Now's your chance.
https://www.reddit.com/r/dccrpg/comments/1q4rymk/raven_crowkings_semiannual_ama/
Giant ticks have always been a part of games I’ve run. Bengal tigers exist near Shanthopal (and parts south through the Unjaggi region). Siberian-type tigers can be found in some of the northern reaches beyond the Ibetyan Mountains. Sabre-toothed tigers of various types can also be found in some of the wilder regions of the Middle World.
Giant toads are another monster that, throughout years of gaming, I have used with some frequency. Like giant frogs and giant ticks, they are a monster that resonates with me – and probably anyone who grew up in the Midwest or the southern parts of Canada. Still, the Monster Manual has a couple of varieties not included in the Cyclopedia, which you will find here.
I have used trappers, although rarely. Like the lurker
above, it is just too dangerous not to use sparingly, and only on the
fringes of inhabited areas in large dungeon complexes. Of course, I cannot be
certain, but I think the difference in frequency which Gary Gygax gives these two monsters is based on the fact that the
lurker above can shift its location more easily than the trapper. Still, the
“survival horror” elements of this monster make it one of the all-time greats.
The other three monsters in this post are three which I cannot
recall ever using. I remember creating a society which used titanotheres and baluchiteriums as beasts
of burden, but as that location was never found by any PCs it remains for some
future game.
Titans, of course, are not only huge giants but a major part of
Greek mythology. The titan write-up herein will serve as the basis for
converting the monsters of the Greek Mythos when I get to that portion of my Deities
& Demigods conversions (ongoing in my Patreon). If you have been following my work on Gods
& Powers of the Middle World, you know that some Greek-inspired
deities are included, which finally gives me an adequate place to include
titans in the game.
(If it interests you, Shanthopal
is intended as a cultural melting pot, but is primarily based upon Indian and
Middle Eastern ideas, as they may have evolved centuries hence, following the
collapse of our own civilization, a nuclear war, and the return of gods and
magic to our world. This allows me to admix many ideas into a semi-cohesive
whole while using the influence of various gods and powers to explain, to some
degree at least, why things are as they are.)
During my 1st Edition
days, psionic characters were so rare on the ground that I didn’t really use
psionic monsters often. I cannot remember ever using a thought eater, although
I am hoping that my conversion will make them more useful to DCC judges than I found them in AD&D. That isn’t really a criticism
of the earlier system; I am sure many
AD&D DMs made better use of the psionics rules than I did. Discerning readers will note that my write-up has nothing to do with the creature as presented, but does have an Appendix N root.
Non-corporeal creatures which feed on intelligence, thought eaters are naturally invisible. To those capable of seeing them, they appear as transparent blobs of violet energy. When they get within 30 feet of an intelligent creature, they can attempt to permanently siphon off 1d3 points of Intelligence (DC 13 Will negates) each round, only being satiated when they have consumed a full 20 points of Intelligence.
Thought eaters are powerless in daylight, and find it painful, so they usually only operate at night or deep underground. Despite being non-corporeal, they cannot pass through even a thin coating of lead and can be harmed by lead or lead-coated weapons. If forced to remain in bright daylight for 2d6 rounds, they are slain. Devices which channel strong ultra-violet light can destroy them in a similar amount of time if they cannot escape.
Thankfully, there are few of these creatures in existence.
Sages believe they were some failed and foolish experiment of the Shining Ones,
and there are still occasionally lead-lined containers found from those Dark
Ages, sealed in lead, and woe upon those unwise enough to open them!
Giant Tick: See the Cyclopedia
of Common Animals.
Tiger: See the Cyclopedia
of Common Animals for both tigers and sabre-toothed tigers,
with some additional variety provided (Bengal vs. Siberian for normal tigers,
and by size for smilodons.
Lesser Titan: Init +0; Atk sword or spear +16 melee
(5d8+12) or spell; AC 22; HD 20d10; MV 50’; Act 1d30; SP invisible at will, planar step (3/day, spell check result
24-26), spellcasting, crit as giant on 20-30; SV Fort +16, Ref +8, Will +12; AL
C.
Greater Titan: Init +2; Atk sword or spear +20 melee
(5d8+15) or spell; AC 26; HD 25d10; MV 60’; Act 2d30; SP invisible at will, planar step (3/day, spell check result
24-26), spellcasting, crit as giant on 20-30; SV Fort +20, Ref +5, Will +16; AL
C.
