No no, I appreciate the comment and it's something I like to talk about quite a bit actually -I've never had a company say "show her boobs more" but you do have to follow a stylesheet or what the established characters are wearing. In these two images for instance fav.me/d7gr4iu fav.me/d7gr4o8 Paizo had already commissioned artists to redesign some of their iconic characters for their new "mythic" setting. I was given those images as guides to work from, and if I deviated I'd probably get told to follow the character art more closely.In this image in particular, the iconic gunslinger is shown, who has her own costume. Paizo is generally decent when it comes to women characters; the ones who are in heavy armor don't really have holes cut our in sexy areas. The women who wear clothing might end up showing some skin from time to time. I'll admit; I kinda wanted to depict an attractive gunslinger here. Not overly so (she's setting up camp here, taking off some of her equipment, but we haven't found her taking her top off or anything) but I wanted to make her face seem attractive, show off some of her figure. Most of the time I'm trying really hard to cover UP some of the pathfinder ladies (like seoni in this image fav.me/d67as71 , she's usually depicted with huge boobs popping out to either side of her dress so I wanted to tone it down a bit)As for MTG, I haven't illustrated any sexy ladies for them (I've illustrated some women but I can't really talk about unreleased cards)It depends on the company, but I'd say how sexy you end up depicting an established character is 50-50; the original design comes from the company, the way you depict it comes from you. In this sense I took off a few pieces of equipment, but I felt like I had a decent reason (she's setting down for the day) as opposed to just taking off some clothes to sex her up. For unique, non-established characters it's more like 25% what the company wants and 75% how you depict it. They could ask for an attractive woman, but unless they specifically say she's in revealing clothing or acting provocatively, that's up to you.All in all, I like painting attractive women but in the right context; if they're wearing armor, it should be practical. If they're wearing clothing, then it depends what they're up to. If it looks like they belong in a strip club, then that should be the setting