View allAll Photos Tagged bugbear

This room had two Bugbears in it. They were asleep and in the same bed when the Rolloff the Dwarf burst the door down with his break door roll of 1 on a D6. Classic D&D with smashing a door down on some unsuspecting Bugbears up to no good. Notice the Bugbears are dead after being caught with their pants down.

  

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reneefrench: Aaaaahhhhhhhhvtsgtdcgddd!!!!!

 

veloshe: I love his facial expression SO MUUUUCH

  

Manufacturer: Otherworld

Line: DM Series – Dungeon Monsters

Set: DM1b - Bugbear Warriors II

Figure: Bugbear Warrior

Release date: 2008 (March)

Sculptor: Kev Adams

Painter: Spooktalker

Date painted: 2011

Another view of the disc area of the HS200. The discs are not present, allowing the four video head steppers to be seen. Note the round hole for the air inlet at the back of the Perspex cover. Air was constantly blown in the exclude dust, as the video heads rode on a film of air just above the surface of the discs, less than a hair's thickness above. One touch or a dust particle could destroy a disc, which cost several thousand dollars each. Maintenance and disc replacements were a constant bugbear of these machines.

 

The picture was taken in 2006.

 

Negative suspicion is the street photographer's bugbear. Bus terminus bad vibes. Potters Bar, Herts.

Dress made by Goetz for Sasha dolls. Hat by Bravot.

Painting Elephants at the Dublin Castle, London, UK presented by Bug Bear

 

More photos from the gig at j.mp/15t5VPr

 

Gig reviews and more photos at 66james99.blogspot.com

Isle of Skye. Dunvegan Castle, home of the Clan Macleod, parts of which date back to the 12th century. They have a "no photos" policy inside, which is daft, especially considering the steep entry charge of £9.50 each! This is one of my particular bugbears - I can certainly accept a "no flash" rule, but a blanket "no photos" rule is just stupid, and mean. As with the monuments in Egypt, where a similar rule applies, non-flash photos cause no harm, and the operators of these sites would make more money selling relatively cheap "camera licences" for a quid or two, and letting the tourists snap away to their hearts' content.

This is a hard plastic, fantasy miniature, approximately 1/72 scale, that was released as a part of an unpainted set. I got the box of figs as a kid in the early-to-mid 80s from a local toy/hobby store. I carelessly slopped some paint on her in my youth. I cannot for the life of me remember who made these figures, but the set included other warriors and various D&D monsters (an imp, a bugbear, possibly an umber hulk). This "valkyrie" character had a sword in her right hand that has since broken off. Any help in identifying her would be much appreciated.

Adam, playing the druid, plans his next move. The Bugbear Bronk is quickly felled with a swift sling stone to the groin.

My mom bought this adventure for me in 1981 for Christmas along with the basic D&D game, Monster Manual, PHB, and DMG. The adventure featured a really cool lost city, bugbears, mongrelmen, and Yuan Ti.

Dungeons and Dragons

massing of the 18 Tartar armies on the Danube, under the orders of the Mandarin-Engineer-in-Chief.

 

Oh yeah, that other fin-de-siècle bugbear, the Yellow Peril, armed, like Westerners, with fishy airships and disease-gas cannons, only made of bamboo. This war looks like it's gonna be a hot one.

 

And it was, too. Robida did a 36-issue serial about a 20th century East-West world war called "La Guerre Infernale."

This (although with lots and lots of reservations) is my favourite paper BUT I absolutely hate the size of it. Broadsheets are soooooo last century - you need floor space the size of a warehouse to open it up properly. It’s completely impossible to read on trains, buses or the tube. So don’t even try. Paradoxically they do the bestest tiniest listings magazine ever - the Guide.

 

It wouldn't be so bad if they didn't know it themselves and so compromise by having all the other separate sections inside the main part -tabloid sized. (Proving they can do it - easily and do so very well actually.) But they insist on keeping/classifying it as a ‘broadsheet’ merely because it’s generally perceived that tabloids are downmarket -rags that only the plebs bother with. Can we say ‘middle class snobbery’? Oh yes we can.

 

My other bugbear about it is all these specialist sections you get lumbered with and so have to lug home - even though you know they’re going to go straight into the recycling bin unread as soon as possible. I’m NOT interested in any sports, any gardening, any women’s fashions, any motoring, etc. thank you. I often joke with the newsagents that it’s like buying a log - I’m that I’m buying a whole tree in instalments. Then don't get me started on those hundreds of stupid advertising leaflets they stuff the magazines with that only spill out everywhere as soon as you open them...

Ralph is a NPC (Non player character) in a DnD campaign that we are playing. He's a mentally challenged bugbear (a kind of goblinoid) that is neutral good instead of evil. He's a first level ranger and one of the most awesome NPC's we've ever had. Here's some artwork I did of him.

Spied this monstrosity in the sink this morning. I don't normally mind spiders too much but when they're fast I'm not okay with that. This one was a fast little bugbear too, so I just worked around him.

  

Feel free to follow me on Twitter. You stalker.

 

During the Dragul Invasion of Nalos, King Taron’s loyal soldiers throw captured minions into Kulbak Prison, where enchanted gates and Construct guards make escape all but impossible. Once each year, Taron releases the toughest gang of war prisoners into the royal Colosseum.

 

You command a squadron of these captured Dragul. Gather goons and craft contraband to raise your reputation. Keep your suspicion with the guards low while establishing yourself as the most powerful crew in Kulbak. In six short days, Taron may offer you the chance to fight for your freedom.

 

Lockup: A Roll Player Tale is a competitive worker-allocation game for one to five players. In the game, players manage groups of minions -- gnolls, kobolds, bugbears, goblins, or insectoids -- locked up in Kulbak Prison.

