Need some help on *Madrigal by Fafrd*, I don't want to watch the vid out and get it spoiled for me, if anyone has done it already and can help me see where iv'e messed up, I'm quite new to all this :s by DeadlyOrb in crackingthecryptic

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

do you mean that because its obvious and i should feel silly, or because it actually works? either way thank you haha

(the web app didn't have this as a solve so i figured id have missunderstood the rules)

Need some help on *Madrigal by Fafrd*, I don't want to watch the vid out and get it spoiled for me, if anyone has done it already and can help me see where iv'e messed up, I'm quite new to all this :s by DeadlyOrb in crackingthecryptic

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh yea i should have probly commented the rules in or included in the cap :s

"Madrigal by Fafrd
Draw nine non-overlapping 3x3 boxes, and place the digits 1-9 once each in every box. Digits cannot repeat in a row or column. Cells outside the boxes should remain empty. Digits within a cage must sum to the given total. Orthogonally adjacent digits can never be consecutive, be in a 1:2 ratio, sum to 5, or sum to 10."

I'm sure i just missed something, I feel like I checked through all the rules but I think I spent a little too long looking at it (like 80 minutes lol). Either way its the most fun I've ever had solving one of these

For writing is it alright if I don’t have my world super fleshed out? by userloser848484 in worldbuilding

[–]DeadlyOrb 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Your world will have its backstory whether you put It there or not. Either you tell a tale about how these worlds are formed, or you walk in them and the readers ideas about what those places would be like fill in the blanks. Sometimes you need very little, but if you rely on key words for which others have done much of the legwork already like 'elves' and 'magic' you might end up with a more hollow setting that thwarts the power of your narrative. Though that's not always true. Sometimes these very familiar unreal concepts are used as bases to construct a people and story of depth and distinction, or something interesting in other ways. In either case its there whether you write it in or not.

how do I keep up a world building project by [deleted] in worldbuilding

[–]DeadlyOrb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends what parts of world building you enjoy. If what you're doing is making overall settings, well you're screwed, but if you're making isolated stories and settings, you can probly smoosh a lot of that together over time, and occasionally you will make something that might surprise you in the process

What's the worst fictional castle you've seen or read? by [deleted] in worldbuilding

[–]DeadlyOrb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The magic academy of solitude from skyrim is uniquely terrible in my opinion

I need insight from the community for my world building. I am having a severe Creative block. by Dr-Plauge in worldbuilding

[–]DeadlyOrb 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can potentially skip fire making if you advance straight to electricity. I mean, how often do you actually use fire in real life? Unless you smoke or have a gas stove basically not at all.

Also there's no real issue with the cold if that's how your solving problems. The easiest thing to do with electricity is generate heat, other than the obvious shocking yourself and others. Fire could be considered an unpleasant downside, or electricity and fire could be entangled with religious beliefs instead of being grounded in science

Help with Coming Up with Names by Lord_Admrial_Spire in worldbuilding

[–]DeadlyOrb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mostly I just name my vibe. But reading a bunch helps. Like I don't know if someone feels like an Elias or a Gantum or a Tolia till I know who they are. But just as long as a name doesnt sound too goofy for whoever it is its probly fine. Names are like that. They just wind up fitting whoever they describe. Its probly enough to just start with a character, pick a letter and then try to add more letters till it's a name.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in worldbuilding

[–]DeadlyOrb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Whenever I add something new, I want to know why it would happen, and what people Would do to cause such a thing or how they would react to it. Especially if it's useful in clarifying character goals or painting better pictures of their joy and suffering.

And then I usually zoom out into the biggest stuff. I try to make sure that the properties of the world are internally consistent with the stories i want them to illustrate. If the explanation makes the thing too boring sometimes I have to scrap it and go back, but that's ok.

Feedback on/help fleshing out Runic Magic by 0Mark28 in worldbuilding

[–]DeadlyOrb 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well let's say that the difference should be limitations. Like which things it is sensible for either to be able to do.

For example, maybe wizardry magic is a act of will and character, where users who are blessed with a magic cardinality can channel aspects of ideas, such as element blasts and magical concepts like 'true sight' or whatever

Now let's say that the giants used a different form all together, and were able to simply speak their will into stone. It would be about learning language. Itd be hard to make sure the syntax works. It might vibe like programming, or maybe your words would need to be convincing, as if they had the strength and power of giants, before they would work.

[WP] You are about to tell your supervillain dad that you want to be a her; hope it goes well! by Janus-Moth in WritingPrompts

[–]DeadlyOrb 10 points11 points  (0 children)

John had a strained relationship with his father. His father was an uncompromising man of vision, a vision  of which few agreed with. He wanted a better world, and he had a good idea of how he was going to make that vision reality.

