This book contains dozens of new monsters found in the Inner Sea region—all invented specifically for the Pathfinder campaign setting! Some, like the gearsmen of Numeria or the moth-like star monarchs who serve the goddess of dreams, have been mentioned many times in Pathfinder Campaign Setting books, but others, like the alien vespergaunt or Rahadoum’s desert-dwelling whirlmaws, have only been obliquely illustrated or mentioned before. And some—like the mysterious and ancient veiled masters, and the disturbingly alluring fungus queen—make their appearance for the first time in print after debuting in Paizo’s office campaigns.
The Inner Sea Bestiary explores some of Golarion’s most unique monsters. Inside this book you will find:
New monsters ranging in challenge rating from 1/3 (such as the mysterious syrinx) to 25 (the powerful infernal duke Lorthact).
Three new monstrous templates: the exotic mind-draining vetala vampire, the blighted fey of Fangwood, and the twisted mutants of the Mana Wastes.
Five new 0-Hit Die races ready for you to customize as villains—or playable as characters if that suits your particular game!
Beings both benevolent and destructive—48 in all—ready to challenge adventurers in any Pathfinder game!
The Inner Sea Bestiary is intended for use with the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game and the Pathfinder campaign setting, but can be used in any fantasy game setting.
By Jim Groves, James Jacobs, Rob McCreary, Erik Mona, Jason Nelson, Patrick Renie, F. Wesley Schneider, James L. Sutter, Russ Taylor, Greg A. Vaughan
ISBN-13: 978-1-60125-468-9
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I enjoyed reading and skimming this one a lot. The ideas were even more interesting than at regular bestiaries. And it is a pure bestiary - monster listing begins at page 3 and ends at the last content page (63). Monsters are diverse and partially go beyond usual Inner Sea inhabitants, from robots over evil and neutral outsiders to aliens. The book includes two familiars (e.g. parrot fey hybrid), five playable races (not covered by Advanced Race Guide, e.g. monkey goblin) as well as three templates (e.g. charisma sucking vampire). In comparison to regular bestiaries (about 280 pages of monsters) it's expensive (especially the PDF), but I felt it was still worth it.
I bought this hoping for creatures... and you know what I got? Exactly that. Good price considering how many baddies i got. You get three playable races, enemies only mentioned in the inner sea world guide, and even some completley new ones. This is definitly worth the price for the PDF, and it will see some use in the future.
I bought this specifically to get my hands on the Blighted Fey and Mana Wastes Mutant templates, and I love them. I've been frustrated at the lack of "fey gone evil" options I had, and now I've got them!
I love that the monsters in this bestiary are versatile enough to use them with the Golarion flavour or as monsters in a homebrew setting. You can bet my players are going to be running into some monkey goblins or water wraiths soon ;)
The Inner Sea Bestiary is really an excellent book, one that manages to add yet more monsters to the game but still fill a niche for the Golarion setting. The monsters are full of a flavour that can’t quite be achieved in a generic monster book. I know that I’m certainly more likely to use monsters from this book in my own games than many of the monsters from the hardcover bestiaries (such as the zoog, an obscure monster from Bestiary 3 that I just chose randomly). I highly recommend it to all GMs who use the Golarion setting, and even to those who don’t, but still want some new and interesting monsters!
While there isn't any hardcover bestiary this year, the people of Paizo at least gave us something. That something is the Innersea Beastiary and it is good. We get 5 playable races, 2 improved familiars, 5 powerful evil outsiders, 3 robots, 3 golems, 2 spawn of Rovagug, 2 dragons, 3 giant vermion, 1 giant, 2 Psychopomps, and 3 templates. Personely I think this book is worth it just for the 5 playable races, wich are the Lashunta, Andriod, Monkey Goblin, Ghoran, and Syrinx. I wish there was more info on these races, heck they don't even list were in the Inneasea region the Lashunta can be found. I do think the book suffers from the too many evil outsider syndrom and I do think there are creatures in there that weren't that world specific and could have been in a hardcover book. But despite some issues it is a good solid book for what 64 pages can really give you. I hope one day we will see more of these world specific books for things like distant worlds and the other continents. etc. but as long as it doesn't cost us a hardcover bestiary.
