*Thanks for watching!* What is your favourite smell? Let us know in the comments below! Check our World Anvil and their inspiring blogposts here: worldanvil.pxf.io/rPqPv Use the code GREATGM for a discount when you sign up for a subscription on their platform. Find each chapter easily by clicking on the timestamps in the description.
Favorite smell: petrichor. After that first rain in a long while, there's that earthy smell coming up from the wet ground. Thanks for a great video, a great series, and so much more you've created here. I love all of it.
The Journey solo RPG game is a worldbuilding tool that lets you fill out a place's details with essentially this same method (and some additional prompts)
@@BigCowProductions It's good fun. My only critique of games like it is that they can be a little *too* open ended and let you craft worlds that might not make sense and need another clean up pass. But it's a fun as hell way to explore and create!
@@ledumpsterfire6474 Mythic is great for replacing a GM. Journey is a totally different system designed specifically for worldbuilding. It's much less about your character and much more about the setting where your character is.
@@MrDowntemp0 Do you know of any other games/systems like Journey that are soloable? I have Journey and I like it but Im always on the lookout for similar products because Im currently world building and always in need of inspiration or ways of fleshing out different things
Best advice so far. It can't be overstated how important and powerful a tool visualizing can be, especially while actually running the game. I've met a lot of DMs that basically write what they think will sound cool or impressive, but never really imagine it outside of broad strokes. I fell into the trap of planning a session, imagining the location in vivid detail, writing narrative from that and feeling very proud of what I'd done. Come time to run the game and be more focused on making sure I used exactly what I wrote than actually immersing myself in the scene. Since course correcting, at most I have a few keywords to jog my memory and I just dive in with my mind's eye and narrate from there. It has greatly improved my descriptive narration and I never draw a blank when something unexpected happens or is asked. Most importantly though, it has increased my enjoyment significantly (not that I didn't already really like DMing) and I find I appreciate scenes my players describe so much more.
Favorite smell: large quantities of books of a certain age. Usually in a library or a book depository. Runners up: fresh peaches (I grew up in an orchard). also newly mown grass.
This was an excellent video. You reminded me of what I had forgotten. Visit my world myself, imagining it, the small things not the fantastic ideas I had for states or tech or magic or animals. No, the small things, those that make you smile when you imagine them. The feel and taste, the smell and noise. Thanks.
Honestly, it is staggering how many DMs don't actually visualize the scenes they are describing for their players. I know some people have difficulty doing it, but every aspect of the game is better when the DM is actively imagining it. Combat is more engaging, places more vibrant and alive, wilderness more impressive etc
As always, Guy, I love watching your videos (you have a very engaging voice) and greatly appreciate your thoughts. As I'm worldbuilding at the moment, these are the kinds of things that inspire changes far beyond merely "This is what your characters sense," but goes into "This defines who your characters are."
There is an incense called "Vampires Blood", I can't explain it well, but it reminds me of a woodsy old victorian houses with those somewhat musty felt like fabric furniture and drapes.
I’ve been binge watching these and just want to particularly thank you for the be a tourist in your world advice. That’s also great advice for internalizing pre-gen worlds, which has been a particular challenge for me.
My favorite scent: the smell of the high desert borne on the winds at night, warring with the incoming marine layer at the coast. Alas, these are usually harbingers of wildfires and/or the onset of people's seasonal allergies, but that chary, charged desert redolence is a drug to me.
Culinarily, my favorite smell has to be hot, buttered popcorn. But in the whole, wide world of scents? The temperate, Hoh Rainforest of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State. It was honestly the most vibrant, and deep-reaching aroma of living earth that I've ever experienced! Perfect for druid or witch inspiration!