Lesser titans are 1d4+20 feet tall and weigh as much as 15,000
pounds. Greater titans are even larger, being 1d8+24 feet tall and weighing as
much as 25,000 pounds. Wherever they appear, they may be worshipped as gods
although they have no clerics and cannot grant divine spells.
All titans can cast spells. To determine what class they cast
spell as, roll 1d6: (1-2) wizard, (3-5) cleric, or (6) both. Lesser titans have
1d6+2 caster levels, and greater titans have 1d7+3 caster levels. If a titan
casts spells as a cleric, it can also lay on hands and turn the unholy, and
acts as the representative of some specific god.
If the judge so desires, a greater titan who casts wizard spells
can be developed as a full patron. Likewise, powerful titans which cast
clerical spells may become Demi-Powers or Least Powers at the judge’s
discretion.
In any event, attacking a titan is almost certain suicide.
Giant Toad: See the Cyclopedia of Common Animals. I didn’t include an ice toad or poisonous toad, so I have included them below.
Ice Toad: Init +0; Atk tongue strike +2 ranged
(20’ range, 0 plus entrap) or Bite +3 melee (1d8); AC 10; HD 6d8+6; MV 30’; Act
1d20; SP entrap, swallow whole (19-20), cold aura (10’ range, 1d4 temporary
Stamina, DC 10 Fort for half); SV Fort +4; Ref +0; Will +0 ; AL N.
These creatures are larger than common giant toads, and radiate
intense cold within a 30’ radius, causing 1d4 temporary Stamina damage (DC 10
Fort for half). Victims who spend 1 turn warming up by a large fire heal this
damage immediately if they succeed on a DC 5 Fort save; otherwise it heals
normally as regular attribute damage.
On a natural 19-20 with a bite attack, instead of the normal critical effect, an ice toad swallows human-sized or smaller prey whole, doing 1d6 damage and 1d3 Stamina damage per round to the swallowed creature. A swallowed creature can do nothing that requires movement. Against other creatures, use normal critical effects. As with giant frogs, giant toads can pull victims toward them at a rate of 5 feet per round unless it makes an opposed Strength check (vs +5), or sever its tongue (AC 13, 10 hp or Mighty Deed 4+). Attacking the tongue doesn’t affect the ice toad’s hit points, but severing it will cause the creature to retreat immediately.
Note that the Stamina damage to swallowed victims is not temporary, but can be healed as normal attribute damage.
Poisonous Toad: Init +0; Atk tongue strike +2 ranged (20’ range, 0 plus entrap) or Bite +3 melee (1d6 plus venom); AC 10; HD 4d8; MV 20’; Act 1d20; SP venom (1d3 Agility plus DC 15 Fort or 2d6 hp); entrap, swallow whole (19-20); SV Fort +2; Ref +2; Will +0; AL N.
Poisonous toads are similar to giant toads, except that they have
a venomous bite. On a natural 19-20 with a bite attack, instead of the normal
critical effect, a poisonous toad swallows human-sized or smaller prey whole,
doing 1d5 damage per round to the swallowed creature. A swallowed creature can
do nothing that requires movement. Against other creatures, use normal critical
effects. Poisonous toads can pull victims toward them at a rate of 5 feet per
round unless the victim makes an opposed Strength check (vs +3), or sever its
tongue (AC 13, 8 hp or Mighty Deed 3+). Attacking the tongue doesn’t affect the
toad’s hit points, but severing it will cause the creature to retreat
immediately.
A thief can extract 1d4 doses of venom from a slain poisonous toad
with a successful Handle Poison check, but there is a -2 penalty to this check.
Trappers are flat, semi-amorphous creatures which can spread
themselves over an area of up to 1d30 x 10 5-foot squares, matching the floor
of the space – whether it is natural or worked stone – with an astonishing
level of success. They are able to extrude part of their bodies into a vaguely
chest-like protrusion which cannot pass for a real chest when potential victims
are within 10 feet of it…but by then it is too late.
The trapper makes a single 1d20 attack against all creatures on
its surface. Those it catches are entrapped, and on each following round it can
crush all of its victims. Victims take 1d6 damage plus damage equal to the AC
bonus of any armor worn as it is crushed into the victims’ bodies. Entrapped
victims can take no action which requires motion, although mental powers may
still be used. In most cases, victims rely upon any which escaped the trapper
to survive.
