Potions
A large wizard tower topples over.
- The stone walls create a maze to protect the dangerous items/wizard inside.
- Releases beasts, potions, magic, etc.
A large wizard tower topples over.
Dragonship and hammership (Jim Holloway, from “Awash in Phlogiston” by Jeff Grubb, Dragon 153, TSR, January 1990)
DM tip: If your world includes flying ships, magic carpets, flying brooms, rings of flying, levitation potions, and NPCs mounted on pegasi, griffons, and dragons, then the PCs’ first impression of a big city will be focused on all the activity in the air above. The most important government, business, religious, and magical locales may be hubs for this traffic. Also take a tip from Terry Pratchett – unless the magic college is completely invisible, it may be the most noticeable building as flames occasionally belch out of the windows and lightning arcs from the rooftops, and if you watch long enough the tallest tower randomly vanishes and reappears.
Finished! \o/ I actually kind of like it. There are certain areas where I’m kind of ‘meh’, (which I especially see after scanning, oh god what happened to his face) but overall I call it a success, considering I haven’t watercolored in years.
Some fun tidbits I thought of while making this.
-The Phoenix bird, because it is an immortal being, will often choose a person to befriend. This person will become the phoenix’s companion throughout their life.
-The Phoenix is very intelligent, and not to be treated as a pet. While it cannot speak human languages, it does understand.
-The Phoenix is also very very protective, to the point of being possessive. Human companions rarely have other close relationships (or even casual), if the Phoenix does not approve of them.
-Human companions of the Phoenix are given the title The Phoenix Keeper.
Watercolor and Ink on Bristol Paper