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Pseudolonewolf — Probably not an Elarna

Published: 2012-07-04 17:34:37 +0000 UTC; Views: 1514; Favourites: 20; Downloads: 20
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Description It's been a long time since I actually tried to do a 'proper drawing' sort of thing, and annoyingly, I don't feel that I've improved in the way I approach it despite several years of learning! So this looks similar to things I did years ago.
Oh well; I suppose *practice* is the most important thing.

When most people design alien characters or races for their settings, I've noticed that they seem to either go with the 'man in a suit' approach, where the aliens have basically human bodies but have certain features here and there exaggerated or altered (big eyes, long arms, savage or tiny mouths, etc), or maybe some people base them on earth animals...

From an early age, it's really bothered me to see bipedal humanoid sentient races from entirely different planets, because it's always made me think 'but they wouldn't evolve to look just like us!'

I understand why people do it though. For one thing, it's a lot more relateable... It's easier to empathise with things that look like us.
Then there are concerns like... how would the creature move? How would it dress itself, or wield tools? Would it wear things at all?
If you've spent a lot time studying real human bodies and tools and clothing, much of that knowledge probably becomes a lot less useful when you're designing some bizarre monstrosity which has little in common with us.

Anyway, the plot of Miasmon takes place on a world that was once home to a race of aliens known as the 'Elarna'... which I've avoided actually designing for months, despite including monsters which are meant to be based on them in some way.

I originally planned to just make them basic 'lizardmen' sorts of aliens, similar to the 'reptoids' from my other games, but I thought maybe it'd be interesting to try and come up with a properly alien design instead...

When designing aliens like this, the details are not my concern... I'm more interested in the general *body plan*, where the limbs go, how many there are, etc.

The world of these Elarna was frigidly cold, and they are adapted to those temperatures. They have skeletons made of ice, for example; their 'feet' are made of these icy 'bones', extending out like horns do in some Earth creatures.

They're asymmetrical. One of their 'heads' is a grasper, seen here wearing a 'gauntlet' used for summoning and controlling monsters.
The other is equipped with sensory organs and a devouring mouth. It also has horns which can be used as a weapon.
Both are attached to the body by very flexible 'necks' which can twist and turn very freely.

Their brain is in the body, not the sensory head.
They have 'bellows' below the folds on their 'chest', which are used to produce sounds for communication; the devouring head isn't used for talking. So it's possible for them to talk and eat at the same time!1

Anyway, I probably won't use this design for the final game. I'll probably come up with something a lot more humanoid instead, which is boring, but massively more practical.

One worry about using something like this is that it's hard to do variation, to make characters with this design as a base. That's a challenge that I can't be bothered worrying about! o_O
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Comments: 5

Eventua [2012-07-08 21:25:25 +0000 UTC]

There are many ways to create variety for these guys!

Aside from differences in skin (scale?) colour and 'bones', the specific shape and positioning of the beak, different eye and sensor colours, position and shape of the 'ripples' on the body, differences and shape and size of the main body (thicker/thinner legs, more/less muscles etc.)

Not easy, but not impossible.

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Michos9 [2012-07-04 18:08:17 +0000 UTC]

Don't forget that having humanlike aliens is much cheaper if they are supposed to appear in a movie, and a lot of SF universes are based on movies. Just slap some facehair or long ears on the actor, and BAM, new alien race.

You've mentioned Elarna have their brains in the body - Tell me, am I the only one, who thinks heads are one of the dumbest 'ideas' of nature? I mean, how on earth did we even evolve them? How is putting the main command center, that the whole body relies on and cannot function without, on a soft, easily breachable pipe outside of the body a good idea? Yeah, I know it probably stimulated evolution, as creatures who couldn't protect the head died, and it allowed faster reactions, but it's still the first thing I would remove from any fictional, advanced aliens.

Okay, why am I even takling about that? Anyway, you're probably not even reading it, and you decided to ignore my comments long time ago, but I really like the design, it's very original, and I think you should stick to it. Bizarre aliens are the future of science fiction. You could put funny human hats on the sensory head for comedic effect. Yes.

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drakina In reply to Michos9 [2012-07-04 20:13:00 +0000 UTC]

I've always wondered that about head, too. And the entire human body is poorly designed, on top of it. We get spinal damage just from standing, knee tissue deteriorates just from walking upright, and while, yes, we have hands, they're very easy to damage as well.

So, hello random stranger, we watch the same person!

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Michos9 In reply to drakina [2012-07-04 20:37:25 +0000 UTC]

Well, human body is not really 'designed' to do half of the things we're doing, and especially not to live how long we are living. When evolution was still working (this is: before we started treating the wounded and healing the sick) it was rare for a man to live past 40, or even 30. It was just <>. While you are right about all those other defects, head still seems to be the biggest. They are all based on wearing off material, while neck and throat are easily one of the weakest points for /all animals/. Get bitten-die. Fall down-break your neck-die. Damage you skull-destroy brain-die. But again, protecting it probably favored individuals who were intelligent enough and had instincts to protect the head. And why we still have a lot of primitive species, who achieved survival perfection long before us.

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drakina In reply to Michos9 [2012-07-04 21:50:34 +0000 UTC]

And here we are, killing off those species and calling them dumb. We should be learning from them! *sigh* But, yeah, the head is the biggest mistake nature made. All the other ones fell into line because the smartest individuals survived.

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