#art category dnd

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Studded leather armour for my Yuan-Ti warlock. Instead of going cod medieval I decided to base the a

Studded leather armour for my Yuan-Ti warlock. Instead of going cod medieval I decided to base the armour set off of modern protective leather clothing: cowboy chaps, a motorcycle jacket, and a modern hat, all dyed green

On the back of the jacket is a patch of Sseth, dread god of the snake-peoples


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Redraw of the 3am drawing I made over the weekend, using a Greek statue as a reference Ssistusa the

Redraw of the 3am drawing I made over the weekend, using a Greek statue as a reference

Ssistusa the Yuan-Ti Pureblood archaeologist, from before she became an adventurer. I’m picturing her as a person who’s lead a long and illustrious career and who was satisfied that her apprentices were nearly ready to take over for her, to keep the innovations she brought to her discipline alive…  until disaster struck, her proteges were lost, and now she faces the harsh realisation that she doesn’t have time to train another cohort from scratch to the level she’s reached. Her achievements will die with her, but at least she can get revenge on the creature that destroyed her legacy.


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3am bust of creativity had me gripped with the need to find out what my Yuan-Ti Warlock would be like as a woman instead of a man. Here’s a sketch of her pre-adventure, and one of her donning the first part of her leather armour.

My personal gender stuff means I’m always a bit uncomfortable playing straight up cis-women unless I have an angle for their choice of femme presentation, so I ended up deciding she was a generation older than M!Ssistusiss, removing her a step from our society’s concept of youthful beauty.

As for the clothes, the official DnD art presents Yuan-Ti Pureblood women as dressing in slinky revealing dresses. There’s no reason that would change with age, given that the Yuan-Ti consider the attractive parts of their people to be the snakey parts of their bodies.

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