For those of you who don't give a damn: Here is a wolf man and a wolf with fiery things.
For those of you who do give a damn (None of you, I know): This is a rendering of Karoteigh, one of the characters in an ongoing tabletop roleplaying series I run. He's a shaman, and that wolf is one of his bound spirits named Feghwen.
For those of you who do give a damn (None of you, I know): This is a rendering of Karoteigh, one of the characters in an ongoing tabletop roleplaying series I run. He's a shaman, and that wolf is one of his bound spirits named Feghwen.
Category All / General Furry Art
Species Wolf
Size 903 x 1280px
File Size 796 kB
Certianly ((_^ always delighted to share.
Spirits, in that world, are representative entities. Every object, emotion, place... everything but mortal creatures has an associated spirit (Mortals have spirits too: their souls which stay firmly in their bodies). So, with that established... the spirits have complex heirarchies, lesser spirits being aspects of higher, more general spirits (For example, Feghwen is an aspect of the higher Wolf spirit). this was in part inspired by White Wolf's Exalted game.
So, a summoner can form pacts with these spirits, allowing him to call the bound spirit to his side, and ask its help (in battle, or for other tasks in which a spirit's abilities may be useful). If the task is similar to the spirit's own motives, it will usually oblige without fuss. Elsewise it may been to be appeased with a favor in return (it it's something well removed from the terms of the pact) or refuse if it is in direct contradiction to its nature.
I hope that was the answer you sought, else just scold me and I'll try to explain further.
Spirits, in that world, are representative entities. Every object, emotion, place... everything but mortal creatures has an associated spirit (Mortals have spirits too: their souls which stay firmly in their bodies). So, with that established... the spirits have complex heirarchies, lesser spirits being aspects of higher, more general spirits (For example, Feghwen is an aspect of the higher Wolf spirit). this was in part inspired by White Wolf's Exalted game.
So, a summoner can form pacts with these spirits, allowing him to call the bound spirit to his side, and ask its help (in battle, or for other tasks in which a spirit's abilities may be useful). If the task is similar to the spirit's own motives, it will usually oblige without fuss. Elsewise it may been to be appeased with a favor in return (it it's something well removed from the terms of the pact) or refuse if it is in direct contradiction to its nature.
I hope that was the answer you sought, else just scold me and I'll try to explain further.
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