RepresentingEnvy
En-Chan Queen Vampy!
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2022
- Messages
- 5,616
- Points
- 233
UOOH! This shitty brat!awsthetics that are obviously being thrown off by impractical and highly unasthetic uses of excessive frills.
UOOH! This shitty brat!awsthetics that are obviously being thrown off by impractical and highly unasthetic uses of excessive frills.
the best thing is obviously the song that come with it.
the best thing is obviously the song that come with it.
I have ptsd just looking at this
They say you can't hear music from a picture.
I would like a fluffy staff that summons magic foxes.
You could dust off some special moves and leave your enemies in the dust with that.
Magical dustYou could dust off some special moves and leave your enemies in the dust with that.
it looks weak because it's weak. But you don't need strong to kill vampiresHmm, it looks pretty weak. Like maybe it can only kill a New-Blood?
2nd one from right.
It's kinda like how the brain just naturally perceives food arrangements that have 5 or more distinct (natural) colors as more appealing. This is because these different colors often means a broader and healthier nutritional balance.
In the same way, the brain precieves weapons as more appealing if they are practically designed, and frills that get in the way of practical use are percieved as being ugly and off-putting.
That's not to say there can't be any frills. If you'll look to my Igarot ax-staff example, there are cut-outs and etchings all over it. Those can be regarded as frills. Except in that case, they are all planned out such that none of them interfere with it's practical use.
When you love magic, but love throwing hands moreI think you'd really like the Igorot wing-staff/ax I had designed then. The entire purpose of it is that it can easily be interpreted as a staff by any onlooker, but in reality it's actually a double bit pole-ax, and as someone who's into HEMA I also made sure it was completely combat practical as well.
It was actually the product of a few conversations with the artist that all the magical gems got moved to the center line of the double-purpose weapon. Couldn't have things like that on the business end of the ax, had to keep them at the center line so they wouldn't get in the way or risk getting damaged.
Sensing a pattern here. It's the simplistic designs without the clearly impractical frills that are getting the higher ratings.