As a fairly new worldbuilder (about 6 months now), your videos have been quite helpful and inspiring. I just watched this and it helped break a bit of writer's block I was having, and I sat down and wrote up the three pillars of elvish society in my world, which fit into the way the elves live, and the way they build communities, and even raise children. This is information that may never come up in a game, unless a player wants to play an elf, and then I can tell them how elves are typically raised, and where they live, and what they find important. Also, while watching this, I found that this is what I had sort of been doing as I was trying to imagine and work out the various cities, as well as rural geography in the land I'm creating. Now I have some structure I can apply this thought experiment and that will also be helpful. Thanks again.
Wow, this is a really great tip! Such a simple idea yet it sounds incredibly powerful and I haven't thought of it despite often imagining places statically. I tend to have dreams about exploring random extensive buildings, places and cities - on foot, in a bus, in a car - and I always wished I could just export these dreams as 3D models to implement them. This just might be the way to do exactly that - although it will be day dreaming to come up with stuff this time around.
My favorite smell in the world is coffee, especially freshly ground, there is nothing quite like it, and with the multitude of varietals, every single one smells different, so each new blend is a new olfactory delight. Speaking of coffee, did you drink some before this video? You were really excited, and I liked it!
I love that you do (and recommend) this, as well. I don’t do it nearly enough (it’s a big world) but I have wandered around many, many parts of my world. I also do it in different time periods (so I can see how it develops, what historical precedents were set, how it’s evolved, what technologies are developed (or lost)! I love being in my own world. Dang. I’m miss it. I’m going back on vacation ASAP. :)
I was born with an incredibly low sense of smell, to the point that I can't really smell anything except really strong odours. I more likely to taste it in the air than anything. But one that always stuck out to me was sandalwood. To me it's a subtle earthy smell that has this spicy smoke taste that clings to the back of my throat in a nice way, but to many people I know it's just so strong a smell.
Favorite smell: cooling wax- the smell of a hundred candles that have just been blown out. Evokes memories/emotions connected to Christmas eve midnight services at church asI was growing up.
Strange answer but my favourite smell is a dry, warm mix of eucalyptus and ox dung. A town from my childhood had that smell in the air so it reminds me of the fun times spent there. Second favourite smell, is a whole lot more normal, a fresh bunny chow
My favorite smell is NOT this stupid smell that comes after COVID... favorite smell in general is storms and/or autumn leaves. I do visualization at the table, but not in prep. This is excellent advice!!!
I wanted to say that my favorite smell is that earthy scent in a deciduous autumn forest... but it's probably the scent of cooking garlic, if we're being real. Or of baked goods, such as banana bread and apple pie.
I love this tecnique, I honestly find little hard doing it but I do somthing similar that maybe can help others. I just write in first person an event that i want to narrate, like a note or a part of a diary of a character, and this just put my mind engine on the right road. If come up well i can olso use it during the campagn and is olso a good writing exercise.
My favourite smell is probably chlorine from a swimming pool, which is weird, but it was absolutely the smell which got me the most excited as a kid so remains my favourite.
I just started posting my own campaign last night on twitch, and have archived them onto RUclips… Someone let me know, gently of course, some constructive criticism to make it better. Next game Could be tonight if everyone shows up, otherwise Sunday nights are going to be the regular time. I’m calling it Genesis because the central story revolves around a magic school that attempts to disengage itself from the crystals sphere, and create a better place for the children… And something goes wrong. Most of the pantheon has been wiped out, and a major portion of the history of this world has been altered… There’s a mystery here, and intrigue large and small. I’ve been working on this for a few years, and I hope everyone enjoys the story we are building together… Hazaa!
this is an amazing video, and as someone who is starting to Dm again i'm going to do this now every time a new town/ city is introduced: about the favorite smells however? its an odd mix of metal smell and scented oils and incense. ( yes i know, Mechanicus)
Cut grass. I struggle with S.A.D in the winter and play cricket throughout summer, so grass getting cut again is cemented in my mind as the end of the thing I hate and the start of the thing I love.
