AI Art Director | Crafting AAA cinematics for indie games via Grok AI. Tips, tributes & commissions open! *DM for collabs*
#IndieDev#AIPrompts#FantasyArt
⚔️🐺 ⚔️ Frank Frazetta’s “Cave Demon” (1978) is brought to life!
This painting serves as the cover for Karl Edward Wagner’s *Death Angel’s Shadow*. It captures a Conan-esque fury: a dark horror emerges from a skull-strewn cave, confronting a defiant winged warrior.
CritChance Co. has selected this artwork to showcase our Prompt Engineering skills with @Grok Imagine. An edited short will be added to our pinned post once it’s ready, if you're interested in seeing it then please follow us @CritChanceCo and turn on notifications. The goal is to demonstrate that Grok Imagine, combined with directorial-style Prompt Engineering, can create AAA-quality cinematics from static art. By editing clips into cohesive shorts, Grok Imagine is a compelling alternative for visuals, despite its current novelty offering.
While AI has its flaws and requires human oversight, it offers a quick and affordable solution for indie game developers as well as AI Art Enthusiasts.
AI enthusiasts and game developers, this is your opportunity to do more for less! Feel free to message me for commission requests or collaborations. Services offered will be listed in a future pinned post.🔥
#Frazetta #PromptEngineering #IndieDev #AIGameDev #FantasyArt
@MarkusTheJames You are a special person to take the time to see my husband's pain, a father and husband. He didn't see this, however his family did and we thank you! I am not familiar with X but I told his story on my instagram account if interested @harleyishandsome
My beloved French Bulldog, Harley, was diagnosed with lymphoma and passed away on January 15th. We discovered swollen lymph nodes on Christmas Eve, and shortly thereafter, we were informed that he had only a few months to live. At 4 years old, Harley was in perfect health as far as we knew before his passing. His life was filled with joy, and his light brightened mine. Now, my light has dimmed, and I no longer feel the desire to continue. So, this is goodbye. 🫡
@TarlapJ@MarkusTheJames Thank you, I am grateful you care. I told my husband's story on Instagram, I have to wait for my son to post here. since I am not familiar with X and it's his company. He's greiving. If interested, my account on instagram is @harleyishandsome
@frazettagirls@loscarabeotarot And here’s my last one. I thoroughly enjoyed creating Frazetta tributes, but my muse, my beloved French Bulldog Harley, has passed away. This has also dampened my enthusiasm for being on X, among other things. See you all on the other side. 🫡
@frazettagirls@loscarabeotarot Frazetta's art is pure magic for tarot, those iconic images deserve eternal life. Brought a classic monster masterpiece to motion with Grok, the intensity shines brighter animated. Check the latest: https://t.co/kug6aI9ULU Favorite Frazetta piece for a card?
Post 1/4
What if Frazetta's ultimate vampire queen stepped from the full moon's glow into hypnotic, photoreal motion? 🧛♀️🌕😱
Frank Frazetta's legendary 1969 "Vampirella #1" cover is fantasy seduction at its deadliest: a fierce beauty in red poses triumphantly over a skull, finger to lips, against a massive lunar backdrop. Created with Trina Robbins' costume design, Frazetta made her an instant icon of dangerous allure.
@cimerians Frazetta's barbarian worlds are timeless adventures, that raw power jumps off the page. I animated a similar savage beast encounter with Grok Imagine, the roar and chaos feel alive now. Full thread: https://t.co/i2QADaGfUI What's your top Frazetta book cover?
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What if Frazetta's legendary Yeti crashed into motion – roaring, grabbing, and raging across the Himalayas in photoreal fury? 😱❄️
Behold Frank Frazetta's 1960s masterpiece "Yeti" (aka Abominable Snowman), painted for pulp adventure magazines. A massive furry beast snatches a beauty while explorers blast pistols and warrior women fight back with kicks & arrows. Pure explosive energy!
Frazetta captured raw terror from imagination alone, blending King Kong vibes with yeti myths in days. His bold strokes made monsters feel alive.
Post 1/4
What if Frazetta's legendary Yeti crashed into motion – roaring, grabbing, and raging across the Himalayas in photoreal fury? 😱❄️
Behold Frank Frazetta's 1960s masterpiece "Yeti" (aka Abominable Snowman), painted for pulp adventure magazines. A massive furry beast snatches a beauty while explorers blast pistols and warrior women fight back with kicks & arrows. Pure explosive energy!
Frazetta captured raw terror from imagination alone, blending King Kong vibes with yeti myths in days. His bold strokes made monsters feel alive.
@MattWalshBlog The same goes for the poor quality of blog posts on social media. The constant complaining and sense of superiority are incredibly draining.
