Wednesday, November 2, 2022

Creatures from the world of Magnum Thrax Part 2

 The post apocalypse world of Magnum Thrax and the Amusement Park of Doom is filled with all manner of strange creatures.


The majestic tortibear, which will fiercely defends its nest.

A hideous lovecraftian old one rises from the sea before a necropriest
Unspeakable horrors emerged from the depths after the apocalypse; some welcomed them as the new overlords.

A beautiful feathered Peliwalri
Peliwalri are ornery but adorable.

a Large yet benevolent horned giraffe
The horned giraffe of the Midwest plains.

Flying shark lined with teeth
A bionitic flying shark, kept aloft on utility fog. Technowraiths would use more evolved iterations as mounts.

A fire red rooster
The explosive rooster. Don't antagonize them.

Adorable bipid crustacean mutant creature of the future
An adorable bipid examines a button camera set on a rock.

A gleaming three eyed frog
The three eyed frog is almost impossible to sneak up on; it's eyes remain open even when sleeping.

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Creatures of the World of Magnum Thrax and the Amusement Park of Doooooom Part I

The World of Magnum Thrax is filled with all manner of strange creatures, many of which were altered by rogue terraformer fog, mutagenic bionite viruses, or even old fashioned gene hacking by hoxsplicers. 

Not all of the new creations were viable, but then, The Apocalypse opened up a lot of niches in the ecosystem to fill. So there's that.

The following images were created in Midjourney, using the --testp --creative --upbeta tags (basically the Remaster button?):


The Turtlehawk: most likely a joke Hoxsplicer creation.

The Ruffle Throated Tree Frog, capable of beautiful singing and prized at lumberjack weddings.

A coiling desert octopus with reptilian snake skin
The desert octopus, capable of changing its colours and blending in to any environment.

Cybernetic gorillas were used extensively in poorer countries as a less expensive alternative to robot labour.

The magnificent Bunnibison backlit by the sun
The magnificent Bunnibison, which can be found in great numbers on the plains and prairies. Capable of long leaps to propel itself out of danger, its bones are reinforced with rigid nanite structures.

Monday, October 24, 2022

About that pink tank

Magnum Thrax and the Future Fossil has a pink tank in which Thrax and his foxy team zoom about. 

Early on, I tried to render it in Midjourney, along with a lot of other fantastical Magnum Thrax stuff. Some turned out better than others.

Dinosaurs? They turned out like bloody, twisted squiggly goop, like something that had been hit by a molecular rearrangement gun, leaving only a vague blob behind. I quickly abandoned that avenue. 

Fast forward 3 months and... Midjourney can do many things so much better. 

These were done within a month of Midjourney being released to the public. First up is the original, unedited version of the tank:

An unedited midjourney pink tank with defects

It's sketchy. Impressionistic. Very concept art. It has a nice, almost artsy edge, like someone took a palette knife to a bunch of photographs. Does the vehicle really have structure? Or is it more an impression of structure? 

And here's the edited update. I collaged in a tank commander from another rendering, gave the vehicle a barrel, hatch and antennae. 

The edited version of a midjourney pink tank with barrel and commander added

Voila! Much more recognizable, at least to me, and significantly closer to what I wanted. 

Now? 

Midjourney's remaster button creates much more defined imagery, but at the same time, loses some of the... artsy, impressionistic flare that is so evident in the above pictures. 

I have mixed feelings about it. But I am not worried: their engineers are working on it. Iteration after iteration, it will gradually improve. A month, a year, ten years, a hundred years: where will AI renderers be then? 

Sunday, October 23, 2022

The giant crab creature: before and after editing

The original prompt result

I thought it might be interesting to post a few before / after images, starting with early images from Midjourney. 

The image above was created with a fairly simple prompt (whatever the prompt was is now lost to the mists of time), and came back with 4 fabulous options. This was my favourite. As you can see, however, there are gaps in the rendering: there is obviously meant to be a person in front of the giant crab, but they are only partly there.

It's maybe 95% there right out of the bot.

This one was an easy fix, especially if the person is wearing a cape. I doodled a rectangle in using ProCreate, then cleaned things up a little bit, removing a few stray lines (obviously could have gone further), and adding tiny flags (for everyone, as Kodos would say) to the suggestion of a horde in the distance.

The (slightly) polished version

So with a little extra effort, the rendering can be polished up and the piece made even more compelling. 

It would take me... weeks? Months? Years?... to render the base image on my own, if I ever could. 