In order to entrap victims, a trapper must expose its weaker
underside. This has a lower AC (15) and attacks against it cause twice normal
damage. If a trapper is reduced to half it hit points, it releases its victims
and attempts to escape. Trappers are smarter than they would appear to be, and
otherwise continue crushing their victims for 2d6+5 rounds before releasing
them for consumption – strong and lucky creatures may be able to escape at this
time.
Whether because they were released or slain, there is a chance
equal to AC bonus on 1d20 that any armor worn by victims is ruined.
Trappers deposit slain victims beneath them, where they are slowly
digested over 1d4 days. Although trappers do not care about treasure
themselves, the remains of victims may include some non-organic items of use or
value to adventurers.
Giant
Dragonfly: Init +5; Atk bite +4 melee (1d6); AC 14; HD 1d8; MV 5’ or fly
60’; Act 1d20; SP immune to morale checks; SV Fort +0; Ref +4; Will -4; AL N;
Crit 1d6/M.
Dragonflies are voracious eaters, and their giant kin are no different. Whereas normal dragonflies are dangerous only to mosquitoes and other flying insects, giant dragonflies are willing to take a bite or three out of anything they can. These creatures infest marshy land and swamps, and are about 3’ long. They attack by biting, and continue attacking until slain.
(Artwork by Daniel J. Bishop)
The sylph is barely modified from an adventure I wrote for Purple Duck Games (Fire in the Mountain), which is, to be honest, the first and only time I have used sylphs in a game. In fact, we are delving today into quite a few monsters I have either rarely or never used when I was running 1st Edition AD&D. I mean, of course I used plenty of stirges, but the others today I generally did not use.
I used sprites as defined by Gary
Gygax, but they never seemed to really hit the feeling that I wanted for
faeries, and having to do this conversion is actually the reason for putting
off this post so long. I had to do a write-up for sprites anyway for the Cyclopedia
of Common Faeries, so I finally overcame my hesitation and jumped in. Overall,
sprites suffer the same problems as I have noted with other fey creatures in AD&D: the game’s war gaming roots.
(Followers of my Patreon are up to Volume K on this project as of yesterday.)
I have also mentioned in previous posts the problem that giant
squids both cause and fall victim to – getting PCs onto a ship when they know
such creatures are out there!
I have used deer of all sorts, even back in the day, but giant
stags were not a creature I used often. This is a pity, because they are a
flavorful addition that would have fit well into many settings and adventures I
ran. I include a giant stag statblock herein for your use.
The strangle weed and su-monster both suffered from their niche
environments and their complexity. In the case of the strangle weed, I seldom
has PCs venture into shallow tropical waters. Then, even if I was inclined to
include such a monster, using it required the DM to determine the strength of
each frond (with 3d4 fronds) and compare it against the trapped PC, then using
that to determine how much (if any) damage is done as well as the PC’s chance
of escaping. I hope that my version is easier to use.
Su-monsters were either inspired by, or I believed that they were inspired
by, a cryptid
from Patagonia. In my younger days, that informed where I thought the monsters
should be encountered. I think that the only time I used them was when running The Ghost
Tower of Inverness, but I could be wrong. The psionic system
from 1e AD&D was a bit
convoluted to run, few characters legitimately had access to the system, and there
was little incentive to go through the headache of using these monsters. In my
write-up, I have linked them to the Ape-God Zal-Rah and made their psychic
powers easier to use at the table.
We are definitely past the half-way point now, and the home stretch
is in sight.
Large Sprite: Init +2; Atk tiny sword +4 melee (1d3 plus
sleep) or tiny bow +6 ranged (1d3 plus sleep); AC 14; HD 1d3; MV 15’ or fly 40’;
Act 1d16; SP sleep (1d6 hours, DC 10 Fort negates), glamour (DC 10 Will
negates), invisible at will; SV Fort -4; Ref +8; Will +2; AL C.
Sprite Swarm: Init +6; Atk swarming attack +4 melee (1 plus
sleep) or harassment; AC 18; HD 3d6; MV 5’ or fly 50’; Act special; SP sleep
(1d6 hours, DC 14 Fort negates), harassment (DC 10 Will negates), glamour (DC
15 Will negates), half damage from non-area attacks, invisible at will,
counting vulnerability; SV Fort -8; Ref +15; Will +4; AL C.
Sprites are small faeries, only about 6 inches tall at the highest, with diaphanous insect-like wings, most often resembling those of a dragonfly, butterfly, or moth. They are too small to harm most humanoids, individually, although they can do so en masse as a swarm. Large sprites are up to 2 feet tall, and have individual weapons that can cause actual harm.
