we've all seen ferengi rule of acquisition 113 always have sex with the boss weve all had a laugh about it implying ferengi gay sex but you know i didnt expect it to Actually be acknowledged in the book it shows up in. and quark says yikes about it
an initial concept for my partner's D&D character in my campaign. meet Seren Fitzophila (they/them), a tiefling warlock in a highly religious society where selling your soul is punishable by death.
flat colour/tattoo reference on the left, full design on the right.
original reference from the Tiefling Maker picrew by @crowesn below the cut
big fan of this funky lil asteroid, sure hope it doesn't ruin some random guy's life over and over again!
Babe wake up it's time for your bi-yearly reminder you shouldn't read Warrior Cats
watch me never draw a star trek alien the same way twice, but for now this is the Bajoran Recipe™ (modeled by Major Kira)
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(slightly more human-looking version under the Read More: )
Weiterlesen
People honestly portray Tuvok as far too "rolling his eyes, reluctantly going along with Janeway's silly little shenanigans" - he's literally so serious about being right there with her on every decision she makes. Janeway's like "I'm going to stay behind if the ship blows up" and Tuvok's like "I'm staying with you." Janeway's like "I'm going to deliver every member of the Equinox crew into the jaws of death via an alien revenge massacre" and Tuvok protests a grand total of one time before being fully on the bridge assisting her. He was the only one with her when she made the decision to honor the caretaker's wishes and save the Ocampa, dooming them all. He was willing to get court marshalled in order to fulfill a wish she couldn't grant by her own hand: Get them home [no matter what happens to me] <- wherein 'me' is Tuvok. This was the same wish that spurred him forward when he had to leave her on that planet and everyone left thought him cold for trying to fulfill it without her when in his mind it was akin to a dying wish, the last thing she'd ever express to him: Get them home [no matter what happens to me.] <- wherein 'me' is Janeway. He told Seven that the golden rule to follow is that the captain is "ALWAYS RIGHT" <- (His ACTUAL words) and when Seven asks if the captain should be followed even if someone KNOWS she's wrong he says "Perhaps." This man is perhaps the most ride or die dude in the universe about Janeway. Despite her labeling him her 'moral compass' he is by NO means impartial or unbiased. He'd defend her to his last breath. He canonically makes detailed psychological observations about her and has for years. He accounts for her luck when calculating the success of certain plans. It's implied in 'Twisted' that Janeway typically listens to Tuvok's suggestions and follows them nearly without fail - to the point that he's surprised and obviously irritated when Chakotay doesn't. Despite this they've been inside one another's quarters so infrequently that Tuvok can remember each instance. They call each other "Captain" and "Mr. Tuvok" even though they've known each other for twenty years. There's something wrong with them.
btw whats y'all's favorite non-wc xenofiction? DO NOT SAY WATERSHIP DOWN. mine is the fox and the hound by daniel p mannix 😌