myrastuff:Drew this last year and started colouring it, but it’s becoming pretty clear that co
myrastuff:Drew this last year and started colouring it, but it’s becoming pretty clear that colouring isn’t going to get finished so I may as well post the lineart.Dr Hex commits crimes based more on vibes than practicality or malevolence. Any vague interest and I will tell the rest of the blimp story. By popular demand (aka like two people expressing vague interest), the blimp story: - Hex unleashes her blimp while local hero Starsong is out of town, because superheroes ruin everything fun.- The blimp game goes like this: the first person to reach the blimp’s controls gets to keep the blimp, full and legal. In her news-hijacking announcement, Dr. Hex highlights that an average blimp sells for several tens of millions of dollars, and this one is far from average.- The blimp will remain in the air throughout the challenge, and features a number of Mad Science defensive capabilities.- Chaos ensues. Individual citizens and organized groups try to catch the blimp. Someone builds a crude human catapult.- Starsong catches wind of this via social media, where people are having a field day. She cuts her trip short to fly home and solve the blimp situation.- Evading the defenses to reach the controls and confront Hex, Starsong also wins the blimp game and is legally the blimp’s new owner. Cue confetti, a little live-streamed reaction video, an annoyed superhero.- Hex argues the blimp was a social good. It kept all the criminally minded organizations busy, so no one noticed Starsong was out of town and tried anything more serious.- It’s a hard sell, but not completely wrong.- Starsong donates the blimp to charity. It runs aerial city tours ($49.95 per adult, $24.99 per child, family and group rates available) with proceeds benefiting the local children’s hospital. City natives still refer to it as The Evil Blimp. -- source link