This is a spin-off of the original GFX Art Battle, but with some updated rules and changes. Please make sure to read the rules before entering, since they have been modified. Good luck, we look forward to seeing some creative artistic entries!
Competition Rules 1. Must be hand drawn, either on paper or in a program. It can then be manipulated in an graphics program. But unoriginal artwork cannot be used as the main focus. Copyrighted images cannot be used. All pieces containing copyrighted images will be disqualified. 2. Submissions must follow the current theme that has been chosen by a moderator for that week. If you submit more than one piece, please clarify which one you would like to be judged. 3. If your image is larger than 600 pixels wide, please provide a link to the image instead of posting it in the forum. Otherwise, the image will be cut off. 4. Artists cannot win in subsequent weeks. You can still submit, but if you won the week before, you cannot get first place again the next week. 5. After the deadline, a moderator will pick the winner, and they will be awarded a 25 AP award.
Well, seeing we have a default top three (since only three posted for both), and I am rather tired (with stony expression and being unable to see even with my glasses on, not to mention being rather bad at my English and Danish (though getting better at German), as well as sudden urge o write long comments) and Zophia is still working on her last entry, I'd say there will be no judging today.
Does we have to enter for both, or can I just make one for the beginning?
If you only enter the beginning, it will only count as half an entry, but hopefully there should be a theme up sometime tomorrow, when both of us are awake and functioning.
awesome. Thank goodness, I realized today was the deadline and my first thought was "well crap"
On a random note, this is the second theme I have not entered in a row.
Hey KingRyan for some reason I went back to your the end entry and look at it carefully and now see the point of it. Interesting way to portray a message.