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Dec 2022

Hi everyone, how are you doing these days ? :wave:

I was wondering : what are the universes in Pop Culture that you hold dear, inspire you in life to create things, fuels you with positivity, hope, kindness and had a significant meaning to you when growing up and in your Art journey to this day ? and most importantly : why is it ?

If so, do you have a FanArt you would like to share here ? :slight_smile: :pencil2:

Thank you and have a nice day ! :sparkles:

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    Dec '22
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    Jan '23
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I'm a big fan of Terry Pratchett's diskworld universe, I like the absurdity and creativity, and all of the little jokes that will show up across all of the books, I read them with my dad when I was younger, so they hold a special place in my heart :slight_smile: I do have some fanart of Mr. Teatime from the hogsfather

Oh I did not know Terry Pratchett's work before (but I am pretty sure I heard his name before, he seems to be a reference :sweat_smile:), it makes me want to read his stories ! :smiley: Thank you for sharing your sweet nice memory and your fanart :blush::gift:

I think my big three faves (especially as of ate have bee Sonic the Hedgehog, Sky: Children of the Light and Splatoon and I've got a pretty decent chunk of fanart for al three (Sonic has the most by far tho)

Overall those three have stood out to me for their shared trait of being these really bright, colorful, exciting adventure type stories or games but the lore and world building when you dig into it get like surprisingly dark which I think is interestingly reflective of how life can be as you grow up looking at the world through childish eyes and then growing up and realizing how a lot of things are.

Like Sonic is a franchise I've loved for years and aside from being this cool hero with super speed there's a charm that the characters have in taking care of their world and having these strong values and feeling their emotions and how there's this sort of repeated theme (in some of the older games especially but also recently with Sonic Frontiers) about life and it's brevity and how valuable that is and the need to just be grateful for each moment and "live life to the fullest in the time you have" (SatBK my beloved) it's just very emotional while also being cool and spunky and funny and I love the versatility

Splatoon I adore for being so colorful and fun as this co-op game with silly themes for splatfest but the worlds are rich in details and the lore is unique but still at the core comes back to people connecting regardless of background or origin and accepting that the past can be messy but what matters is coming together to build a better future

Sky really does well I think in going over these phases of life as there's this new strangeness when you first open the game to exploring each sort of phase of life through the form of realms within the game. Reliving the memories of ancient spirits, seeing their struggles and their triumphs and just mundane things both sad and happy and every other emotion on the spectrum as you observe their world as it is now versus the glimpses of how it was in the past and then experiencing this games version of life's end and a unique process of rebirth it's just really breathtaking and I love how well it's score incorporates these things and the player can truly be immersed with such great music and sound design

As for others I'd say there's been moments in different pieces of media and others work that have really captured me though getting into the specifics is a little tough. Like just on Tapas alone stories like Dream Constellation have really grabbed me with visuals that are really impressive but hitting on bits of life tha most readers can relate to or at least empathize with. Ghost Lights which is also a very pretty story but the way it mixes the natural and supernatural is just really captivating especially when one seems to almost literally bleed into the other. Then in more popular media I've loved Into the Spiderverse and it's way of playing with alternate universes, Undertale and Deltarune and it's characters and their personalities and stories and the way their worlds operate both separately and in tandem with one another. The Zelda games tho the only one I've played is Breath of the Wild and only even watched a playthrough of Wind Waker I still enjoy both for this interesting silent protagonist but this interesting land of Hyrule and the conflicts that are faced as well as the underlying theme with duty by way of being this hero throughout time and how the main character responds to that even if it's not addressed directly but more through other characters around him.

