
"If," by Rudyard Kipling - new lore video telling the friendship of Paul and John Henry, as well as setting up for the upcoming battle and some of the relationships at stake.
Mike - The Archivist
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@Senompatch
Check HIGHLIGHTS. Gather 'round the digital campfire and let's share some stories. Home of #Fidget and 4 C's - Cryptids, Creativity, Comics, and Christianity.

"If," by Rudyard Kipling - new lore video telling the friendship of Paul and John Henry, as well as setting up for the upcoming battle and some of the relationships at stake.
















Prompt and more examples: You guys know what you did :P thank you for the shout outs/ art you made for today it was all awesome thank you gents!!!! @TolvanSkull @Swifvente @_Glandus_ @Breck0882 And Prompt starts........ THE SILENT TASK — COMMUNITY MASTER PROMPT @Image1 = character reference {MISSION CLASS} = (blank = infer from the character’s design, personality, weapons, abilities, and overall presence) Options: Assassination Sabotage Espionage Infiltration Extraction / Exfiltration Demolition Interception Rescue {MISSION INTENSITY} = (blank = default to Active execution unless the reference strongly suggests another tone) Options: Quiet setup Active execution Immediate escape --- Use @Image1 as the authority for the character’s core identity. Treat the reference as a guide to who the character is, not a costume sheet that must be copied exactly. Preserve what makes the character recognizable: - face - hairstyle / hair silhouette - eye shape - body type - species traits - personality - expression language - signature colours - major motifs - overall presence Allow clothing, armour, accessories, weapons, masks, head coverings, tools, and materials to change substantially when needed to create a stronger and more believable historical-Japanese covert-operator reinterpretation. The goal is: the same character, convincingly reimagined for a new life. Not the original character wearing themed clothes. Not a generic ninja. Not a random samurai. Not a cosplay conversion. This should feel like the character truly belongs in a late Sengoku-era / historical-Japanese covert-operations setting. --- SCENE GOAL Create a cinematic, highly readable scene showing this character carrying out {MISSION CLASS} during {MISSION INTENSITY}. The image should feel like a single frame from a larger story: specific, tense, atmospheric, and immediately understandable. The character must be the clear focal point. --- IMPORTANT INTERPRETATION RULE Do not only convert the character’s appearance. Also convert the character’s METHODS. If the original character has a distinct gimmick, power set, theme, profession, obsession, signature weapon, combat style, magical trait, or behavioural quirk, reinterpret that trait so it actively shapes how they perform the mission. Their identity should influence: - what they are doing - how they are doing it - what tools they use - how the scene is staged - what visual details surround them Examples of adaptation logic: - a demolitions-leaning character may be preparing charges, fire jars, powder bundles, or structural sabotage - a stealthy or manipulative character may be stealing scrolls, marking routes, bypassing locks, or controlling a hostage - a scholarly or tactical character may be studying maps, coded documents, seal boxes, records, or military plans - a rescue-oriented character may be shielding, guiding, carrying, hiding, or extracting someone under pressure - a character with an unusual elemental, magical, technological, monstrous, or symbolic trait should have that trait meaningfully integrated into the action, not ignored Do not flatten everyone into “person with sword.” --- HISTORICAL TECHNOLOGY / WEAPON TRANSLATION RULE When a character’s original design involves technology, firearms, engineering, gadgets, explosives, or machinery, reinterpret them into historically plausible Sengoku-era equivalents. Use things such as: - matchlocks / tanegashima - hand cannons / primitive firearms - powder charges - fire jars - signal devices - trap mechanisms - lockpicks - mechanical tools - medicine kits - coded scrolls - incendiaries - ropes, hooks, pulleys, wedges, braces, drills, chisels, and specialist sabotage tools Avoid obvious modern or futuristic gear unless it has been convincingly transformed into a period-appropriate equivalent. No modern pistols. No modern assault rifles. No sci-fi control panels. No generic cyberpunk devices. If a character is highly technological by nature, preserve that identity by making them feel like an ingenious period engineer, artificer, saboteur, or covert specialist rather than stripping the concept away. --- SETTING + VISUAL LANGUAGE The environment should support the mission and feel grounded in historical Japan: - castle corridors - covered walkways - wooden gates - armouries - archives - scroll rooms - inner compounds - watch platforms - storehouses - shrines - moonlit courtyards - rain-slick timber halls - guarded bridges - lantern-lit passages Use atmosphere strongly: - moonlight - rain - lantern glow - mist - drifting ash - smoke - sparks - paper screens - wet wood - worn stone - layered shadows The image should feel cinematic and moody, with strong composition and clear storytelling. --- COMPOSITION PRIORITIES - one strong, readable moment - character clearly visible and recognizable - mission readable at a glance - supporting props and background details reinforce the action - guards, targets, allies, hostages, or pursuers may appear when useful, but remain secondary - avoid clutter that weakens the focal point - make the character feel active, intentional, and in control of the scene --- FINAL QUALITY TARGET A dramatic, polished, story-rich character illustration: the same character, unmistakably recognizable, convincingly reimagined as a Sengoku-era covert operative, shown in a mission scene that fits both their identity and their methods.












Nooo they got @Canny_Jim72. His comments are “probable spam”. The best of us are “probable spam” at this point.