Omg I'm so excited, this seems like it's going to be very adventury and I can't wait
The Intrepid Heroes return for a new season of Dimension 20, arriving on Dropout starting June 4th!
Prepare to go upward, skyward - nay, Cloudward Ho! ☁️
I might've added the BG3 Art Book to my dnd assets stash
It' 100% does not have things like the 5e players' handbook + 5e’s character sheet, several gm guides, critical role's explorer's guide to wildmount, baldur's gate and waterdeep city encounters, 101 potions and their effects, volo's guide to monsters, both of xanathar's guides, a bunch of other encounters, one shots, and class builds
In no way are there any pdf’s relating to any wizard who may or may not be residing on any coast
(Edit that I’ve moved the folder to the new link above! So if you catch a different version of this post that link won’t work anymore!)
academic dishonesty is not something you can spin as moral lol i do not want to share a career field let alone a social sphere with a bunch of chatgpt using ass bitches
oh boy i sure do love having tons of trinkets
the nefarious dust particle:
And this two faced bitch is seeing twice as many stars as usual
guest house (Old English) ⚜ hostry (1377) ⚜ harbergery; host (1382)
hostel (c.1384) ⚜ hostelry (c.1386) ⚜ harbergage; inn (c.1400)
hostelar (1424) ⚜ host-house (1570) ⚜ fondaco (1599)
auberge; sporting house (1615) ⚜ albergo (1617) ⚜ rancho (1648)
posada (1652) ⚜ public house (1655) ⚜ inn-house (1694)
livery tavern (1787) ⚜ roadhouse (1806) ⚜ meson (1817)
tambo (1830) ⚜ gasthaus (1834) ⚜ estalagem (1835)
locanda (1838) ⚜ temperance inn (c.1849) ⚜ sala (1871)
bush-inn (1881) ⚜ ryokan (1914) ⚜ pousada (1949)
B and B (abbreviation for "Bed and Breakfast") (1961)
hotel (1687) ⚜ hotel garni (1744) ⚜ lodge (c.1817) ⚜ gasthof (1832)
temperance house (1833) ⚜ temperance hotel (1837)
railway hotel (1839) ⚜ parador (1845) ⚜ palace hotel (1870)
metropole (1890) ⚜ Ritz (1900) ⚜ Trust House (1903) ⚜ motel (1925)
residential (1940) ⚜ welfare hotel (1952) ⚜ botel (1956) ⚜ floatel (1959)
The turning point in the first category above is around 1600.
Before then, there were relatively few words for a traveller’s lodging, and they form a close-knit etymological community.
The later decades of the 16th century saw a great increase in travel from England to the continent of Europe, during periods of relative peace. Some of it was motivated by the need to avoid religious persecution in England. Some was for cultural reasons.
Travelling theatre companies brought their plays abroad, and the wealthy made cultural visits, especially to France and Italy – forerunners of the ‘Grand Tour’ which would become a major part of the European social scene during and after the late 17th century.
By the 20th century, with travel becoming so much easier, we see words coming from further afield, as English becomes established as a global language
Source ⚜ More: Word Lists ⚜ Notes & References ⚜ Historical Thesaurus
I don’t know why that affected me so strongly, but I’m watching a youtube video on disasters on Lake Huron, and the first one involves a coal freighter that was lost in the White Hurricane of 1913 called the SS Argus. Everyone on the ship was lost. But it’s mentioned that the captain’s body washed up later, and was found without a life jacket. So they thought, based partly on testimony of another ship that thought they saw them go down, that it just happened too fast for him to have time to get his jacket. But then another body was found, that of the second cook, and she was found wearing the life jacket marked ‘captain’. And that’s …
It didn’t work. It didn’t save her. But it’s so very possible that he spent his last moments alive trying to save someone else, one of his crew, and they probably both knew that it wouldn’t work, that there wasn’t a lot of hope in a blizzard on the lakes in November, but he tried … he tried anyway. Even if it did nothing but maybe make her body easier for her family to find.
You know that Mr Rogers thing of ‘look for the helpers’? How many times has someone, facing the end, done something tiny and fragile and maybe hopeless just to try and help someone else? Whether it works or not. How many people went to their graves at least trying?
That has to say something about us. As a people. As monstrous as we sometimes (perhaps often) are, so many times we were also …
Whoever saves one life, saves the whole world.
And sometimes you can’t save one life, sometimes it doesn’t work, sometimes there’s no getting out of this for anyone, but … try anyway. Because it matters anyway.
And maybe no one will ever know. But maybe also some day more than a century down the line, maybe some idiot will be crying into her coffee because of what you died trying.
This is so great and impressive!!
Ive linked all the important information/comics below
(If anyone wants to make fanart of the characters or your own in this au or even cosplay, you have my permission. Plz tag me!!)
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
Gale & Astarion Character Sheet
Gales Bandages
Whole Party Character Designs
Horsies
The Flayers
Companions Summaries
Astarions Backstory
Dame Aylin, Cazador Szarr, Bhaal details.
Ketheric, Gortash, Orin, Raphael.
The Gith
The Gur
Astarions chronic pain + Saddle
Gales Sickness Stage Progression
How Gale Treats His Sickness
Companion Fighting Styles
are we not feeling very pious today, brother lionel
Why the fuck does "womanizer" mean what it does, that shit sounds like the name of an instant sex change ray gun invented by some guy who has beef with a platypus.