Sooo I just started using Scratch in high school, but I already knew how to use it as I've used it various times before. So, after finishing the block the teacher gave us(really just making a character ask your name), I got bored as hell and decided to make an extremely bad copy of Doki Doki Literature Club(which I've never played before) with the characters in the game. And so, I have Giga and Tera but who else can I put? I was gonna put Nano but their gender confuses me
u/BABYMETALISTA
So I wanted to buy a Candy plush and I saw most of them have her hair down. I was wondering if I could put it back into the buns once it's done?...
Hello there! I'm Do•Ki, I'm a young girl who really likes to draw, and I'm planning on making a manga about magical girls/boys against AI. At first it was gonna be just a traditional artist, digital artist and one who paints(painter???? Sorry english isn't my first language) but then I rememberd there are various ways of art. And so, here I am!
(For a bit more of context, they're magical girls/boys(mostly girls for now, I can't exactly draw boys without them all being femboys) who make art and fight AI generated magical girls/boys who try to pass as real artists, but they have to identify them first so they don't accidentally fight one of their own.)
Character design is a complicated thing, at least for me. And while I want them to be a clear, obvious representation, I also want people to be able to feel identified by them. At first I was doing an idol and realized I was going the wrong way, because I feel that's too excluding. Too specific. But I'm not just writing all this to tell y'all I almost exclude a lot of musicians with putting simply an idol and saying "yeah that's a representation of music". I'm here to ask you, if y'all have anything in mind that can make you feel identified or represented in some way in a character design.
If you've read this much and/or commented something, anything, then thank you very much!!