexpected. ^^

5 hours ago, Crw said:

To Malicia: 

 

latest?cb=20150115044552 « I've been looking for you. Got something I'm supposed to deliver - your hands only. Lets see... »

 

  Hide contents

Inv.thumb.png.b47712a7470180a365e44bc6cf03aea4.png

 

Malicia : « Ooh, I'm cordially invited somewhere by people who know my name. Ooh. That's very pleasing, yes. :classic_happy:

 

              I'd like very much too see Rose, yes, but all the gals at the place she's in look very diseased right now. But I keep the invitation, yes. :classic_lightbulb:

 

              Thanks you, Mr Crw. ?  »

 

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Stunning work with the special effects and lighting ?. This shot:

 

Spoiler

1.jpg

 

Has such a cool feel to it with the DOF and the lighting from the windows, super cool.

 

Unfortunately quite a few images aren't loading for me right now so I'll try to come back and read the actual plot later when big chunks aren't missing ?

Link to comment
On 8/27/2020 at 3:15 AM, SpyVsPie said:

Stunning work with the special effects and lighting ?. This shot:

 

  Reveal hidden contents

1.jpg

 

Has such a cool feel to it with the DOF and the lighting from the windows, super cool.

Yay, thanks ^_^ Glad if you like it ^_^

17 hours ago, SpyVsPie said:

All working this morning. Oh my the pit sounds interesting ?

Love it when a problem fixes itself. :D 

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