Below you’ll find the final wave of entries for our initial geomorph design contest! #GeomorphMapContest Here is the prior set and the first set . Also, you can see the rules post .
If you entered and don’t see your design, please drop a note to joe at inkwellideas dot com by tomorrow (Wednesday) at 9pm US eastern. Also, please correct credits and licenses if you entered and I mixed things up. Shortly after that we’ll post anything we missed, announce the winner, and kick off the next contest! (The kick-off will reveal the next ingredient and any rules changes. Mostly the rules changes will be about making it easier to run the contest.)
And now for our final group of entries:
Tony Obert of romeinoneday.tumblr.com submits his ruined throne room under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial license.
The Goblyn Geomorphs & Map Icons by Gregory B. MacKenzie are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
Jim Magnusson allows this geomorph to be used under a Creative Commons Attribution license. Like Dyson’s design, there are a lot of interesting/fun bits to this design. Of course, you’ve got to love the statue behind the throne. But we’ve also got a skeleton, discarded weapons, a secret room, and so on.
“Mars Homeworld” offers this design through a Creative Commons Public Domain license.
Andrey Makarov’s multicolor geomorph. It uses a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license.
Andrey Makarov’s claverns geomorph. It uses a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license.
Andrey Makarov’s classic blue geomorph. It uses a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license.
Erin Smale of Welshpiper.com enter’s this grand throne room under a Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike 3.0 unported license.
Paul “grayarea” Go enters this design. It has a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-alike 4.0 international license.
d47’s rotating throne room is available by a creative commons attribution license. We felt that it was important to show that even if a design isn’t digitally cleaned up, good ideas can do well in the contest. I love this rotating throne! The leader/king can meet with advisors in one room, then rotate to a mini-audience hall, then rotate and go back to his quarters.
A smaller throne room by Simon Forster of theskyfullofdust.co.uk. Use the Creative Commons attribution 4.0 license.
A throne room by Simon Forster of theskyfullofdust.co.uk. Use the Creative Commons attribution 4.0 license.
Simon Forster of theskyfullofdust.co.uk enters this cavern design. Use the Creative Commons attribution 4.0 license.
Fortz Self’s entry uses the Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike license.
Brian Lee’s entry uses the Creative Commons attribution non-commercial license.
Another design by Alex Welk of anarchydice.blogspot.com. It uses a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial license.
A cavern throne by Alex Welk of anarchydice.blogspot.com. It uses a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial license.
Alex Welk of anarchydice.blogspot.com offers his design through a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial license.