Another Chinese import…a 1/35 Succubus:
Sweet dreams! They come to you in your sleep and steal your sperm (don’t ask how)!
Likes…dislikes…comments?
Another Chinese import…a 1/35 Succubus:
Sweet dreams! They come to you in your sleep and steal your sperm (don’t ask how)!
Likes…dislikes…comments?
Reminds me of an ex-girlfriend
They only look like that before you say "I do " after that… oy vey
Suck your what???
Anything like Willie Nelson’s Canni-Bus?
Vitality or life force …
And your wallet dry.
I think there may be a hint in the first 3 or 4 letters of the name…
Cheers,
M
wee-eeelll …
acktschuallyyy …
late Middle English: from medieval Latin succubus ‘prostitute’, from succubare, from sub- ‘under’ + cubare ‘to lie’.
Which implies that the “ladies of negotiable affection” back in those ages only did missionary style …
Minus the “bat wings” she could be a model of a stripper.
Reminds me of my ex-mother in law , she sucked your will to live.
Not according to these:
Plastic Soldier Review - Linear-A Bacchanalia in Ancient Rome (Set 1)
Cheers,
M
Purity Of Essence…
OMG! Is that original D&D literature? There are certain things that have stuck with me from my mis-spent youth (so many years gone by)
Is it likely that the concept of a succubus was the idea of a male ? Just wondering…
Maybe someone had to come up with an explanation for the “wet dreams” and the potential need to wash the bedlinen afterwards …
It’s the devils/demons fault, I haven’t sinned …
What…no pics??
I’ve pushed the envelope before and I like it here, so I’m not going to chance a ban… Not even Linear-A’s own website has pictures of the Bacchanalia box contents, although as a German miniatures company they are not averse to depicting the undraped human form where historically appropriate (to give them credit, they omit the “gang rape” figures in the illustration of the contents of the LINEAR-b 002 Roman Port Set 1). This set may be of interest:
If you wish to enter “Linear-A Bacchanalia in ancient Rome Set 1” into Google and choose “images” you will understand why retailers avoid illustrating the contents…
Cheers,
M
A bunch of years ago a fellow I worked with had purchased a facsimile of an Elizabethan book, “The English Vulgate”. As the title implies, it was a “dictionary” of the vernacular of the day. Over a beer or two, he read out of few of the words and their definitions for our enlightenment. I have always remembered one definition: “A beastly sluttish woman.” I have no idea what the word was that encapsulated this colourful epitaph because in our amusement he dropped the book, and lost his place. Someone felt the need to coin a word to contain THAT definition. Who was the inspiration?