Gigantic cybernetic crabs leading armies of pirates... that's the sort of totally bonkers stuff I wanted to inhabit the world of Magnum Thrax and the Amusement Park of Doom.

With Midjourney, I can at last breathe some life into that vision. 

And have a lot of fun doing it!

I highly recommend playing around with the tool to any world building writer. 




Midjourney images on Instagram for Magnum Thrax

a winged geisha surrounded by floating magic stones rendered in Midjourney
The Technowitch at The Nexus, where nanite swarms have saturated the rock, and can be called forth with the proper command node implant. The wings, the cubes, the hair, the head, the energy ball were all added in ProCreate

I've been continuing to bring to life Magnum Thrax in Instagram (@magnumthrax), using Midjourney renderings. 

Over the last couple of months, Midjourney has improved by leaps and bounds. On release, it couldn't do wheels. Faces were asymmetrical and disturbing looking. Hands and feet were nonexistent. Now, they're often warped, but they're there. You can get wheels, tracks, recognizable vehicle shapes. Things seem to have more structure than they did before, using the Remaster button (the initial version adds lovely texture and an artistic flare that is sometimes absent in remaster, which can sometimes be stripped down and simplified to the point of looking cartoonish. But that's gotten much, much better as well...).

It's astonishing. 

I can only imagine how good it will be in a year, or ten years. 

This is really going to change things, although I wonder how it will wash out legally, as Midjourney uses millions of photos to construct its images.

For now, I'm having a lot of fun. Midjourney's kind of addictive, and once you learn to roll with its limitations, you can produce a lot of fabulous imagery.

Most of the stuff I've generated is from the history of the Magnum Thrax and the Amusement Park of Doom world, the satirical sci-fi adventure novel I wrote in The Before Time. =

Cyborg curator of the cryocrypts
A technowitch tending the deep underground cryocrypts. Much of the arms and hands were added in post.

A gigantic 100,000 ton pirate megacrawler which terrorized the Arizona Sun Corridor for centuries after The Fall. It was armed to the teeth and powered by a fusion stack fuelled by... water, meaning it could keep going indefinitely, without access to fossil fuels. On the plus side (for its potential victims), the crawler was terribly slow and you could literally see it coming miles away. In the image above, you can see a vertical arcology they're about to loot. 

Priests of the infamous Cocainola Cola Cult at a formal soda blessing ceremony. They used dark tech to preserve their flesh long before it's Best Before Date. The gruesome faces were detailed in post.

Team Thrax's glorious Pink Tank from the short story, Future Fossil. Note the roughness of the rendering, which is typical of Midjourney early after release. The tank commander was collaged in from another rendering, and the barrel 'photoshopped'.

Emergency tactical response team assembles outside New York City during one of the bionitic zombie outbreaks that occurred before even The First Apocalypse

Wait till you see what's to come.

If you can't, find more images right now over on Instagram @magnumthrax. 

These images were all made with Midjourney (and some subsequent image fiddling in ProCreate... some a considerable amount of editing, some hardly any). 

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Photographs recovered of the lost Caruthers-Ilsen Terra Nova Expedition of 1912

Wide shot of wind swept edifices, Antarctica, 1912

In 1912, the second Terra Nova expedition to Antarctica, led by Sir Reginald Caruthers and Olaf Nilsen, vanished without a trace. 

An abandoned boat, somewhere off the Ronne Ice Shelf
Majestic ice formations

Caruthers had wished to recover from his disgrace during the 1902 expedition, when he had a failure of nerve during the sinking of the Indefatigable. Nilsen, a Norwegian explorer of some repute, could not raise the funds for another expedition of his own; investors felt his steady temperament could help balance the impetuous Caruthers, and a joint expedition was arranged with the help of a government grant.

One of the mysterious structures. It is unknown how many more there might have been, still buried beneath tons of snow and ice.
The West side of the temple complex
A complex labyrinth of structures in a state of semi-collapse could be found to what researchers speculate was the north side of the site

Caruthers was a hot tempered man of resolute conviction, and would rarely entertain alternate viewpoints. At the same time, he was known for astonishing flashes of insight and intuition. He was a poor judge of character, however, and frequently dictatorial. These attributes were believed to have played a role in the ill fate of the expedition.

Megaliths, many fallen but some still upright, extend over quite a large area

The Imperial Geographic Society contributed maps and a photographer, Benjamin Woolstead; the photographs recovered are believed to have been taken by him.