 

Each round, players try to keep their suspicion from the guards under control while allocating their crew to different locations within Kulbak. The player with the strongest crew in each location at the end of each round gains the most resources, hires the most powerful crew, and builds the most powerful items, increases their reputation. The player with the highest reputation at the end of six rounds, wins the game.

 

Lockup is a worker placement game set in the Roll Player universe.

 

Play takes place over three phases in each round:

Roll Call - Players take turns placing their minions in different parts of the prison, some face up showing a unit's strength and some face down, hiding the strength from the other players.

Lights Out - Each area with minions is scored based on the strength of each player's crew. Players receive resources and have the opportunity to recruit goons and build items.

Patrol Phase - New resources are placed on the gameboard, and the guards patrol the dungeon. Players with high suspicion are raided, and their chambers are searched.

 

boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/240855/lockup-roll-player-tale

During the Dragul Invasion of Nalos, King Taron’s loyal soldiers throw captured minions into Kulbak Prison, where enchanted gates and Construct guards make escape all but impossible. Once each year, Taron releases the toughest gang of war prisoners into the royal Colosseum.

 

You command a squadron of these captured Dragul. Gather goons and craft contraband to raise your reputation. Keep your suspicion with the guards low while establishing yourself as the most powerful crew in Kulbak. In six short days, Taron may offer you the chance to fight for your freedom.

 

Lockup: A Roll Player Tale is a competitive worker-allocation game for one to five players. In the game, players manage groups of minions -- gnolls, kobolds, bugbears, goblins, or insectoids -- locked up in Kulbak Prison.

 

Each round, players try to keep their suspicion from the guards under control while allocating their crew to different locations within Kulbak. The player with the strongest crew in each location at the end of each round gains the most resources, hires the most powerful crew, and builds the most powerful items, increases their reputation. The player with the highest reputation at the end of six rounds, wins the game.

 

Lockup is a worker placement game set in the Roll Player universe.

 

Play takes place over three phases in each round:

Roll Call - Players take turns placing their minions in different parts of the prison, some face up showing a unit's strength and some face down, hiding the strength from the other players.

Lights Out - Each area with minions is scored based on the strength of each player's crew. Players receive resources and have the opportunity to recruit goons and build items.

Patrol Phase - New resources are placed on the gameboard, and the guards patrol the dungeon. Players with high suspicion are raided, and their chambers are searched.

 

boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/240855/lockup-roll-player-tale

Manufacturer: Otherworld

Line: DM Series – Dungeon Monsters

Set: DM1b - Bugbear Warriors II

Figure: Bugbear Warrior

Release date: 2008 (March)

Sculptor: Kev Adams

Painter: Spooktalker

Date painted: 2011

with Chef Seiji Yamamoto

Sorted by type. From top, left to right:

Kobolds and Goblins, weird humanoids, lizard-types, gnolls and bugbears, spell casters, dwarves and gnomes, elves, warriors, animals, outsiders, elementals, undead, commoners, demons, Orcs, and everything else

With one in ten motorists regularly stressed behind the wheel, research carried out among drivers* revealed what elements would not only calm them, but could also be combined into a 'soother' to reduce stress in the car.

 

Although having a cuppa topped the stress-busting list, it's not practical when you're stuck in traffic jams, being tailgated or feeling rushed**. What is feasible is something that not only doesn't distract, but incorporates a soothing feel, colour and fragrance designed to calm on touch.

 

Research revealed colours such as blue and green, scents such as the ocean and the touch of a soft material like velvet have a calming effect.

 

AXA put these details to a designer who came up with the ultimate in-car 'soother' to tackle stressful drivers. A simple solution being tactile, self-adhesive and fragrant patches that can be stuck on the steering wheel which drivers can press and touch to make them feel calm and help make the car a happier place.

 

*Research carried out by OnePoll in October 2011. 2,000 drivers were surveyed

 

** Top three bugbears for drivers - Traffic jams 53%, being tailgated 43%, feeling

rushed 38%

the webmaster's St. Valentines Day Puppet Monster.

 

working in the puppet studio

 

see more Holistic Forge Works, Latest Inventions & blacksmithing techniques.

...cuz she's a brick... house. Um, and that's El in the background yelling, Mahalo, baby! Mahalo! Sometimes he dresses like a chicken. That should help explain Elliott. ;-)

Isle of Skye. Dunvegan Castle, home of the Clan Macleod, parts of which date back to the 12th century. They have a "no photos" policy inside, which is daft, especially considering the steep entry charge of £9.50 each! This is one of my particular bugbears - I can certainly accept a "no flash" rule, but a blanket "no photos" rule is just stupid, and mean. As with the monuments in Egypt, where a similar rule applies, non-flash photos cause no harm, and the operators of these sites would make more money selling relatively cheap "camera licences" for a quid or two, and letting the tourists snap away to their hearts' content.

mi primer dibujo en tinta china...verolsaices.

James Leary Flood Mansion, 28 October 2012

Ms. Darcy's St. Valentines Day sexy puppet lady looking a bit like Courtney Love

 

working in the puppet studio

 

see more Art by Tacoma's own Ms. Darcy

Don't get me wrong: half the pleasure of an overseas holiday is eating and drinking things you'd never find at home. Nevertheless, the lack of decent tea (and the absence of tea-making facilities in French hotel rooms) is a major bugbear – so a travel kettle and associated requisites contributed greatly to the enjoyment of this year's trip to the French Alps. Balcony of the Hotel Richemond, Chamonix, with the slopes of Mont Blanc in the background.

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