Sprites can create illusory glamours of the most basic kind individually – a slight change in appearance, a flower, sweet bird song – but a swarm of sprites can create illusions which seem real until interacted with, and use this ability to lead travelers astray. The weapons of large sprites and sprite swarms can cause mortal beings to fall into an enchanted slumber for 1d6 hours, from which only magic can awaken their victims. Finally, a swarm of sprites can harass their victim, visibly or invisibly, pinching, pricking with tiny weapons, snagging hair or clothing, and laughing or twittering the entire time. The victims of such harassment must succeed in a DC 10 Will save or move 10’ in a direction chosen by the sprite swarm. Sprites may use this ability to drive mortals into bogs, off cliffs, or into other dangers. In some cases, they may simply wish to force mortals away from an area they have claimed.
Because they can become invisible at will, it is even more
difficult to count the number of sprites in a swarm than it is more mundane
creatures, as which sprites can be seen or not changes round to round. However,
if a victim can say aloud the true number of sprites in a swarm, the swarm is
automatically dispersed and cannot harm that individual for seven days. A
sprite swarm will have 4d10 + current hit points members.
Giant Squid: See the Colossal squid in the Cyclopedia
of Common Animals.
Stag: See the Cyclopedia
of Common Animals for many varieties of deer, including 16
statblocks. Nothing quite matches the giant stag in the Monster Manual, so here
is an additional statblock:
Giant Stag: Init +4; Atk gore +6 melee (2d8) or
hoof +4 melee (1d4); AC 13; HD 5d8; MV 40’; Act 1d20; SV Fort +6; Ref +4; Will
+4; AL N.
A giant stag is a majestically large deer, weighing 4d50+1,300
pounds and standing 1d3+5 feet tall at the shoulder. Giant stags may sometimes
be ridden by faeries or woodland humanoids, and are more aggressive than their
small kin, sometimes turning vengefully on would-be hunters.
Folklore says that these creatures are the repository of the
mortal souls of those greedy and hard-hearted enough to be reincarnated into
bloodsucking monstrosities after death. Certainly there is something almost
meanly human about their faces, with nose and mouth merged into a sharp but
mobile tube for draining their victims.
A stirge attacks with its proboscis. If it hits, it remains
attached to the victim until sated, one of the two is dead, or it is dislodged
with a DC 15 Strength check or successful Mighty Deed. If an attached stirge is
attacked by anyone other than its victim, a miss has a 1 in 3 chance of
requiring a new attack roll using the same die as the original attack, similar
to firing missile weapons into melee. The round after it hits, a stirge begins
draining blood, automatically causing 1d3 Stamina damage per round. It requires
10 points of Stamina damage to satiate a stirge, so that they can easily be the
death of those with weak or average constitutions.
Stirges often cache treasure in the areas they infest – coins,
gems, and similar small items which the creatures can carry. This lends some
credence to the theory that they possess the souls of deceased avaricious
mortals.
A carnivorous form of kelp, with 3d6 fronds surrounding a central
mass, strangle weed attempts to capture and crush creatures so that their
remains may be used as nutrients. Entwined creatures have a -1d penalty to all
attack rolls, skill checks, ability checks, and spell checks.
Su-Monster: Init +2; Atk bite +0 melee (1d4) or psychic
attack; AC 14; HD 2d6; MV 20’ or climb 40’; Act 1d20; SP psychic attack 3/day, brachiation;
SV Fort +1; Ref +4; Will +4; AL C.
These unnatural, leathery-skinned monkeys are almost as big as
adult humans, and just as intelligent. They have the ability to project a
psychic attack three times each day. When a su-monster makes a psychic attack,
roll 1d3: (1) a psychic blast in a 30’ wide cone with a 30’ base, causing 2d6
damage to all sentient targets ca
ught therein (DC 13 Will for half), (2) a
single target within 30’ must succeed in a DC 13 Will save or take 2d3
Intelligence damage, or (3) a single target within 30’ takes 1d3 Personality
damage and must succeed in a DC 13 Will save or the su-monster can direct its
next action as a physical melee attack.
Su-monsters roam unhealthy jungles where chaotic forces are
strong. Luckily for nearby inhabitants, they are usually found in troops of no
more than a dozen individuals, and they avoid civilization. Su-monsters are
said to guard fallen temples and ruins dedicated to a certain Ape-God, and are
feared for their cruel wickedness.