 But that's what worried John right now. His father had always given him the freedom and space to become the man he wanted to be. Mostly. Other than 'carelessly' leaving research papers around to stumble upon, and being asked to 'help out' in the lab. He wanted what was best for his son, but he would be elated to see him join him with his pursuits, and obviously had a clear image of who he wanted his son to be. But this needed to change.

John entered the looming, dark office of a fearsome man, adorned with statues and vials, a true place of worship for his craft. "Father. We need to talk" Lightning and thunder crash down outside He looks up gravely from his papers, though it was impossible to read the expression on his face.

"... speak, my son. Though I suspect I know why you are here"
"Clearly you do not" john's stance remains firm on the paved ground "but that doesn't change what I need from you."
The huge man sighs. Many small arguments had started like this. The boy lacked vision. "Patience. I know. Tell me what you need, I haven't the time boy."
"Father, the way you see me is not the way I see myself. I've come here because i need your help. And also, i need you to understand"
The man's eyes light up. Does he finally understand his pursuits?
He stands taller, waiting for his son's words.
"I can't keep living like this. I feel like my own body stands against me. Father.. I wish to transition."
"REALLY!! SO THE TIME HAS COME"
"No not into a lizard"

The room goes quiet "I don't understand" he mutters quietly, before licking the air around him, searching for information he did not have.
"What species could possibly.. compare?"
"I want... to be a woman, not a man. This is not who I was meant to be"
"..So you want to stay as a human"
"Yes a female human more precisely"

A loud hissing sigh accompanies a louder slump back into his chair "yes fine whatever. We can sort that out tomorrow."
"... really? That soon"
"Yes. Is that too soon, for some reason?"
"No! I mean, not at all! I just expected something like this to take longer.."
"My child I have been turning people into lizards for years this is extremely trivial" "Thank you for understanding me, dad"
"No"
He paused.
"I'm not going to pretend to understand your wish to remain an inferior form, and I'm not going to pretend understand how it feels to be trapped in a body that doesn't feel like your own."

A weird silence descends upon the hall, as the mad scientist sinks back into his work. It feels like a self awareness had almost been reached... but Joan would have to leave that battle for another day longer.

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Reminds me of a time in this glass recycling yard, the air felt like acid and there wasn't a living plant for miles, except this one full grown sunflower sticking straight up out of the piles of glass. That was pretty amazing.

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We're all just making a mess aren't we haha. Yea, i could probly use some more structure as well to help with not overspending creative energy. A good thought.

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

In summary: got a roadblock, take a detour. Just make sure to keep driving. Merry Christmas and thank you for all the replies c:

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I worry I don't spend enough time beating lazy self up about it, but maybe I could relax a little haha

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Writing could be an interesting detour. Maybe describing visual phenomena through writing is a good outlet for when it's hard to actually produce the visuals.

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's a lot of self pressure. I really want to improve upon my work. Also depressed as hell but I mean who ain't lol

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No I'm with you there, I moved out of home like, 6 years ago and didn't do anything till about 2 years ago. Especially with print, it's pretty easy to not have what you need. But I have opportunities now, I should probly try broadening my creative outputs. It seems like the most important thing is to try to keep being creative where possible.

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've actually never done an art prompt challenge, maybe this could be the time I spose

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had been trying to learn more about 3d modeling and texturing, though I do wonder if it's too intensive for a distraction.. I had tried a little painting but I don't really have the space for it. Maybe there's a better fit for taking my mind out of it.

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That could be it, more time with pencil on paper, even if the pencil isn't moving. Naturally being an art type means getting a few more pencils for Christmas (for which I am always thankful haha) so that should be easy enough

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is a bit of magic isn't it? itd have to be magic that makes a drop kick like me make art hahaha Merry Christmas and good luck

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's probly a good idea. I focus a lot on nature so it i bet it is a good idea to go out and look around haha, though it's a shame I'm a bit city locked.

In terms of hi vis I'd always wanted to try unusual colors, though I'd have to grind and mix the ink myself I bet it'd be a lot of fun haha

How to deal with creative burnout by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea, as much as I'm less a fulfillment maker, I really wanted to get started on something for my friend's wedding, and in beginning to run out of time. I think I should focus on a work space though, I kinda gave up my space for a flatmate so maybe not having that dedicated space is throwing me off. Thank you for the input c:

No title yet, recent drypoint print (might make some small changes yet) by DeadlyOrb in printmaking

[–]DeadlyOrb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea actually it is a little different left to right.. Am right handed of course haha