Mogre |
I did some sifting on the inter-webs and found some creatures that don't fit into the European and Asian cultures (not that there's anything wrong with creatures from those cultures, there is a lot there).
Abada (African): A small creature, about the size of a donkey that has two large crooked horns that can cure poisons and disease.
Boo Hag (American, South Carolina): A cross between a hag and a vampire. It turns into a mist and steals the breath from sleeping victims. This act is called "riding", I'm guessing because the boo hag straddles their victims.
Cadejo (Central American): Actually two creatures. Both are large shaggy dogs (about the size of a cow) with glowing red eyes. One is white and one black (good and evil, depending on the culture's view of those colors). The good one helps and protects travelers; the evil one devours them (of course).
Ewah (Cherokee): Also called a Wampus Cat. A cat woman that hunts men, and not in the good way.
Ijiraq (Inuit): A shapeshifter who steals children.
Nasnas (Arabian): A demon that resembles half a person, as in split down the middle. They hop to get around. They were in the Al-Qadim books as well.
If you like fey, you should check out Hawaiian Lore. Lots of fey like creatures.
Kobold Catgirl |
I did some sifting on the inter-webs and found some creatures that don't fit into the European and Asian cultures (not that there's anything wrong with creatures from those cultures, there is a lot there).
Abada (African): A small creature, about the size of a donkey that has two large crooked horns that can cure poisons and disease.
Boo Hag (American, South Carolina): A cross between a hag and a vampire. It turns into a mist and steals the breath from sleeping victims. This act is called "riding", I'm guessing because the boo hag straddles their victims.
A less NSFW description would be a literal one, but my knowledge of this creature mostly comes from children's books. :P
Goth Guru |
Read up some more on the Boo Hag. You're right, many children's books written about it. Apparently they steal their victim's skin as well, a form of shapeshifting I guess. An American Classic apparently.
Is it like the Japanese demon which is sometimes observed repainting the skin to keep it convincing?
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Warning, my spelling is very bad and I like puns.
Mogre |
Mogre wrote:Read up some more on the Boo Hag. You're right, many children's books written about it. Apparently they steal their victim's skin as well, a form of shapeshifting I guess. An American Classic apparently.Is it like the Japanese demon which is sometimes observed repainting the skin to keep it convincing?
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Warning, my spelling is very bad and I like puns.
It may have some African roots, as the story was told in the American South, mainly amongst slaves and free blacks. The boo hag wears a woman's skin, but sheds it at night to feed. She transforms into a mist to travel and either feeds by sitting on her victim's chest and sucking the breath out of him or riding on their back and draining their energy (I've read a story about this one when I was in the 6th Grade, a long time ago).
While I was looking up information for this thread, I did get a sense of similarity between the cultures. You see a similar creature wrapped in a different suit with different lore. The dragon looked to be the most common. Every culture has a story about a dragon or dragon like creature of some sort it seems.
Goth Guru |
Goth Guru wrote:Mogre wrote:Read up some more on the Boo Hag. You're right, many children's books written about it. Apparently they steal their victim's skin as well, a form of shapeshifting I guess. An American Classic apparently.Is it like the Japanese demon which is sometimes observed repainting the skin to keep it convincing?
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Warning, my spelling is very bad and I like puns.It may have some African roots, as the story was told in the American South, mainly amongst slaves and free blacks. The boo hag wears a woman's skin, but sheds it at night to feed. She transforms into a mist to travel and either feeds by sitting on her victim's chest and sucking the breath out of him or riding on their back and draining their energy (I've read a story about this one when I was in the 6th Grade, a long time ago).
While I was looking up information for this thread, I did get a sense of similarity between the cultures. You see a similar creature wrapped in a different suit with different lore. The dragon looked to be the most common. Every culture has a story about a dragon or dragon like creature of some sort it seems.
Indeed, there is the American Indian skindancer, and in Russia there was a man who used a belt of Bear fur to become a killer Were Bear. He became such a beast that he had no alignment and had to be put down by an angry mob.
YawarFiesta |
YawarFiesta wrote:No love for the Tunche :(.
My searches indicate that a Tunche is a person that acts like a cold tuna at a party. I can't even find anything about the movie El Tunche. Is it a monster or a wrestler? Who knows?
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Warning, my spelling is very bad and I like puns.
Sorry for grammar mistakes, here is the most popular description of the Tunche, and my personal favorite.
