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CM672: Uh.. one of each, put it on my tab.
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BrickShitHouse: I don't care how illegal it is, I WOULD go to THAT bordello!
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Anonymous1: It is called Festhall methinks
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Anonymous2: DEM EARS!!!
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Picker_of_Nits: Added tags for aquatic elf (top-left, the most obvious besides drow), and for what I assume to be wild elf (bottom left), sun elf (middle right), and wood elf (bottom right).

That leaves the middle three. I'm guessing the mid-bottom is a high elf (would that even get its own tag?). The white-haired one could be a grey elf or silver elf, I can't be sure without real knowledge of elf subraces, and the amber-eyed blonde has me stumped. If anyone actually knows this shit, now's the time to show off.
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Anonymous3: @Picker_of_Nits: Went and looked at the original; the artist gave that info in the comments.
"(from top left to top right then bottom left to bottom right) Ashalla - sea elf fighter, Alyrria - Artic elf sorceress, Esoja - Grey Elven Paladin, Malayvin - drow Cleric, Lairessa Wild Elf Barbarian, Druscilla high elf Druid, Solee, desert elf monk, and Glaycia (laying) Wood elven bard"
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Ezram: I love elves.
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Anonymous4: http://www.hentai-foundry.com/story-5995.html
This is the story where this pic is based on.
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Anonymous5: Elves: now come in eight varieties.
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Anonymous6: what the fuck. isnt there 3 or 4 types of elves? where the hell did a sea elf come from. anyway they're all hot especially bottom left and the two bottom right ones.
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Anonymous7: Actually, if you read the DnD sourcebooks, ther are more elven varieties then this: sun elves, all I can think of, atm
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Anonymous8: The types of elves depend on the setting. In the D&D setting Forgotten Realms, high elves come in sun and moon elf varieties, wood elves also have their more feral cousins, the wild elves, and there's the evil drow.

But there's also a pointless additional number of subraces including sea elves, star elves, half-eladrin, and others that I've never seen people use in their campaigns. Fortunately, these ones are rarely mentioned.
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Anonymous9(8): The types of elves depend on the setting. In the D&D setting Forgotten Realms, high elves come in sun and moon elf varieties, wood elves also have their more feral cousins, the wild elves, and there's the evil drow.

But there's also a pointless additional number of subraces including sea elves, star elves, half-eladrin, and others that I've never seen people use in their campaigns. Fortunately, these ones are rarely mentioned.

And of course, there's half-elves, if you count those.
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Anonymous10(8): The types of elves depend on the setting. In the D&D setting Forgotten Realms, high elves come in sun and moon elf varieties, wood elves exist but also have their more feral cousins, the wild elves, and there's the evil drow.

But there's also a pointless additional number of subraces including sea elves, star elves, noble eladrin, and others that I've never seen people use in their campaigns. Fortunately, these ones are rarely mentioned.

And of course, there's half-elves, if you count those.


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