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Thread: Show your Roe!!

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  1. #11
    Player
    Vejjiegirl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Posts
    1,344
    Character
    Raelynn Lovelace
    World
    Hyperion
    Main Class
    Warrior Lv 90
    Quote Originally Posted by Cairdeas View Post



    Squeeeeeee, This thread makes me so happy. I'm so glad there are so many pretty Fem Roes running around (They make me look rather butchie >.>) <3 You guys are awesome. I'm so glad we got them implemented. That was a rough fight. But it also makes gloating so much more fun, Because there were people were against us the whole way.

    LOL At my old thread and the Irony on it's first page.





    I wish I had better pictures of Julie, But I'm on PS3 and I have no idea how to extract screenshots.
    Omg I love your Roegadyn!!!! I really love that Roegadyn face I've seen so many nice Roegadyn in game with it >__< I'm probably going to use it for my Melee Roegadyn when I get the time to make her.
    I really want to make a Roegadyn that looks like this NPC here.

    -----

    On a side note, there were actually people that didn't want Female Roegadyn!?
    Wow that's crazy! Also, that guy's reasoning is very flawed.

    The reason why there were no female Galka was because they were a race that rebirth, rather than have babies.

    Galka reproduce through a form of reincarnation. It is told that "When a Galka senses his death, he sets out on a journey to climb a high mountain and await his final moments.
    Roegadyn however, are a completely differen't race. Even though Roegadyn share the same features of a Galka(minus the tail).

    Roegadyn are more akin to Celtic Fomorians, and actually give birth to children rather than Rebirth.

    In Irish mythology, the Fomoire (or Fomorians) are a semi-divine race said to have inhabited Ireland in ancient times. They may have once been believed to be the beings who preceded the gods, similar to the Greek Titans.
    The race are known as the Fomoire or Fomoiri, names that are often Anglicised as Fomorians, Old Irish word composed of fo "under/below" and muire "sea", concluding that it may refer to beings whose (original) habitat is under the sea.[2] Observing two instances of the early genitive form fomra, Kuno Meyer arrives at the same etymology, but takes it to refer to land by the sea. In later times any settled pirates or seaborne raiders were labeled Fomorians and the original meaning of the word was forgotten.
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    Last edited by Vejjiegirl; 10-07-2013 at 11:16 PM.