Sylphs are faerie creatures related to elemental air, who dwell
amongst the clouds but occasionally descend to cavort around mountain peaks,
especially at night. They appear to be foot-high elven women, with no hair and
skin of the palest hue. During daylight hours, they are translucent nearly to
the point of actual transparency.
Because of their elemental nature, half of all attacks using
non-magical weapons pass through them without causing harm.
If a sylph can be captured and bound, its life force can be used
to power wizard spells, at a rate of 1 hp per bonus to the spell check. As the
wizard has no way to determine the sylph’s initial hit points, draining the
creature in this way has a good chance of destroying it.
A sylph regains 1d3-2 hp per day (1d3-1 per day of complete rest),
so that the wizard can never be entirely sure how far it is safe to drain the
creature.
A faerie sylph can be bound in this way using the following means:
• A modified find familiar
spell (-1d to cast, minimum result 14; 1d3 sylphs bound with a result of 24+).
• Invoke patron cast for
that purpose, minimum result 12; 1d3 sylphs bound with result of 20-31; 2d3
sylphs bound with result of 32+.
• Binding.
• Ritualized magic devised for that purpose; see p. 124 of the core rulebook.
With thanks to MagicalMishap for the image. Art by DMAC. Used without permission; I will remove if asked.
Having had such a nice day yesterday, I decided to roll this post out early! And here I am, bringing you spiders for Christmas!
The DCC Annual has plenty of rules for giant insects and arachnids, and the Cyclopedia of Common Animals has one or two examples of normal spiders grown to enormous size. Several DCC adventures also include giant spiders of various sizes and types, so there is already a lot to choose from! As a judge, I love the inclusion of giant spiders of all sorts, so it should not be surprising that they occur in many of my adventures. The piece I wrote for Jungle Tomb of the Mummy Bride is probably the most arachno-centric scenario I have ever written, and certainly contains the most horrific giant spider encounter. Unless one includes The Tainted Scroll of Aranha, anyway.
Despite all of these resources, the big spiders in the original Monster
Manual deserve a more direct conversion. These should be useful as
benchmarks for other enormous arachnids of your own devising, but you should
feel free to diverge wildly from them if you like. I certainly have!
Giant Spider: Init +2; Atk bite +2 melee (2d4 plus venom);
AC 16; HD 4d8+4; MV 30’ or climb 20’; Act 1d20; SP venom (1d3 Stamina plus DC
15 Fort or additional 1d3 Stamina), webs (as spider web spell, spell check
22-25); SV Fort +3; Ref +2; Will +2; AL C.
Giant spiders are intelligent, thoroughly evil, and about as large
as a pony. Those who understand the language of spiders may attempt to converse
with them, but few can avoid being seen by these spiders as smaller ones see
flies. Some 5% of giant spiders can also use the common tongue.
A thief may obtain 1d4+2 doses of venom with a successful Handle
Poison check. If able to converse, a giant spider may well indicate a
willingness to supply this venom while alive, but those who approach a living
giant spider in this way soon learn the foolishness of doing so.
Huge Spider: Init +4; Atk bite +0 melee (1d6 plus venom); AC 14; HD 2d8+2; MV 40’
or climb 20’ or leap 30’; Act 1d20; SP venom (DC 13 Fort or 1d3 Stamina),
camouflage +8; SV Fort +2; Ref +4; Will +0; AL N.
Including spiders similar to wolf spiders, jumping spiders, and
trapdoor spiders, these creatures are the size of a human but no more
intelligent than dogs. Generally attacking by surprise, they do not normally
act cooperatively, but there are arachnid-like humanoids capable of training them
as a huntsman trains hounds.
A thief may obtain 2d3 doses of venom from a slain huge spider with
a successful Handle Poison check.
Large Spider: Init +4; Atk bite -2 melee (venom); AC 12; HD
1d6; MV 20’ or climb 20’; Act 1d20; SP venom (DC 12 Fort or 1d3 Stamina); SV
Fort +0; Ref +4; Will -2; AL N.
Fist-sized spiders with relatively weak venom, these spiders are
sometimes found in numbers (2d10) and are relatively mindless. A thief may
obtain 1d3 doses of venom from a slain large spider with a successful Handle
Poison check 50% of the time.
Phase Spider: Init +3; Atk bite +3 melee (1d6 plus venom);
AC 13; HD 5d8+5; MV 30’ or climb 20’; Act 1d20; SP venom (1d3 Stamina plus DC 18
Fort or additional 1d4 Stamina), webs (as spider web spell, spell check 22-25),
phasing; SV Fort +3; Ref +4; Will +3; AL N.