There's a LOT of monsters in this book... and folks who've been wondering about monsters we've mentioned or illustrated but never gave stats to should be well pleased with the book, since that's a primary purpose of it—to stat up monsters we KNOW live in or visit the Inner Sea region, but as of yet have no stats.
That means that it's something of a departure for is in that these monsters are not things taken from the SRD or inspired directly from myth and legend. With perhaps a couple of exceptions (which should be obvious once the book is out), these really are "monsters invented specifically for Golarion" through and through.
Note that this book does NOT replace "Bestiary 4." We could well still do a "Bestiary 4" at some point in the future.
BUT! Having it come out at about the same time as the NPC Codex was intentional. Folks who would rather have more monsters at that time will have an option.
So which two spawn is it in the book? I'm guessing the one from legacy of fire and the giant beatle In Osirion.
The one from Legacy of Fire is already presented in Pathfinder #24. (There are NO reprinted from other sources monsters in this book.)
The giant beetle is dead. (All the monsters in this book are still alive in modern Golarion.)
Therefore... the two in this book are different than those two.
Will they be statted as Behemoths? (which by the way is an amazing monster subtype)
No. Behemoths are different things than the Spawn of Rovagug. You can certainly look at them as "world-neutral versions" of the Spawn of Rovagug, I guess... but in Golarion... the Spawn of Rovagug and behemoths are two different things.
Note that this book does NOT replace "Bestiary 4." We could well still do a "Bestiary 4" at some point in the future.
BUT! Having it come out at about the same time as the NPC Codex was intentional. Folks who would rather have more monsters at that time will have an option.
Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook Subscriber
Wait, this maxes out at CR20? Both the terrasque and Xotani are higher than CR20 monsters.
I wonder what Spawn you're using. probably not the Slohr, since that's a ghostbusters reference. if it's Ones that you've illustrated, then Probably Chemnosit, the Monarch Worm, and Volnagur, the End-Singer.
Unless it's new Spawn? Either way, Spawn are always welcome foes for high level campaigns. I presume they'll be as hard to kill as old 'rasquey and the Firebleeder?
Hey Liz, what's the maximum number of times I could type the word "want" in a single Paizo thread post? I don't want to try if its not going to be enough to show how much I want this book.
A Bestiary is a Bestiary, no matter where the title says the monsters are from, after all!
Wait, this maxes out at CR20? Both the terrasque and Xotani are higher than CR20 monsters.
I wonder what Spawn you're using. probably not the Slohr, since that's a ghostbusters reference. if it's Ones that you've illustrated, then Probably Chemnosit, the Monarch Worm, and Volnagur, the End-Singer.
Unless it's new Spawn? Either way, Spawn are always welcome foes for high level campaigns. I presume they'll be as hard to kill as old 'rasquey and the Firebleeder?
The Slohr is no longer a part of the Campaign Setting; we omitted it precisely because it's TOO much of a ghostbusters reference. To the extent that it could be deemed legally actionable.
It IS the two we've illustrated, since you guessed that pretty well.
So the mockup cover is a promise that we'll get the Numerian Scorpionbot, right? ;)
Extremely curious about the vespergaunts.
Really eager to see more on Lorthact.
Also, shifting my Bestiary 4 hopes for dark/scary/ugly celestials to this book!
No dark/scary/ugly celestials in this book. Those are more of a Great Beyond monster. There ARE some outsiders in this book, but they're ones that we've either a) mentioned already or b) have a stronger interest in the Inner Sea region, or c) both.
And the vespergaunt has been illustrated before... but we've not yet revealed that's what it is in print.