Hi!
We're about to depart on a well deserved holiday down south for a week where I suspect we shall be catching up with some relaxation, reading and perusing of National Trust properties as well as peeking into the odd bookshop but before I trundle off, I thought I'd post a bit of randomness to get the inspiration going.
Over the last couple of years I've become fascinated by the odd moss covered and decaying tree stumps that we often pass while out walking and have begun photographing them as they're oddly beautiful.
Beyond their odd beauty, I find myself pondering their similarity to the South American Tepui or tabletop mountains that Professor Challenger explored in the Lost World but in a much smaller scale.
Some of the tiny but lush vegetation looks surprisingly like trees and it gets me to pondering creating some sort of setting where a once mighty forest of unimaginable scale has been reduced to a wasteland with the stumps of once mighty trees thrusting up from the surrounding desolation.
Small settlements of beings could inhabit them, creating tiny fortifications to protect themselves from the creeping beasties that live on the ground level and gliders, airships or even insects could be used to travel between them. Possibly some of the closer ones could have great bridges build between them and tiny fields that are hidden in the secluded interiors could provide inhabitants with their daily needs.
Now I need a new project like I need a hole in the head, especially as there is absolutely no way I can reasonably recreate the cliff like landscapes and outcrops, I doubt I'll do much more than keep taking snaps of these strange little outcroppings and musing on what tiny civilisations could live on such things.
What a great idea! Maybe try to do it at 2 or 3mm scale so that the stumps would not have to be to big on the table? Or just make them a few inches/centimeters thick and only model the tops of the stumps and the intervening terrain, not the rises?
ReplyDeleteProbably easiest as an RPG.
Have a great holiday.
Hi!
DeleteI've spent much of the last week pondering on the same thing!
I think I'm going to end up doing a 28mm skirmish ala Trench Crusade with heavily converted figures to represent groups of adventurers exploring the forest floor.
A RPG based mini campaign is going to be my go to using 28mm and Brutalquest as a basis of the rules which will allow me to focus on building a small party and throwing them against all manner of beasties.
I'm also pondering doing a more grand scale affair in micro scale but need to ponder upon how I'm going to do it!
There's a very large "stump" in my neighborhood, perhaps 10 feet high, that's every bit as gorgeous and interesting. I think about fairy-folk every time I pass by.
ReplyDeleteGreat setting idea! That's a proper tree of life / world tree.
Thanks for the comments!
DeleteWe've been off down south for the week and I've been pretty inspired to flesh out the setting a bit and see where it goes!
All the best!
Wonderful photographs, and a great idea! I remember reading The Carpet People by Terry Pratchett as a child, and thinking it would be a great setting for gaming. There are plenty of manufacturers who do various beetles, ants, spiders etc. but not sure there are any who do woodlice?
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments!
DeleteI remember reading the Carpet People back in the day!
I'm going to be having a rummage to see what I can find suitable for the project and plan on having a bit of fun making scenery for it too!
Evocative!
ReplyDeleteBrings to mind a "Five yards from the hive" sort of game, where each stump is a world into itself and you can have each with their own culture for your exploring bugs/fairies, etc.
Thanks for the comments!
DeleteI've been scribbling away over the course of the week on holiday and have started putting a bit of thought into each culture.
At present I'm planning on starting off with a single stump settlement with a group of intrepid adventurers exploring its surroundings.