These spiders are similar to giant spiders, but they are less
cruel and may sometimes be bargained with by those who can speak the language
of spiders. Like giant spiders, 5% can use the common tongue.
They have the special ability of moving out of phase with the
corporeal world, so that otherwise successful attacks against them instead pass
harmless through their out-of-phase bodies. A phase spider gains a Reflex save
against any successful attack roll to phase through the attack. This power has
no effect against magical weapons, and a warrior or dwarf may use their deed to
give the spider a penalty to its save equal to the deed die result (even if
only a 1 or 2).
A thief may obtain 2d4 doses of venom from a phase spider with a
successful Handle Poison check. Attempting to negotiate for venom with a phase
spider is safer than with a giant spider, but all spiders prefer living prey,
so the offering must be great indeed.
Giant Water Spider: Init +2; Atk bite +1 melee (1d4 plus venom);
AC 15; HD 3d8+3; MV 40’ or climb 30’; Act 1d20; SP venom (1d3 Agility plus DC 13
Fort or 1d3 Stamina); SV Fort +3; Ref +2; Will +1; AL N.
These semi-intelligent spiders live in fresh water, and are able
to carry a bubble of air on their abdomens with which to breathe. They can
carry air in this way, and deposit it in underwater lairs designed to receive
it. They are not smart enough to speak, but are smart enough to understand
basic speech and concepts, and if fed living prey they may become neutral, or
even friendly, with their benefactors. Giant water spiders are roughly as big
as a human.
A thief may obtain 1d4 doses of venom from a dead giant water
spider with a successful Handle Poison check. They are not smart enough to
understand that someone may wish venom from a living spider.
Giant Saltwater Spider: Init +0; Atk bite +3 melee (2d4 plus venom);
AC 15; HD 6d8+6; MV 30’ or climb 20’; Act 1d20; SP venom (1d4 Agility plus DC
17 Fort or 1d4 Stamina); SV Fort +5; Ref +0; Will +2; AL N.
Similar to giant water spiders, giant saltwater spiders live
instead live in shallow oceans and seas.
In fact, let's call it a Yuletide Miracle, because I wasn't planning on posting this until after Boxing Day. Yet, after being visited by three ghosts last night (four if you count Marley's ghost), my heart grew three sizes. So here are some beasts to roast and carve.
The various sphinxes are from Creatures of the Sands, but
there are plenty of new conversions here. I had done a shrieker conversion for Purple Duck (Purple Mountain
II: Desolate Dwarven Delve), but I didn’t reference that for
this conversion.
Skeletons, shriekers, and giant snakes are all creatures I have
used relatively frequently, and is fitting that the core rulebook covers two of these. Or mostly covers them, as I have
had a bit to add to giant snakes.
Sphinxes are also an excellent monster for campaigns in regions suited
to using them, and they are also monsters I have used fairly regularly. The
idea that sphinxes may hold spell knowledge in DCC makes their inclusion invaluable.
The remainder are good monsters that I have used infrequently,
largely because they can be devastating to encounter. The flavor of these
monsters is excellent, though, and I hope my versions of them meet with your
approval. In the early days of the hobby, the idea of killing a PC through a
slithering tracker, or taking away 2 levels with a single attack might have
been easier to swallow than they would be today. My spectre may be gentler
(especially if you have access to restore
vitality), but my slithering tracker is not. In the case of the slithering
tracker and the giant slug, I have tried to give a little more guidance as to
description in one case or abilities in the other than the original Monster
Manual did.
Anyway, today’s post includes a dozen statblocks. I hope that you
find them useful!
These slowly-ambulating fungi are about as tall as a halfling,
with thick, leathery bodies that can survive a fair amount of abuse. They feed
on carrion and, although incapable of attacks themselves, they have the means
to ensure a reasonable food supply. Light or movement within 30 feet of a
shrieker cause the fungus to emit a loud and high-pitched shrieking noise which
can be heard from a great distance. Each round of shrieking, there is a 1 in 6
chance of a random encounter (in addition to any set encounter the shrieking
triggers). The fungus continues to shriek for 2d6 rounds even after it detects
neither movement or light, and even after it stops there is a 1 in 10 chance
per round of a random encounter being drawn to the shrieker’s location each
round for the next 3d10 minutes.