The three snow shrouded pyramids
Amidst the megaliths, and what could possibly be a water trough or aqueduct

A search party was sent in summer of 1913 after no word had been heard for over a year, led by Sir Reginald Thurmond, an experienced explorer. Unfortunately, he found no sign of the expedition whatsoever. It was speculated that their ship, the Piquant, was crushed by ice. 

Beneath the surface, chambers extended in many directions and were of a cyclopean scale. In earlier times, it would have been speculated that the work was conducted by aliens.

In 2007, the remains of a wooden shack was found near the Ronne Ice Shelf by American research staff from Palmer Station. Phographs, and papers with unintelligible scribblings that matched the hand writing of Sir Caruthers, were recovered from a sealed medical chest.

What appear to be artificial canals cut from the rock. It may also be the result of natural rock formations fracturing along right angles.

The photographs show that the team found incredible edifices of unknown origin or function; some resembled temples of Central America, but covered in glyphs no one has been able to decipher, and which have no bearing on any other in recorded history. Large canals seem to have been carved into the rock, as well, although the photographs are so badly deteriorated it is difficult to tell for certain.

Another view of the megaliths. There appear to be steps, but they are not to human scale
A vast underground chamber mostly filled with a giant flow of ice, which has fragmented and cracked at top.
One of the glyph covered chambers beneath the surface. 

Evidently Caruthers and Ilsen decided to shelter within these cyclopean temple complexes, which extended underground, and there are photos confirming that they moved supplies within, possibly to survive the winter months and attempt a return to civilization in the spring.

Unidentified crewmen near an entrance to the underground complex; the walls behind them seem to be made of sheer ice.
Caruthers (left) and Ilsen (right) with their supplies. Presumably these would have been moved to a chamber near the complex entrance.
Given the extent of supplies they moved underground, they should have been able to weather the entire winter and still had enough to make an attempt to reach safety.
Stacks of supplies in a badly degraded photograph
Another chamber
This chamber is noteworthy for what appear to be stairs (middle, above centre)

Some of the last photographs in the collection show what appears to be a form of sea life frozen in the ice. Biologists have been unable to identify the species; it may yet be undiscovered and only found in Antarctica.

The Explorer Society has posited that the lumps are the remains of giant squid, deposited there due to an undersea geologic event (and subsequent tsunami), then frozen in place. We're still recovering mammoths that've been dead ten thousand years ago and haven't decayed. On the other hand, Shoggoth!

 Who is to say? 

Whales moved to the poles to escape the megalodon, rendering it extinct for want of food. Or so the experts say. Could giant squid have migrated to the poles as well? Or... something else?

Organic shapes carved into the rock, but difficult to distinguish what
A large organic looking mass, but scientists have been unable to identify of what

The photo collection generated considerable controversy in the scientific community and were suppressed until 2019, when they were printed in a fringe magazine filled with wild speculations about unspeakable, squamous beasts out of The Cthulhu Mythos and H. P. Lovecraft. 

The ruins are undated, as obviously the expedition would have had no equipment for such a task. We can only speculate that during one of the warm spells, early human societies either lived there or migrated to ritual sites in Antarctica, possibly as part of their whale hunts. 

A survey of the region by helicopter in 2012 failed to find any hint of the structures or canals, which are likely now buried once again under millions of tons of ice, thanks to the glaciers shifting in the century since the expedition met its grim fate.

I've always found this particular lost expedition fascinating, and the photos, however poor in quality, intriguing to say the least. 

The infamous 'eye' shot could be that of a frozen squid, a bit of sculpture, or a decomposing organ frozen in time. OR it could be a horrific Lovecraftian monster, even Nyarlathotep, ready to leap out of the ice and devour unwary explorers. 

It does fire a writer's imagination, does it not?

What is believed to be the last photographs in the collection, at least what has been released to the public. It appears to be an eye, or an orifice of some kind. Species unknown.

Saturday, August 13, 2022

Hunter killer bot patrolling forest outside monastery of the technomonks

Tetrodotox-5 hunter killer bot adapted to patrol duty by the technomonks

The world of Magnum Thrax is a very dangerous place, filled with technological horrors run amok. 

The peaceful Order of Non seeks uninterrupted calm, requiring them to employ high tech guardians to intercept those who would interrupt them typing prayers and devour them. 

The Tetrodotox-5 is well suited for this, armed with both a plasma cannon and gatling gun using depleted uranium ammunition.

Early efforts with MidJourney.

I made these images with tools from @midjourney, you can sign up for their private beta here http://bit.ly/3J2NNVs