Favorite smell: Cake in the oven. Doesn't matter what kind of cake. It's less about the smell itself but more about the anticipation, there's a cake waiting to be baked, to be cooled down, to be decorated... and eventually to be eaten.
This is literally my favourite part of any world: the local customs, clothing, festivals, food, etc. My favourite authors/books always make sure to describe these things.
I recommend telling everything aloud and recording yourselves. When you're done, listen to the recording and parse the data in notes. Also, I have the same t-shirt but so does 50% of people who watched this video.
This is great advice, but I'm not sure this video really explains HOW someone becomes a tourist in their own homebrew world. I'm doing it by both writing stories about characters adventuring in the world, and by writing mini-guides for the many rival cities in the core region. I am getting mixed results. Favorite smell? I really don't do favorites. One smell I enjoy, which is rather odd for someone to really enjoy, are the wild mustang horses some rich folks are training near a client's house. I love the smell of horse in general, it's a luxury for an ordinary guy like me, but these have a distinct smell, one that carries across 150 yards/200m.
favorite smell? I must say mixture of freshly cut wood, gas and oils from chainsaw. But it may be closely tied to memories of me working with my father in forest :)
Cel-Vinyl acetate cels. Unfortunately nobody makes acetate cels anymore, as cel animation is now done entirely on computer. So my next favorite would be gunsmoke.
Favorite smell? Vanilla. I've never used this method for finishing out a setting. Ive always just stopped when it seemed about right. I'm not sure if it's more of a good thing, or a bad thing.
It's fun to play with alternatives for archetypal "standard fantasy/D&D" race setups. Add a few twists here and there and they feel fresh. Say, elvish cuisine can be very flavourful to elves but much less so to most other races, with some more affected than others, because elvish sense of taste is insanely detailed and needs little. (In general, if you want high detail, think about how different races might differ in their natural sense of taste!) Or, instead, it could be very intensely flavourful to everyone, because elves' food is one of the aspects of their culture where they seek to enjoy life to the fullest, stimulating their discerning senses, even if they otherwise act reserved, because culinary enjoyment is seen as refined and noble to them. (This could also be a unifying thing among different elven alternate cultures that differ otherwise, like high/wood/dark elves, providing them a common touchstone and shared experience and a degree of mutual understanding.) Orcish food could be simple but extremely well prepared and very flavourful because good food is crucial to health and fighting ability, is one of the few "refined" pleasures orcish life can reliably offer, and either provide many potential dishes from the few ingredients they normally have, or have few dishes that they refined to perfection over their culture's development. Dwarven cooking could be hearty and filling and well-made but taste almost the same no matter what dish it is, nice but just identical, because that particular dwarven culture does not like to change things at all and likes things traditionally uniform. This could be a fine point of cultural antipathy between them and Flavourtown style elves, or could be a curious unintentional situation with the "different sense of taste" kind, where dwarves think elven food is good by dwarven standards because it tastes the same to them, but they simply lack the overly sharp sense of taste to discern the variety.
The smell of grilling thick, glistening ribeyes right over the fire, with buttered onions, peppers, and prawns on the top shelf wreathed in the rising steak-smoke.
Instructions unclear, got my wobbly bits cut off because I took an apple of a market stall without paying because I was so engrossed with the smells and sounds of said marketplace. 3/5 would visit again.
My favorite smell is unequivocally green soap The smell all fellow tattooed people associate with tacking on a new piece It's also indelibly what tattoo parlors used to smell like
It would have to be the smell of fresh baked cookies, sizzling sausage in the morning, the pages of a new book, clean clothes that have just come out of the dryer, and a cool, rainy evening.
*Thanks for watching!* What is your favourite smell? Let us know in the comments below!
Check our World Anvil and their inspiring blogposts here: worldanvil.pxf.io/rPqPv
Use the code GREATGM for a discount when you sign up for a subscription on their platform.
