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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
guardian-of-soho eunyisadoran
sammininoofthelord

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Remembrance


Today is Día de Muertos in Mexico and I like to imagine that Aziraphale & Crowley would put an altar for all the friends they've made on the way. It would be a very big, very full altar indeed


Hoy es Día de Muertos en Mexico

Me gusta creer que Aziraphale & Crowley pondrían un altar por todos los amigos que han hecho a lo largo del camino. Sería un altar bastante grande y repleto


This is also for all the people we've lost this year


Esto también es por todas las personas que hemos perdido este año

guardian-of-soho sparklypurplerock

grim-fr asked:

Do you know how to write a character that is smarter than you? idk if that makes sense but like... if I wanted there to be witty character in my story, when I'm not a very witty person myself. Or someone who was just exceedingly wise. I don't have a whole lot of wisdom.

neil-gaiman answered:

You don’t. But you have time. Witty people say funny things on the spur of the moment. You have ages to think of the perfect thing for them to say. Brilliant people caught in a trap can think fast and come up with a plan to escape. You as the writer have all the time you need – and you can design the trap in a way that allows them to get free from it in the first place.

And you have the whole of knowledge at your fingertips… you can research the thing that they just happen to know.

You don’t have to write the wisest person in the world. They just have to be the wisest person that the reader has encountered right then…

oldschoolfrp
Adventuring party vs dungeon door (Iain McCaig, White Dwarf 52, April 1984) So many details to discover in this – faces carved everywhere, the lit candle on the hat, the symmetry of the dragon statue and the familiar, runes on the staff and sleeve,...

Adventuring party vs dungeon door (Iain McCaig, White Dwarf 52, April 1984)  So many details to discover in this – faces carved everywhere, the lit candle on the hat, the symmetry of the dragon statue and the familiar, runes on the staff and sleeve, and the thief’s knit cap pulled down over the tips of his elven ears like Spock in “The City on the Edge of Forever.”  That same thief in the same clothes can be seen on McCaig’s cover for WD 26, Aug/Sept 1981 (the detail that positively ID’d the artist for me here).  That could be the same party in both pics, but I believe the thief was the sole survivor of the earlier attempt to steal the dragon’s eggs.

D&D Dungeons & Dragons Iain McCaig dungeon White Dwarf dungeon door adventuring party wizard thief rogue dwarf fighter dnd Dungeons and Dragons Games Workshop GW