'Key art' is the term for the artwork that defines the character of a game, movie, or similar product - it's often the art that appears on boxes and posters. You'll recognise Two Point Museum's: it's in the header of this reward and on Steam.
For this reward, we want you to create a high-quality piece of festive/Christmas-themed key art for Two Point Museum. You can make your own from scratch, but we only advise you do this if you have a very clear understanding of what key art is, what it's supposed to do, and if you're highly skilled in creating digital art.
The route we recommend is to modify the official key art - you can download a high-resolution version from the Two Point website. Please give it a thorough and high-quality Christmas/festive overhaul, bearing Two Point Museum's particular aesthetics in mind: check out the winter update and all the exhibits and cosmetics it's added to get your design cues. Think snowglobes, candy canes, baubles, elves, Christmas jumpers, and those slightly creepy toy soldiers that only show up this time of year.
Your submission must:
Mesh with the original key art - match the aesthetic and graphical style as closely as you can
Be high in resolution - ideally it would retain the 3840x2160 resolution of the version we've linked above, but 1920x1080 is a minimum
Be thorough - just drawing in a Christmas tree and a couple of presents in one corner won't cut it!
Giving the whole scene and its occupants some Christmas accessories is fine, but it would really put your entry over the top if you could seamlessly remove certain elements or exhibits and replace them with items from the winter update, or other suitably festive pieces.
The quality bar for this one is high, but entries which meet it will receive a $40 prize. As an added incentive, the very best submission will receive a further bonus manual payment of $40 after the reward closes, for a potential total of $80, and may, at the developer's discretion, get their artwork used on Two Point's official social channels! You are welcome to (subtly) watermark or sign your work to ensure we all know who made it.