Find each chapter easily by clicking on the timestamps in the description.
this Yankee candle my wife gets. I'm not sure of the scent, but it's good.
thanks for the videos you make. I find them encouraging about my DM style
the smell of grilled ribeye
I’m almost entirely anosmic so the absolute standout for me is lavender because it is one of the only nice things that I can smell.
My favorite smell is the heavy, earthy ozone-laden scent of an imminent storm breaking out. It makes me feel like a kid again.
That's got a name! It's called Petrichor. Such a great smell
Favorite smell: petrichor. After that first rain in a long while, there's that earthy smell coming up from the wet ground. Thanks for a great video, a great series, and so much more you've created here. I love all of it.
Guy asks us to think of a smell and play with ourselves; this is one of my favorite videos so far.
The Journey solo RPG game is a worldbuilding tool that lets you fill out a place's details with essentially this same method (and some additional prompts)
@@BigCowProductions It's good fun. My only critique of games like it is that they can be a little *too* open ended and let you craft worlds that might not make sense and need another clean up pass. But it's a fun as hell way to explore and create!
that looks like literally the best thing ever. thank you kind stranger
Huh, I've always just used Mythic GM Emulator. Maybe I'll give it a go.
@@ledumpsterfire6474 Mythic is great for replacing a GM. Journey is a totally different system designed specifically for worldbuilding. It's much less about your character and much more about the setting where your character is.
@@MrDowntemp0 Do you know of any other games/systems like Journey that are soloable? I have Journey and I like it but Im always on the lookout for similar products because Im currently world building and always in need of inspiration or ways of fleshing out different things
Best advice so far. It can't be overstated how important and powerful a tool visualizing can be, especially while actually running the game. I've met a lot of DMs that basically write what they think will sound cool or impressive, but never really imagine it outside of broad strokes.
I fell into the trap of planning a session, imagining the location in vivid detail, writing narrative from that and feeling very proud of what I'd done. Come time to run the game and be more focused on making sure I used exactly what I wrote than actually immersing myself in the scene.
Since course correcting, at most I have a few keywords to jog my memory and I just dive in with my mind's eye and narrate from there. It has greatly improved my descriptive narration and I never draw a blank when something unexpected happens or is asked.
Most importantly though, it has increased my enjoyment significantly (not that I didn't already really like DMing) and I find I appreciate scenes my players describe so much more.
Favorite smell: large quantities of books of a certain age. Usually in a library or a book depository.
Runners up: fresh peaches (I grew up in an orchard). also newly mown grass.
My favorite smell: petrichor (the smell after it stops raining).
I love the sickly sweet vanilla smell of old books! 💖
This was an excellent video. You reminded me of what I had forgotten. Visit my world myself, imagining it, the small things not the fantastic ideas I had for states or tech or magic or animals. No, the small things, those that make you smile when you imagine them. The feel and taste, the smell and noise.
Thanks.
Honestly, it is staggering how many DMs don't actually visualize the scenes they are describing for their players. I know some people have difficulty doing it, but every aspect of the game is better when the DM is actively imagining it. Combat is more engaging, places more vibrant and alive, wilderness more impressive etc
The smell of fresh mowed grass. Seriously. This sounds like a very good idea.
As always, Guy, I love watching your videos (you have a very engaging voice) and greatly appreciate your thoughts. As I'm worldbuilding at the moment, these are the kinds of things that inspire changes far beyond merely "This is what your characters sense," but goes into "This defines who your characters are."
A GUY ASMR channel in the works perhaps? Hmmm...
There is an incense called "Vampires Blood", I can't explain it well, but it reminds me of a woodsy old victorian houses with those somewhat musty felt like fabric furniture and drapes.
I’ve been binge watching these and just want to particularly thank you for the be a tourist in your world advice. That’s also great advice for internalizing pre-gen worlds, which has been a particular challenge for me.
My favorite scent: the smell of the high desert borne on the winds at night, warring with the incoming marine layer at the coast. Alas, these are usually harbingers of wildfires and/or the onset of people's seasonal allergies, but that chary, charged desert redolence is a drug to me.