There are many histories about this being, for example, there is the one about a person in the midle the jungle thinking of his wife or his family and the ¨Tunche¨ takes advantage of the weakness of his stalkee, shapeshifting into his loved ones and, through deceit, make his victims follow it, when the victim realices it, its far away from his encapment and absolutely lost.
The fate of the ¨Tunche's¨ victims its uncertain, its unknown if the ¨Tunche¨ abandons them to their own deveices and they die of hunger or devoured by another animal or if the ¨Tunche¨ itself devours them.
Here is the translation of the Wikipedia article, the original article is in spanish:
There exist the belief that when a Tuche whistles with insistence in the surroundings of a comunity its a bad omen and when it does it over a house, it brings deacease and death.
Mocking the Tunchi or Tunche or insulting its unwise, to say the least, because it will infuriate it and the the Tunche will attack with greater insistence,whistling and whistling it will chase and harras so much that even the bravest will end up enter such a great panic state that, will either go insane or die.
Humbly,
Yawar
Davor |
I know Paizo = Pathfinder, but I'd love to see them do a collaborative book with ArenaNet and do a "Guild Wars: Campaign Setting" book.
We'd get a small, intelligent race, catfolk that are NOT fanservice, and a veritable plethora of new monsters, or new takes on monsters (Titans, the Corrupted, Mursaat, Siege Wurms, and more).
Or at least do add those to the bestiary.
Wolfgang Baur Kobold Press |
I'd like to see a few more explicitly Mythos creatures to add to the Denizens, shoggoths, and hounds.
I'd also like to see some of the creatures from Northlands, but I may be biased there.
And devils and demons. There ALWAYS need to be more demons and devils.
Wicht |
I'd also like to see some of the creatures from Northlands, but I may be biased there.
Valkyries!
Berselius |
I shortened the list of what I’d like to see in the Bestiary 3 plus made some improvements (hope that helps Asgetrion):
Agathion, Ceratonal (Rhino-like Agathion more powerful than Leonals but less powerful than Loxonals)
Agathion, Loxonal (Elephant-like Agathion nearly equal in power to the Draconal and higher in station than a Ceratonal)
Angel, Cherubar (powerful Angels who act as a prevention force against fiendish incursions in the Material Plane)
Angel, Seraphar (angels whose powerful voices can produce numerous ill effects for evil beings)
Ape, Tyrant [Megaprimatus] (huge apes often worshiped as gods on tropical islands and in the jungles of the Mwangi Expanse)
Archon, Feather (Archons whose massive and beautiful feathered wings can become as sharp as razor blades)
Archon, Sword (Winged archons clad in golden platemail who carry vorpal greatswords and administer entire cities of heaven)
Azata, Nedagha (Powerful Azata who promote freedom and liberate the oppressed across the Multiverse)
Azata, Rusalka (Aquatic azata who seek to safeguard the good-aligned aquatic races of several material worlds)
Cackle Bird (Large feathered birds of prey who can breath clouds of laughter causing vapor)
Devil, Pleasure (Lucunagon) (devils who seek to damn the innocent to hell by offering physical pleasure)
Dragon [Chromatic], Brown (Wrathful dragons of the desert who have fiery breath and the ability to manipulate sand)
Dragon [Chromatic], Yellow (Treacherous dragons of the jungle with electric breath and a tendency for betrayal)
Dragon [Metallic], Cobalt (Dragons of the frozen arctic who use their icy breath and immense strength to protect and teach good-aligned humanoids of the north)
Dragon [Metallic], Orium (Intellectual dragons who dwell in ancient ruins seeking to secure the future by safeguarding the relics of the past with their acid breath)
Golem, Doll (Infant-sized doll-like golems whose bite can cause one to break out into deadly laughter)
Golem, Bone (Golems made of the bones of dead monsters that can unleash a frightening shriek)
Golem, Gold (Golems made of solid gold that while malleable also possess potent healing powers)
Golem, Steel (Golems made of solid steel with extraordinary durability as well as a sonic breath weapon)
Herald of the Great Old Ones (Ancient and terrible beings whose mere presence causes insanity)
Maelstrom (Colossally large evil cloud-like elementals who rain thunder, hail, and wind upon bystanders and civilization)
Skeleton, Nova (Template) (Skeletons that crackle with electrical power)
Zombie, Ooze (Template) (Zombies whose form is almost ooze-like)
Eric Hinkle |
I'd like to see a few more explicitly Mythos creatures to add to the Denizens, shoggoths, and hounds.
