Friday 13 January 2023

Let’s Convert the Fiend Folio: Tirapheg and Trilloch

Every monster ever devised, in the Fiend Folio or not, is somebody’s favorite monster. This time out, we are doing two monsters which I don’t believe that I have ever used. Surely, though, they were someone’s favorites, and if you have ever put them to good use, please share in the comments!

The Tirapheg is difficult to describe, but as it is not automatically hostile, it could be a fairly interesting encounter. Slow-moving eaters of decomposing meat, they might be used as an encounter simply to heighten the weirdness of an area. At seven feet tall, their looming forms will certainly seem eerie. But what if they were taller? Hence, the Giant Tirapheg entry! Because, why not?

The Trilloch is just another way to make standard encounters more interesting, like a wandering living curse, and a creature you cannot affect with weapons or spells doesn’t need a statblock. I did include a Move speed because characters or monsters might find a way to outrun the thing. Save modifiers are included in case it needs to save to avoid being forced away. Dungeon Crawl Classics is a different beast than Advanced Dungeons & Dragons, and this is also reflected in the write-up.

There are only two more blog posts to get through the letter “T” – next up are the Trolls!

If you feel like tipping, here is a way to do so.

 

Tirapheg

Tirapheg: Init +3; Atk Spike +3 melee (1d4 plus power of three) or claw +3 melee (1d4 plus strangle); AC 10; HD 2d8; MV 10’; Act 3d20; SP Infravision 30’, power of three, strangle, mirror image; SV Fort +3, Ref +0, Will +3; AL C.

Giant Tirapheg: Init +3; Atk Spike +3 melee (1d6 plus power of three) or claw +3 melee (1d6 plus strangle); AC 13; HD 6d8; MV 20’; Act 3d24; SP Infravision 60’, power of three, strangle, mirror image, crits using Crit Table G; SV Fort +6, Ref +3, Will +6; AL C.

The tirapheg is strange indeed – a naked and hairless tripedal hermaphrodite, of generally humanoid shape, and seven feet tall. The creature has three heads of which the outer two are featureless. The middle head has three large, deeply-inset eyes, two to the front and one to the rear. It has ear-like organs on each side of the central head, but its mouth is located on its torso.

Tiraphegs have three arms. Two are jointed at the shoulders so that they can attack to the rear as easily as to the front, terminating in six-inch long spikes. The third arm, emerging from the center of the chest, ends in a three-fingered hand. Of the creature's three legs, the outer two end in stumps while the central one has three unusually long and strong toes. The creature’s mouth is below its central arm.

Above the mouth are three tentacles, each three inches long, which writhe continuously but which have no obvious function.

Tiraphegs can only attack targets in front of them with their central arms. If the creature hits the same target with both spikes, and it can bring its central arm to bear, it gains the power of three – its central arm automatically hits. This arm grabs its victim around the neck and strangles for automatic damage each round, although a victim can free themselves with an opposed Strength check vs. +3.

When it wishes to retreat from a combat, a tirapheg can create a mirror image effect without spending an Action Die. There is a blinding flash (creatures within 30’ must succeed in a DC 13 Reflex save or be blinded and confused for 1 round), and two illusory projections are created (as result 16-19 on the mirror image spell, page 183 of the core rulebook).

Tiraphegs eat carrion, and seem to show a greater preference to meat the more decomposed it is. Normally, tiraphegs avoid other creatures, but their behavior can be unpredictable and it has been known for a tirapheg to attack a party of adventurers for no apparent reason. Usually, they are encountered singly, but trios are also possible, and it is thought that three must come together for the creatures to reproduce (although this is mere speculation, as the creatures seem to have no means of reproduction). They do not speak, and are seemingly no more intelligent than animals.

The giant tirapheg is very much like its smaller kin, but it is 14 feet tall, and uses Crit Table G. The opposed Strength check to break a giant tirapheg’s strangle is against +6.

 

Trilloch


An extraplanar creature that can not normally be detected, the trilloch lived on the waning life-force of dying creatures. Detect magic can reveal the creature, and dispel magic, banish, exorcism, or a cleric’s ability to turn the unholy may drive it away. No other magic has any effect on a trilloch, so far as is known, and no weapon can harm it.

All melee attacks within 100’ of a trilloch are at +1 to hit, do +1 damage, and have their critical range increased by +1 (so that most creatures crit on a 19-20). The creature can also influence the behavior of unintelligent monsters, making them twice as aggressive. Trillochs accompany large, powerful monsters, thriving on the huge amounts of life-force released by their victims. If a trilloch’s “host” is killed, the trilloch attaches itself to the victor until driven off or until another, even more powerful creature, kills its new host. At that point, it transfers to the new creature.

A trilloch can fly noncorporeally with a 40’ Move speed, and has a +6 bonus to saves.

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