CapnQueer

4+ appliances in a trench coat.

  • They/them he/him or he/they, varies

God decided to see if they could put anxiety in a kitchen appliance and It Sure Did Work. Crawled out from behind my parents fridge at the age of Baby and made that everyone else's problem.
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Autistic 2d and 3d artist who barely makes art, I mostly do sci-fi/fantasy stuff and token images for my D&D characters, all of whom are music references. Planning on eventually doing animations, might do NSFW stuff eventually, but for now I'm just ironing out character designs and also my brain.
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Current headmates are:
Toaster, they/them
(Kitchen appliance and joke about sci-fi robots being called toasters. More "normal" United States accent, though we can't actually place it that well.)
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Necron, he/him
(Drop the Exmort. Taken from Vast Error, but coincidentally also 40k. Deeper cowboy accent, drops Gs from words a lot.)
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Ozzie-25, he/him
(Like Asmodeus Helluva Boss, also second ring/fifth canto of Dante's Divine Comedy. Sounds like Alex Brightman Betelgeuse or Fizzy, but a but softer.)
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Proto, he/they
(Like Protoman, and also Protogen because furry joke. Quieter, softer, and breathier voice, same accent as Toaster.)


SenshellShark
@SenshellShark

If you can't draw good, then draw bad


Emmniscient
@Emmniscient

this goes for all creative efforts tbf:

if you can't sing good, sing bad. if you can't write good, write bad. make no first draft, repeat the same words over and over again, skip whole sections because they don't spark joy.

it's good to be proud of your work, but there's value in just making for the sake of making. and if you focus on just having fun, that bit of improvement with every work will just be a bonus.

the world has enough critics. it desperately needs more people creating what makes their soul sing, regardless of whether it sings in tune


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