I could probably list of more but I think it's something about stories that point out and address things relating to the human condition and all the mess we've done or still do or are still doing or things we feel and experience and it's just interesting how all that can be interpreted from one story to another. I'm also just a sucker for unique or interesting visuals or designs and just generally pretty or colorful things

Regarding fanart here's a couple that I like:


(sonic frontiers screencap redraw)


(undertale scenario with an old self insert)


(this one looks like it has sad context but it's actually two sketches stitched together from another canvas and liked how it looked on a black background which one is a vet player that led me through a trial and another that's just a really dramatic sketch of my moth)


(ENA and Moony fanart(ft Turron) for ENA Day)

that's like it's a lil addendum but i think fanart for me is interesting because for me it means i got that invested into a piece of media or just actually fixating on it long enough that i wanted to add to it in terms of ocs or self inserts or sonas or whatever

I am pure, unapologetic Homestuck trash.

Like... I've been an admin and VA in the team that makes Let's Read Homestuck for over a decade. I also did track art for not just a number of Homestuck fan music Albums...

(This one is off the Beforus album. I also did art on Land of Fans and Music 2 and SBURB OST).

But a couple of official Homestuck music albums too:

(Portrait on volume 9 is listed as a track associated with Roxy by most fan wikis purely because I decided to draw Roxy for the track art. The composer just told me to do whatever! I also did the art for "Train" on Volume 10).

But I've arguably spent more time lending my voice to what some people think of as almost an official part of the series (it's not, of course, Let's Read Homestuck is a totally unofficial fan dub). Sometimes involving talking about magic frogs for like twenty minutes...

...Which I'm happy to do because Kanaya is best girl. I voice the best character. She's a lesbian alien vampire lumberjack fashionista. As soon as I came across her in the story, and the description that she "Enunciates Very Clearly And Carefully" I was like "oh hell yes, I was born to voice this girl." It's always funny when people find my old art tutorial videos or Let's Plays and are there like "WAIT, WTF, IS THAT KANAYA!?" :rofl:

Homestuck for me is a powerful story about self-discovery, and accepting your own personality flaws and that having flaws or just being a massive dork doesn't make you inherently unheroic. It's a story about how profoundly tragic and ridiculous and unfair life can be and yet of finding love and muddling through and winning anyway. It's a story that undermines and ridicules the self-importance of a lot of Sci-fi and Fantasy by being extremely clever, but in a very flippant way as if that's nothing to make a person think they're too great to be ridiculed.

While I am not really a fan of Twilight, I do really like how they did the worldbuilding there. It reminds me of the Romantic Era, which is also my favourite era when it comes to literature. This is mostly because of how they portray the landscapes and weather. Rough weather, nature and a small town.

There are several of them I like, really. There are too many of them to list, but I’ll do my best:

  • Middle Earth

  • Discworld

  • Oz (the books, that is)

  • The HDM multiverse

  • Thra

  • Gormenghast

  • The Roald Dahl-verse

  • Runeterra

More to the point, I like fictional universes that are complex and detailed, but not too complex and detailed that I cannot easily access them. This is because of the fantasy world at the top and my own wish to emulate Tolkien by creating a detailed fantasy world of my very own (which resulted in some aborted attempts) but because of the escapism. I found it hard to absorb the Runeterra lore for a moment due to its game’s misleading title, but once I read the lore, it drew me like a moth to a flame. Others I forgot to mention on the list for that same reason include Redwall, Narnia, Ingary, and the Edge.

Thank you @Aeneas1 :wink: ! Yes there is this common point in the fantasy universes you mentionned.

These are worlds that feels built, enough to be immersed, but without being lost into if the reader does not wish to know more or loose track of the main plot (and at the same time, where the readers/viewers has the freedom to imagine and explore by themselves if they desire to do so and will find many details to dive immerse more into the universe of the story) :smiley:.

It works like invitations to travel and spark curiosity, open doors and free spaces to fill with your own sentisivity and interpretation, which then makes the reader active, invested and in closer connexion to the story :slight_smile:.

I do not know all the stories you listed here, I'll look more into it ! Thank's for making me discover new universes that you enjoyed :blush:

1 month later

closed Jan 26, '23

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