tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5877873840763228001.post4994454670108729790..comments2024-03-13T05:54:27.719-07:00Comments on Rob Heinsoo: Tarrasque at BayRob Heinsoohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06577746024668857179noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5877873840763228001.post-69959342264664976472013-05-31T19:05:48.803-07:002013-05-31T19:05:48.803-07:00I think there should be room for every type of beh...I think there should be room for every type of behemoth, often in the same campaign. Yours is great. I love the notion that your Behemoth might have more to do with the hostility of something like the Iron Sea than the nature of the High Druid. <br /><br />I *think* we'll be making these two that are about to pound the tarrasque a bit more distinct from each other, but then again I am the scribbler and not the artist, so we'll see what we see in the final. Rob Heinsoohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06577746024668857179noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5877873840763228001.post-88482945328005735512013-05-31T17:43:34.737-07:002013-05-31T17:43:34.737-07:00I was definitely a fan of the ambiguously defined ...I was definitely a fan of the ambiguously defined Behemoths. Designing the one that I drew was half the fun of that image. <br /><br />I remembered one of them was described as enjoying swimming so I ended up creating an almost lobster-like design: big, alien and built like a tank with massive pockets of swirling life energy to power it.<br /><br />So rather than being a moving forest my Behemoth was more of an avatar of life and the sea, emerging from the ocean to find a new home on land. As such I like to think it wasn't so easy for the High druid to make habitable for her followers.Pyradoxhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05717967153137493329noreply@blogger.com