Random encounters may be able to track adventurers, but, if they
cannot silence a shrieker quickly, retreat is often the best option they may
have. Judges are encourages to have distance shrieker noises heard occasionally
by characters exploring vast dungeons or cave systems.
Skeleton: See the core rulebook, pages 426-427.
Giant Skunk: See the Cyclopedia of Common Animals.
Slithering Tracker: Init +0; Atk touch +3 melee (paralysis);
AC 15; HD 5d8; MV 30’; Act 1d20; SP paralysis (1d6 hours, DC 15 Fort negates),
tracking, semi-fluid, blood drain (1d3 Stamina per turn), stealth +18; SV Fort
+3, Ref +2, Will +4; AL N.
This creature is an evolved type of primordial slime, no more than
3 feet long, which moves in a puddle shaped much like a flattened snake.
Because they are semi-fluid, they can pass through almost any aperture not less
than three inches in diameter. Flattened out, they can easily pass beneath most
doors. Because they are almost transparent, they nearly always gain a surprise
round – when discovered before this, it is usually because a slithering noise
made their prey wary.
As their name suggests, slithering trackers are nearly faultless
trackers, and once they have begun trailing a target they seldom stop unless
killed or something (such as taking a ship) stymies the trail. Many an
adventurer may curse trudging in the rain back to town after a dungeon raid,
but slithering trackers do not hesitate to leave the underworld, or to enter
civilization, and a heavy enough downpour may wash the adventurers’ tracks and
scent away.
Slithering trackers do not attack immediately, in general, but
wait to get their chosen target alone. Their only useful melee attack paralyzes
targets for 1d6 hours unless a DC 15 Fort save is successful. Once a victim is
paralyzed, the slithering tracker spreads out across the body and slowly begins
draining blood plasma, causing 1d3 Stamina damage per turn. If the victim’s
Stamina reaches 0, they die. A victim in contact with a slithering tracker when
paralysis wears off must succeed in another DC 15 Fort save or be paralyzed
anew. It is possible, though unlikely, that a victim might survive the blood
plasma draining, become mobile again, and escape or fight the monster off
without outside help.
Be thankful that these monsters are seldom encountered.
Giant Slug: Init -6; Atk bite +4 melee (1d12) or
acidic spit +3 ranged (acidic spit); AC 12; HD 12d6; MV 20’ or burrow 1’; Act
1d20; acidic spit (SP 60’ range, 3d6 damage, DC 13 Fort for half), half damage
from bludgeoning weapons, possible slime; SV Fort +10, Ref -10, Will -4; AL C.
Giant slugs are horrendous creatures which can spit acid, and use
their rasping tongues to slowly burrow even through solid stone. At the judge’s
discretion, their slime trails may have traits similar to underdark slugs (core rulebook, page 427).
Giant Snake: See the core rulebook, page 428, for giant constrictors, poisonous snakes,
and spitting snakes (boas, cobras, and vipers). See the Cyclopedia
of Common Animals for giant sidewinders and giant sea snakes. The
giant sea snake in the Cyclopedia is not a destroyer of
ships, so I include another statblock below.
Amphisbaena: : Init +6; Atk bite +8 melee (3d6 plus
venom); AC 16; HD 4d8; MV 30’; SP venom (DC 12 Fort or 1d4 Stamina); Act 2d20;
SV Fort +6, Ref +4, Will +2; AL N.
Amphisbaenas are simply snakes with a second head instead of a
tail. To make an amphisbaena from any serpent, simply add an extra action die
for the second head. Normal-sized snakes as well as giant snakes can be
modified this way, although amphisbaenas are far more likely to be venomous
snakes than constrictors. These stats were modified from the giant viper in the
core rulebook.
Hoop
Snake: This snake can form a rigid “hoop” by keeping its tail (or second
head, if an amphisbaena) near its head, using an action die. It can then roll
along at twice its normal move speed, and can still attack at the end of its
move if it has an available action die to do so.
Colossal Sea Snake: Init -4; Atk bite +4 melee (1d12 plus
venom) or crush ship; AC 18; HD 10d8; MV swim 70’; Act 1d24; SP venom (3d6
damage plus Fort DC 16 or death), crush ship, crit 20-24; SV Fort +12, Ref +0,
Will +8; AL N.
Sea serpents of incredible size, there is only a 1 in 5 chance
that sighting such a creature results in an attack. The initial attack of a
colossal sea snake is to coil about the ship (assuming that such is present),
an attack which takes 1d6 rounds for the creature to accomplish. Once it has
succeeded at this, the snake crushes the ship, which requires no action die.