Culinarily, my favorite smell has to be hot, buttered popcorn. But in the whole, wide world of scents? The temperate, Hoh Rainforest of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State. It was honestly the most vibrant, and deep-reaching aroma of living earth that I've ever experienced!
Perfect for druid or witch inspiration!
I grew up in the Seattle area. There is something REALLY special about the Hoh rainforest.
As a fairly new worldbuilder (about 6 months now), your videos have been quite helpful and inspiring. I just watched this and it helped break a bit of writer's block I was having, and I sat down and wrote up the three pillars of elvish society in my world, which fit into the way the elves live, and the way they build communities, and even raise children. This is information that may never come up in a game, unless a player wants to play an elf, and then I can tell them how elves are typically raised, and where they live, and what they find important.
Also, while watching this, I found that this is what I had sort of been doing as I was trying to imagine and work out the various cities, as well as rural geography in the land I'm creating. Now I have some structure I can apply this thought experiment and that will also be helpful. Thanks again.
My favorite Smell? The smell of ash (like from a fire burning or ether after the fire is out.
Citrus is my favorite smell.
Petrichor is hands down my absolute favorite smell. Doesn't matter what sort of mood I am in, Petrichor will make me happy and calm.
Wow, this is a really great tip! Such a simple idea yet it sounds incredibly powerful and I haven't thought of it despite often imagining places statically. I tend to have dreams about exploring random extensive buildings, places and cities - on foot, in a bus, in a car - and I always wished I could just export these dreams as 3D models to implement them. This just might be the way to do exactly that - although it will be day dreaming to come up with stuff this time around.
My favorite smell in the world is coffee, especially freshly ground, there is nothing quite like it, and with the multitude of varietals, every single one smells different, so each new blend is a new olfactory delight. Speaking of coffee, did you drink some before this video? You were really excited, and I liked it!
I love that you do (and recommend) this, as well. I don’t do it nearly enough (it’s a big world) but I have wandered around many, many parts of my world. I also do it in different time periods (so I can see how it develops, what historical precedents were set, how it’s evolved, what technologies are developed (or lost)! I love being in my own world. Dang. I’m miss it. I’m going back on vacation ASAP. :)
I was born with an incredibly low sense of smell, to the point that I can't really smell anything except really strong odours. I more likely to taste it in the air than anything. But one that always stuck out to me was sandalwood. To me it's a subtle earthy smell that has this spicy smoke taste that clings to the back of my throat in a nice way, but to many people I know it's just so strong a smell.
Favorite smell: cooling wax- the smell of a hundred candles that have just been blown out. Evokes memories/emotions connected to Christmas eve midnight services at church asI was growing up.
My god, this is exactly what I needed today.
Strange answer but my favourite smell is a dry, warm mix of eucalyptus and ox dung. A town from my childhood had that smell in the air so it reminds me of the fun times spent there. Second favourite smell, is a whole lot more normal, a fresh bunny chow
Cannot wait for Dung Video!!
DUNG = Deeper Understanding of Nihilist Gamers.
I'd say favourite spell is probably cherry blossoms, or lilacs. Both are smells I strongly tie to my home, as they grow in our garden.
That is THE greatest advice i've heard, thanks A LOT, it is really helpful and fun!
My favorite smell is NOT this stupid smell that comes after COVID... favorite smell in general is storms and/or autumn leaves.
I do visualization at the table, but not in prep. This is excellent advice!!!
I wanted to say that my favorite smell is that earthy scent in a deciduous autumn forest... but it's probably the scent of cooking garlic, if we're being real. Or of baked goods, such as banana bread and apple pie.
I love this tecnique, I honestly find little hard doing it but I do somthing similar that maybe can help others. I just write in first person an event that i want to narrate, like a note or a part of a diary of a character, and this just put my mind engine on the right road. If come up well i can olso use it during the campagn and is olso a good writing exercise.
