Admittedly have been holding onto this one for a while, just couldn't think of anything to go with it.
This was a nice little gift from my friend GeorgieGanarf over on DeviantArt that he drew of his characters, Baroness Hildegard von Fleischer (AKA "Hilly"), Der Meep, and my Hasin character in his universe, NB Stagg, in a style inspired by the classic works of Osamu Tezuka. Judging by that box NB the buck is holding, I wouldn't be surprised at all if he were going to summon Gigantor at some point!
NB Stagg ©
Hilly, Der Meep, and Art © GeorgieGanarf
This was a nice little gift from my friend GeorgieGanarf over on DeviantArt that he drew of his characters, Baroness Hildegard von Fleischer (AKA "Hilly"), Der Meep, and my Hasin character in his universe, NB Stagg, in a style inspired by the classic works of Osamu Tezuka. Judging by that box NB the buck is holding, I wouldn't be surprised at all if he were going to summon Gigantor at some point!
NB Stagg ©

Hilly, Der Meep, and Art © GeorgieGanarf
Category All / General Furry Art
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 1280px
File Size 174.3 kB
less pedantic note: They may not be the Wonder Three, but they seem like a wonderful three!
more pedantic note: Gigantor / Tetsujin 28-gou was Mitsuteru Yokoyama's
They were born just a few neighborhoods apart, as it happens. A lot of people saw Yokoyama as Tezuka's rival, but he himself was a humble man and didn't even see it that way. (Well, despite some visual humor with his name, where for publishing he replaced a kanji meaning 'bright' with one meaning 'brilliant'.) Tezuka aimed for art and experimentation; Yokoyama saw himself as making what we would call "pulp", and stuck to what he knew. That mindset resulted in a 60+ volume series adapting the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, for example.
more pedantic note: Gigantor / Tetsujin 28-gou was Mitsuteru Yokoyama's
They were born just a few neighborhoods apart, as it happens. A lot of people saw Yokoyama as Tezuka's rival, but he himself was a humble man and didn't even see it that way. (Well, despite some visual humor with his name, where for publishing he replaced a kanji meaning 'bright' with one meaning 'brilliant'.) Tezuka aimed for art and experimentation; Yokoyama saw himself as making what we would call "pulp", and stuck to what he knew. That mindset resulted in a 60+ volume series adapting the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, for example.
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