Just gorgeous! Truly. And, it's not just about the tools, dear Mouse, you are an artist. It shows.
A splendid map Mouse. Really has a lot of flavor
Oh, welcome to the Guild. I featured your map on the Guild FB page.
What a wonderful entrance you've made. Look forward to seeing more maps.
Cheers,
J
Artstation - | - Buy Me a Kofi
That's an extremely intriguing idea, I'm just trying to picture how it works in terms of celestial mechanics? For one body to permanently eclipse another, they couldn't be mutually rotating twin planets, since like the Earth-Moon system they'd be in constant motion relative to their star. They'd have to be either both individually orbiting the sun, or Errispa is somehow stuck in Ethran's unstable Lagrange 1 point.
Or unless the twin-planetary barycentre is the centre of their system, and a small sun orbits on the outer edge at a velocity relative to them.
Or, it's magic
The weather would be interesting - like other tidally locked planets the light side would be hot and the dark side cold, but there would be a lot of convection winds and storms along the borderline blurring the temperature gradient.
Fascinating worldbuilding concept anyway.
(As a pedant I'll insert a shamefaced critique about the shadowing on your mountains: given the eclipse-shadow is near those mountains it means the sun is almost directly overhead, so those shadows are all very wrong. I doubt anyone will care tho )
Last edited by Robulous; 07-10-2016 at 12:13 PM.
Now I know I'm dreaming...
Thank you J.Edward
M
Ethran is like a super gigantic moon to the twin world, being slightly smaller than Errispa, and just like the moon it is locked in a geosynchronous orbit.
I could explain it all so that it made perfect sense... but that would ruin the story... all its sequels... and all its prequels
I'm afraid, Robulous, that I am not as good as I could be at relief shadingRobulous said: (As a pedant I'll insert a shamefaced critique about the shadowing on your mountains: given the eclipse-shadow is near those mountains it means the sun is almost directly overhead, so those shadows are all very wrong. I doubt anyone will care tho )
Last edited by Mouse; 07-10-2016 at 01:06 PM. Reason: Put the quote right
That's a gorgeous map, and a really depressing back-story. To the people that live on Ethran - you poor, poor bastards!
This book of which you speak... can I get a guarantee you'll post notice of its publication, when you get a round tuit? Because the setting alone (and the drop-dead gorgeous rendition thereof) is enough to draw my interest.
The little bar beneath your name - that's cheese, Mouse, green cheese. The better to get you to stick around and with which to nourish your cartography.