My favourite smell is probably chlorine from a swimming pool, which is weird, but it was absolutely the smell which got me the most excited as a kid so remains my favourite.
There is this really great cologne called Villain from Pete and Pedro, it's a Tobacco Vanilla smell to it and I adore it.
Thank you!
I'm trying to have a car race in my game and playing it is Greatly helpful.
Lilacs and gooseberries.
My favorite smell is the smell of freshly baked bread. Usually because a tasty sandwich is going to be sold nearby.
You’re an outstanding guy, Guy.
I just started posting my own campaign last night on twitch, and have archived them onto RUclips… Someone let me know, gently of course, some constructive criticism to make it better. Next game Could be tonight if everyone shows up, otherwise Sunday nights are going to be the regular time.
I’m calling it Genesis because the central story revolves around a magic school that attempts to disengage itself from the crystals sphere, and create a better place for the children… And something goes wrong.
Most of the pantheon has been wiped out, and a major portion of the history of this world has been altered… There’s a mystery here, and intrigue large and small. I’ve been working on this for a few years, and I hope everyone enjoys the story we are building together… Hazaa!
the smell of wild strawberries brings back good childhood memories like nothing else.
You had me at "execution by mob" lol
Favorite smell: fresh-dug earth. Or bacon.
Than you very much! it's a great video, your excitement got me very excited so it's fun and very helpfull
I don't know if it's your haircut, the casual look with the T-shirt and the wristwatch, or what, but you look good.
The smell after/during a rain within a spring day.
this is an amazing video, and as someone who is starting to Dm again i'm going to do this now every time a new town/ city is introduced:
about the favorite smells however? its an odd mix of metal smell and scented oils and incense. ( yes i know, Mechanicus)
Cut grass.
I struggle with S.A.D in the winter and play cricket throughout summer, so grass getting cut again is cemented in my mind as the end of the thing I hate and the start of the thing I love.
"soup that taste like wet vinegar"... best description ever.
😋
Horseradish is surprisingly my favorite smell
Favorite smell: Cake in the oven. Doesn't matter what kind of cake. It's less about the smell itself but more about the anticipation, there's a cake waiting to be baked, to be cooled down, to be decorated... and eventually to be eaten.
11 minutes of waffling. Truly masterful.
Reminds me of the first person mode in Theme Park World lol. Very cool idea
This is literally my favourite part of any world: the local customs, clothing, festivals, food, etc. My favourite authors/books always make sure to describe these things.
I agree with "Dancer."
I recommend telling everything aloud and recording yourselves. When you're done, listen to the recording and parse the data in notes. Also, I have the same t-shirt but so does 50% of people who watched this video.
The smell of a used bookstore - the bit of dust, the leather, the decaying paperbacks…
This is great advice, but I'm not sure this video really explains HOW someone becomes a tourist in their own homebrew world. I'm doing it by both writing stories about characters adventuring in the world, and by writing mini-guides for the many rival cities in the core region. I am getting mixed results.
Favorite smell? I really don't do favorites. One smell I enjoy, which is rather odd for someone to really enjoy, are the wild mustang horses some rich folks are training near a client's house. I love the smell of horse in general, it's a luxury for an ordinary guy like me, but these have a distinct smell, one that carries across 150 yards/200m.
My favorite smell is the smell of green onions. I dont know why but i love it. I wish i could have a candle of it.
"Slightly wet vinegar" made me lol.
The smell of thunder and spring rain🦋
The smell... (Deep Inhalation) of Victory. Ahhhh!
Well, this episode went all sorts of places.
favorite smell? I must say mixture of freshly cut wood, gas and oils from chainsaw. But it may be closely tied to memories of me working with my father in forest :)
Amazing advice
Glad you liked it
The video that made me think about dung in a whole new way. It might even be my new favorite smell.