I'd love to see write-ups for the Mi-go, the Elder Things, and the Great Race of Yith.
I'd also like to see some of the creatures from Northlands, but I may be biased there.
And devils and demons. There ALWAYS need to be more demons and devils.
And agreed on both of these as well.
booger=boy |
Machine Age Dragon, basically a dragon that is a golem. Maybe a Mechzilla thing.
Gold Pieces o' Death, you think their gold until you put them with your treasure and they start eating everything!
Rotten Assassins, assassins that were killed before they finished their last job and now walk the earth looking to do so.
The Mind Joiners, an offshoot of the Mind Flayers that do not wish to devour human's brains but to join with them in symbiotic relationships. They have traded their mind blast for a peace ray.
The Scarecrows from the first fiend folio.
The Filth Men, humanoids that herd otyughs. Some say they feed off their "milk".
Screamers of Disunity, a group dedicated to the destruction of music and the death of all bards!
booger=boy
Justin Franklin |
Justin Franklin wrote:Aren't those in bonus bestiary?Confirmed from Undead Revisited as being in the upcoming Bestiary 3.
Allip and Huecuva.
Yep they are.
Adam Daigle Director of Narrative |
Gorbacz |
*taunt taunt*
I know a few that'll be in it, care of being mentioned as being in it in the outline for a project I won't name. ;)
That doesn't help at all though, does it? But what do you expect? I'm evil.
Uh oh, Todd Stewart is in teasing mode. RUN!
DungeonmasterCal |
I'd love to see more monsters garnered from folklore, rather than just made up from scratch. And I'd prefer their illustrations to resemble the most common descriptions given by witnesses and lore (the chupacabra in Bestiary 2 comes to mind. It looks like a low budget dinosaur with spikes on its back. Nothing like the "common" description and illustration that most appears online or in publications).
I reckon that's it.
Nodnarb |
I have a few, some serious and some just plain silly, but I would love to see them in Bestiary 3, nonetheless.
Most of them are links to wikipedia pages
Nachtkrapp or Night Crow (Germany, Austria, Hungary, Etc): A large nocturnal crow that eats children.
Cactus Cat (North America): A Bobcat-like wild cat with cactus thorns instead of fur
Jackalope (Northa America): A combination of a Jack Rabbit and an Antelope or White Tail Deer.
Platypus(Australia): A magical combination of a duck, beaver, and an otter.
The Duck Bunny: An unnatural (Magical?) combination of a duck and a rabbit. Simply because I'd love to see how Paizo handle it.
Oh, and I would love to see the Flumph (Misfit Monsters Redeemed) and hopefully a host of Asian inspired monsters make an appearance in the new Bestiary as well.
Auxmaulous |
Confirmed from Undead Revisited as being in the upcoming Bestiary 3.
Allip and Huecuva.
They also mentioned the Graveknight as being in Bestiary 3
Based on what was listed in UR I would also add: Demi-lich
If Mr. Jacobs cannot find a way to sneak in the Flying Polyps and Nightgaunts (both cut from AP 46) into the Jade Regent then I would hope they would end up in Bestiary 3.
If not B3 then maybe in Classic Mythos/Mythos Revisted series of books (lol, one can hope!)
Jadeite |
Jim Mount wrote:Avolakia !!I would like to see EVERYTHING not IP from Shackled City, Savage tide and Age of Worms...there were some awesome monsters there...
Anything published in Dungeon and Dragon Magazine is IP, with a few exceptions that were made Open Content. With the exception of things that were in the SRD, anythign from the Dungeon Adventure Paths is IP.
Any D&D monster that isn't in the SRD or Tome of Horrors is off-limits, unless it's based on mythology (or is a historic creature).
Did I already mention that I'd like Frost Men/Frost Folk from the ToH?
Ian Eastmond |
Penanggalan,
Sidhe / Aos Sí,
Maenads (Bacchae or Bacchantes),
Asian Dragons,
NEW kytons & oni,
Táltos Horse,
Bánánach,
Demilich,
Scorpionfolk,
More creatures like the Tane, such as servants of the Eldest of the First World that don't exist yet in either Bestiary (the Sidhe/Aos Sí or Maenads may fit in that category, but other stuff would be great),
Bhut,
Sollux.