This is the most adorable non-bot blank blog I’ve ever seen. People, this is all you need to do to let us know you’re a human if you’re confused.
This is the hardest part, I ever made yet. There were a ton of mistakes in my drawing and this is rushed before. So I was given to my 8th-grade teacher before recognition day but I failed and they were many characters to draw so I couldn't make it. So here's the description:
"Every January to March, the 10th grade advisers will leave for unknown reasons so they hire exchange foreign teachers to keep an eye out their students. Some have mixed results about the exchange foreign teachers, some of them like it, some of them hate it but they'll try something good for their students."
I FORGOT TO POST THIS ON TUMBLR 😰😰
hello dave and bambi community :]
I fell in love with expunged and dave and I ended up drawing a lot of these two funky lads so here’s some drawings i made of them!! Lol
TW: BLOOD AND CHOKING!!!!
(Eye contact warning)
I love the cat game. Drew a funny little meme thing hope u guys enjoy.
Do not repost without permission please😎
Re-blogs are appreciated
Silly cat game my beloved🐚
Goomba Loaf
made some versions of the agony grip for my friends for when the whole gang gets it . including different levels depending on the anguish
and a joyous one for when there is love abound
Here are a handful of quick tips to help you write believable characters!
1. A character’s arc doesn’t need to grow linearly. Your protagonist doesn’t have to go from being weak to strong, shy to confident, or novice to professional in one straight line. It’s more realistic if they mess up their progress on the way and even decline a bit before reaching their goal.
2. Their past affects their present. Make their backstory matter by having their past events shape them into who they are. Growing up with strict parents might lead to a sneaky character, and a bad car accident might leave them fearful of driving.
3. Give reoccurring side characters something that makes them easily recognizable. This could be a scar, a unique hairstyle, an accent, or a location they’re always found at, etc.
4. Make sure their dialogue matches their personality. To make your characters more believable in conversation, give them speech patterns. Does the shy character mumble too low for anyone to ever hear, does the nervous one pace around and make everyone else on edge?
5. Make your characters unpredictable. Real people do unexpected things all the time, and this can make life more exciting. The strict, straight-A student who decides to drink at a party. The pristine princess who likes to visit the muddy farm animals. When character’s decide to do things spontaneously or in the heat of the moment, it can create amazing twists and turns.
6. Give even your minor character’s a motive. This isn’t to say that all your characters need deep, intricate motives. However, every character should need or want something, and their actions should reflect that. What’s the motive behind a side character who follows your protagonist on their adventure? Perhaps they’ve always had dreams of leaving their small village or they want to protect your protagonist because of secret feelings.
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