"The Ins and Outs of Dragon Dung Disposal: A Primer"
Favorite Smell: Spring morning air gently coming in the window with early morning sun.
Rain in the spring on a freshly cut lawn.
Cel-Vinyl acetate cels. Unfortunately nobody makes acetate cels anymore, as cel animation is now done entirely on computer. So my next favorite would be gunsmoke.
Favorite smell? Vanilla.
I've never used this method for finishing out a setting. Ive always just stopped when it seemed about right. I'm not sure if it's more of a good thing, or a bad thing.
Heavy sage and eucalyptus in the southern hills of San Jose, CA
Pine trees after a rain.
The smell of books!
My favorite smell is the smell of a library.
No, that's not a joke.
It's fun to play with alternatives for archetypal "standard fantasy/D&D" race setups. Add a few twists here and there and they feel fresh.
Say, elvish cuisine can be very flavourful to elves but much less so to most other races, with some more affected than others, because elvish sense of taste is insanely detailed and needs little. (In general, if you want high detail, think about how different races might differ in their natural sense of taste!) Or, instead, it could be very intensely flavourful to everyone, because elves' food is one of the aspects of their culture where they seek to enjoy life to the fullest, stimulating their discerning senses, even if they otherwise act reserved, because culinary enjoyment is seen as refined and noble to them. (This could also be a unifying thing among different elven alternate cultures that differ otherwise, like high/wood/dark elves, providing them a common touchstone and shared experience and a degree of mutual understanding.)
Orcish food could be simple but extremely well prepared and very flavourful because good food is crucial to health and fighting ability, is one of the few "refined" pleasures orcish life can reliably offer, and either provide many potential dishes from the few ingredients they normally have, or have few dishes that they refined to perfection over their culture's development.
Dwarven cooking could be hearty and filling and well-made but taste almost the same no matter what dish it is, nice but just identical, because that particular dwarven culture does not like to change things at all and likes things traditionally uniform. This could be a fine point of cultural antipathy between them and Flavourtown style elves, or could be a curious unintentional situation with the "different sense of taste" kind, where dwarves think elven food is good by dwarven standards because it tastes the same to them, but they simply lack the overly sharp sense of taste to discern the variety.
My favorite smell is the smell of grass the first time I mow in the spring.
It's cliche, but I love the smell of a used bookstore.
The smell of grilling thick, glistening ribeyes right over the fire, with buttered onions, peppers, and prawns on the top shelf wreathed in the rising steak-smoke.
I love the smell of fresh brewed coffee :)
I haven't been able to smell for the past decade but I still remember the smell of the sea.
this one is nothing new but I love the smell of Rain
My favorite smell is camphor.
Fresh cut lawn at low tide
Favorite smell (one of): Onions and garlic searing in olive oil. O.O.
Excellent!
8:00 Something more personal…🤣🤣🤣
The smell of enchiladas de mole 😍
Instructions unclear, got my wobbly bits cut off because I took an apple of a market stall without paying because I was so engrossed with the smells and sounds of said marketplace. 3/5 would visit again.
My favorite smell is unequivocally green soap
The smell all fellow tattooed people associate with tacking on a new piece
It's also indelibly what tattoo parlors used to smell like
It would have to be the smell of fresh baked cookies, sizzling sausage in the morning, the pages of a new book, clean clothes that have just come out of the dryer, and a cool, rainy evening.
Finally caught up!
Freshly cut grass
Is my favourite smell
Heated wood. Not wood burned in a fire, but the smell it gives off after being cut with a saw.
My favorite smell is fresh-ground coffee
Ionized air, that smell that indicates a storm is about to break out. It’s that smell of rain.
It’s like debugging a mario maker stage? You have to play it yoirslef to see if it works?
Hot bread: I cannot find a better smell to me.
Oak and sap from the world tree.
I like the smell of food cooking cause it means I’ll be eating soon 😆
burning charcoal. i love a barbeque.