From £5.99
What It Is
A robed female cultist caught mid-stride with arms outstretched, channelling elemental magic. She's wearing flowing robes that billow around her legs, suggesting movement or wind. The pose is dynamic without being over-the-top — both arms are raised and spread wide, palms open, as if summoning or directing air currents. Her hair streams back from her face, reinforcing that sense of wind and motion. Clean sculpt with good detail in the fabric folds.
At The Table
The obvious use is as an elemental cultist in D&D 5e — drop her into Princes of the Apocalypse or any campaign featuring the Cult of the Howling Hatred. She works equally well as a low-level spellcaster NPC, maybe a hedge witch who's gotten in over her head with wind spirits, or a weather mage for hire in a port town. In Dolmenwood, she'd fit perfectly as a practitioner of one of the stranger folk traditions, calling down storms to bless (or curse) the harvest.
For Call of Cthulhu, she's tailor-made for occult rituals involving Ithaqua or other air-aligned entities. Picture her as the lone survivor of a doomed expedition to the Arctic, now half-mad and trying to recreate the ritual that damned her companions. In Blades in the Dark, she could be a whisper working for one of Doskvol's stranger cults, or a contact who can arrange weather patterns for a particularly ambitious score.
You could also flip the script entirely and use her as a hero — a druid calling the winds to scatter an enemy formation, or a cleric of Akadi driving back fiends with gale-force prayers. The pose reads equally well as offensive casting or desperate defence.
Printed in high-quality resin. Supplied unpainted. Fits a 1" base (25mm).