Luis Royo and Julie Strain had a very close artistic relationship throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, becoming one of the most iconic collaborations in fantasy art and heavy metal aesthetics. Julie Strain —known for her dominant, sensual, and almost mythological presence— served as the muse and model for many of Royo’s illustrations, appearing in paintings, covers, and books where she embodied warriors, cyberpunk creatures, and dark figures characteristic of his visual universe. The combination of Royo’s hyper-detailed, decadent style and Strain’s powerful image helped define much of the fantasy/erotic aesthetic of that era, especially the one associated with magazines like Heavy Metal 🔥🗡️ @LuisRoyoOficial
First SF6 mod from me
Ingrid as Athena in her KOFXV outfit
+ Optional Purple VFX
Replaces C2
Download from
https://t.co/l8RIV5t5yq
#SF6#スト6#kof15#kofxv#麻宮アテナ
Hard truth…
I can speak freely because I’m 65 years old and my pocketful of fucks is seriously depleted.
Working as a paralegal at various studios in LA for thirty years…I had the opportunity to observe studio executives closely.
They’re generally a slippery and clueless bunch who shouldn’t be allowed near anything remotely creative…but the new regime at Paramount is straight up evil.
I assure you.
These soulless bastards have nothing but contempt for a show about grace and redemption and the struggle against fascism.
ATLA is a mystery to them.
They. Do. Not. Value. The. Franchise.
The Jet has seen what it is like to go from a hero in the eyes of AEW fans to becoming the villain
#AEWDynamite brings you Summer Blockbuster LIVE this Wednesday at 8/7c on TBS and HBO Max