Big. Pink. Frilly. And a whole lotta bows.
-TB
Big. Pink. Frilly. And a whole lotta bows.
-TB
Her name is Stubs McGee. She’s a goob and we love her.
-TB
It is impossible to get a picture of all of them together but here are four of them being adorable. From left to right: Booker, Mercury, Howl and Ghibli.
I own six ferrets and a Pembroke Welsh Corgi.
What is it?
Cupcake by Nellie McKay
….
MILF $ by Fergie…..
‘All this and heaven too’ by Florence + the Machine
Me likey that.
I actually have plans to make a Linda Wright and the Wriggling Jungle Part 3. I have it mostly written out already. However, before I can do that, I want to do ASPR 2. I’d hate to leave the plot dangling to too long.
I’m probably going to do a Patreon for all of my future comics. It’s proven to be a really good formula for me. People can still purchase the comic in full once it’s done and the public will still get all the preview pages I would normally post but Patreon folks get the pages as soon as I finish them instead of waiting until the whole thing is done. It gives people the option to pay early and get pages early or wait to the end and buy it all at once.
Lets say it’s relegated to animals in the Subphylum Vertebrata.
Not a whole lot yet. I don’t have the game. But giant, muscular, amazonian Gerudo Women are plenty enough to raise my eyebrows.
Well, I wouldn’t exactly agree with your initial statement there. There are some alien species that could definitely be considered Furry. Furry is, after all, just a stand-in word for the more technical ‘Anthropomorphic’ which, by definition, is any non-human thing to which we apply human traits. I realize that furries tend to reserve that word for living creatures that have human traits but if a fictional alien has humanoid traits, would that not still be some kind of humanization? M’ress would be an easy example of an alien that shares both human and animal traits.
As for xenomorphs, that actually does get a little tricky. Facehuggers are outright not furries at all. They’re completely alien. However, when a facehugger mates with a species, the resulting spawn shares traits of both the xenomorph and the host species. If that initial host were human (which is what we predominantly see in the films) what we see could actually be considered furry as it is the application of human traits to another non-human creature. Thus why they start out spidery egg sacks but then develop into bipedal, two-armed creatures with limbs, head and tail all in the same configuration as humans.
And yes, I can already hear some of you people whining about how it can’t be furry because it’s not a real animal from earth; to which I would simply counter that dragons, griffons and sergals aren’t real either but they can fall into the furry category just fine when they have humaniod traits. Boom.