@PJaccetturo@MattWalshBlog might be talking about museum-quality art that meets specific standards. Most art is designed to be entertaining, not something to sit and stare at for an hour, searching for hidden meanings. https://t.co/ef882BxWwo
Post 1/4
What if Frazetta's legendary Yeti crashed into motion – roaring, grabbing, and raging across the Himalayas in photoreal fury? 😱❄️
Behold Frank Frazetta's 1960s masterpiece "Yeti" (aka Abominable Snowman), painted for pulp adventure magazines. A massive furry beast snatches a beauty while explorers blast pistols and warrior women fight back with kicks & arrows. Pure explosive energy!
Frazetta captured raw terror from imagination alone, blending King Kong vibes with yeti myths in days. His bold strokes made monsters feel alive.
@nhoeskape Your army is nothing without a yeti! Fortunately, I’m providing a Frazetta tribute that includes all the yetis you could ever want. https://t.co/ef882BxWwo
Post 1/4
What if Frazetta's legendary Yeti crashed into motion – roaring, grabbing, and raging across the Himalayas in photoreal fury? 😱❄️
Behold Frank Frazetta's 1960s masterpiece "Yeti" (aka Abominable Snowman), painted for pulp adventure magazines. A massive furry beast snatches a beauty while explorers blast pistols and warrior women fight back with kicks & arrows. Pure explosive energy!
Frazetta captured raw terror from imagination alone, blending King Kong vibes with yeti myths in days. His bold strokes made monsters feel alive.
@PaterDagon Happy birthday to Robert E. Howard – his worlds still hit hard. Frazetta nailed that primal spirit. I revived his Bran Mak Morn cover with Grok animation recently, the charge feels alive now. Tribute to both legends. https://t.co/8foM5TA8Xd Favorite Howard story?
Post 1/4
What if Frank Frazetta's legendary Bran Mak Morn, Pictish king in full berserker rage, charged into photoreal motion with his feral tribal horde? 😱⚔️
I revived this 1969 masterpiece with Grok Imagine. Skull-painted fury leading savage warriors... pure Howard/Frazetta primal power!
Full credit: Original cover painting by Frank Frazetta for Robert E. Howard's Bran Mak Morn (Dell, 1969).
That 1982 Conan vibe never gets old. Frazetta's influence is all over it. I brought new life to his Bran Mak Morn painting with Grok animation – the horde charging feels even more savage in motion. Full credit to Frank. https://t.co/fN8dGL2Yqh What other Howard hero needs this treatment?
Post 1/4
What if Frank Frazetta's legendary Bran Mak Morn, Pictish king in full berserker rage, charged into photoreal motion with his feral tribal horde? 😱⚔️
I revived this 1969 masterpiece with Grok Imagine. Skull-painted fury leading savage warriors... pure Howard/Frazetta primal power!
Full credit: Original cover painting by Frank Frazetta for Robert E. Howard's Bran Mak Morn (Dell, 1969).
@frazettagirls@loscarabeotarot This tarot deck is stunning. Frazetta's art has that eternal magic that pulls you in every time. I animated his classic Yeti painting to bring the roar and fury to life with Grok – all respect to the master. https://t.co/i2QADaGfUI Which card captures his energy best for you?
Post 1/4
What if Frazetta's legendary Yeti crashed into motion – roaring, grabbing, and raging across the Himalayas in photoreal fury? 😱❄️
Behold Frank Frazetta's 1960s masterpiece "Yeti" (aka Abominable Snowman), painted for pulp adventure magazines. A massive furry beast snatches a beauty while explorers blast pistols and warrior women fight back with kicks & arrows. Pure explosive energy!
Frazetta captured raw terror from imagination alone, blending King Kong vibes with yeti myths in days. His bold strokes made monsters feel alive.
Post 4/4
Frazetta's beasts still rule fantasy decades later. This Grok animation proves classics can evolve with AI.
What's your favorite Frazetta monster? RT if this yeti deserves to be a game boss ❄️🔥 Drop your own Grok revivals below – let's inspire each other!
Follow @CritChanceCo for more AI × indie game magic.
#Frazetta #GrokImagine #AIArt #IndieDev #FantasyArt
Post 1/4
What if Frazetta's legendary Yeti crashed into motion – roaring, grabbing, and raging across the Himalayas in photoreal fury? 😱❄️
Behold Frank Frazetta's 1960s masterpiece "Yeti" (aka Abominable Snowman), painted for pulp adventure magazines. A massive furry beast snatches a beauty while explorers blast pistols and warrior women fight back with kicks & arrows. Pure explosive energy!
Frazetta captured raw terror from imagination alone, blending King Kong vibes with yeti myths in days. His bold strokes made monsters feel alive.
Post 3/4
How'd I pull this off? Some prompting tips for Grok Imagine revivals:
• Start with exact style refs: "in the style of Frank Frazetta, dynamic composition, bold brushstrokes, dramatic lighting"
• Add motion details: "yeti roaring and lunging, woman kicking mid-air, snow particles flying, pistol muzzle flash"
• Boost realism: "photoreal animation, high detail fur texture, cinematic camera pan"
• Iterate fast: Small tweaks = huge leaps in intensity
Indie devs – this is your shortcut to epic trailers/boss intros without breaking the bank!