For a normal-sized galley, there is a cumulative 1 in 10 chance of sinking the
ship per round. Smaller ships are easier to sink (1 in 8, 1 in 7, 1 in 6, and
so on), while larger ships are harder to sink and take longer to coil around
(+1 round per die shift).
When a colossal sea snake attacks a ship, it is usually because it
has mistaken the vessel for a prey item. In this case, it ignores life boats
and those fleeing into the air or water. If it is attacked by those on the
ship, however, it may use its venomous bite against them.
Thieves can recover 1d6 doses of venom from a slain colossal sea snake, if they manage to gain access to its body, with a successful Handle Poison check. This check has a -1d shift due to the nature of the creature it is being collected from, but a thief may make 3d6 attempts if they have access to the body long enough.
Spectre: Init +2; Atk non-corporeal touch +3 melee (1d6 cold plus life drain); AC 10; HD 5d12; MV fly 40’; Act 1d20; SP un-dead traits, life drain (DC 13 Will or 1d4 permanent Stamina damage), create spawn, immune to non-magical weapons; SV Fort +2, Ref +4, Will +8; AL C.Spectre Spawn: Init -2; Atk non-corporeal touch +0
melee (1d3 cold plus life drain); AC 10; HD 3d12; MV fly 40’; Act 1d20; SP
un-dead traits, life drain (DC 13 Will or 1d3 Stamina damage), immune to
non-magical weapons; SV Fort +0, Ref +2, Will +2; AL C.
A particularly powerful and nasty type of ghost (see core rulebook, pages 413-414), specters
are intelligent and evil. Unlike many ghosts, they actively conceal the means
by which they may be laid to rest, for they revel in their un-death. Unless a
spectre is permanently lain to rest, anyone slain by a spectre arises as a
spectre spawn 1d3 nights later. It may take decades for a spectre spawn to
become a full spectre, and until that time they may be laid to rest by
permanently laying to rest the “parent” spectre. This often revolves around
righting some wrong the spectre performed in life or destroying some object
that binds it to the Lands We Know.
Criosphinx: Criosphinx: Init +4; Atk ram + 5
melee (1d6+2) or claw +3 melee (1d4); AC 15; HD 4d8+4; MV 40’ or fly 50’; Act
1d20; SV Fort +6, Ref +2, Will +1; AL N..
Gynosphinx: Init +6; Atk claw +5 melee (1d6); AC
17; HD 6d8+6; MV 40’ or fly 50’; Act 2d20; spellcasting; SV Fort +5, Ref +5,
Will +6; AL N.
Small Gynosphinx: Init +7; Atk claw +5 melee (1d4); AC
18; HD 2d8+4; MV 30’ or fly 50’; Act 2d20; SV Fort +3, Ref +7, Will +5; AL C.
Hieracosphinx: Init +4; Atk claw +5 melee (1d4) or
bite +3 melee (1d6); AC 15; HD 5d8+5; MV 40’ or fly 50’; Act 3d20; SV Fort +5,
Ref +2, Will +2; AL N.
The names of the various types of sphinxes come to us from the
ancient Greeks, and particularly by Herodotus when he travelled to Egypt. All
sphinxes have leonine bodies and bird-like wings, but there are several
different types which may be encountered.
Androsphinxes are the largest group, with make human heads. These
sphinxes serve as guardians, and generally ally themselves with the gods of
Law. Androsphinxes have the spellcasting abilities of level 1d3 clerics,
including the ability to turn the unholy and lay on hands.
Criosphinxes have the heads of rams and are not particularly
intelligent.
Smaller gynosphinxes are decidedly malevolent. Although they may
be dispatched by the gods to punish transgressors, in truth they do not care
who gets punished, and they will kill and devour all they can until their
proper target should appear. Like their larger kindred, these sphinxes love
knowledge, and particularly love riddles. It is a favorite game to ask a riddle
of their intended prey, who – if they can answer correctly – may be allowed to
go free unscathed.
Hieracosphinxes are falcon-headed and intelligent. They have been
known to aid humans, acting as guardians or hunters, but they are equally
likely to be encountered raiding livestock, or far in the wastes where all but
the most hardy travelers may be avoided. Hieracosphinxes have a great store of
wisdom, but only those who understand the languages of hawks and eagles may
prise secrets from them successfully.