Why Underwater?


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Noumenon

First Post
I have to say this post has a misleading thread title. The actual post I was led to expect would have read like this:

Why did I choose to set a campaign not only in the World of Greyhawk, but also primarily underwater? <snip 495 words that don't explain why the campaign was underwater>
Almost on a whim, I decided to set the game underwater. I had started keeping saltwater aquariums and my campaigns already had a reputation for being somewhat unorthodox, so it seemed a natural fit; the perfect amalgamation of my interests in writing, D&D, and marine aquaria. <snip 140 more words; end of post.>

However, I'm still glad you resurrected the post because the ideas in your signature really open up a new world of water-based adventures for me. Underwater volcanoes; water spiders on the surface; undead dragon turtle. That really expands the palette beyond the underwater monsters in the MM. I also like the idea of using oozes as jellyfish. And illithids make natural octopus-heads.

You mention "hydrodaemons" -- underwater demons are a great new idea too. What kind of flavor and abilities do they have?
 
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On Puget Sound

First Post
I'm a professional aquarist and GM in Charlotte SC. Are you perchance anywhere close by? (Yeah, I know, the screen name...I'm not geographically challenged, I just moved).
 


On Puget Sound

First Post
That's pretty close, but too far for a gaming commute. I work at Fintastic aquarium shop in Charlotte (just moved here from Seattle about 2 weeks ago) and am working on putting together a 4E group here. Had not thought about looking into a tank for monster and dungeon inspiration; what a great idea! Huge anemones and tunnels dug by enormous yellowhead jawfish....
 

Aeolius

Adventurer
That's pretty close, but too far for a gaming commute. I work at Fintastic aquarium shop in Charlotte (just moved here from Seattle about 2 weeks ago)
My LFS, Aquamain's, just changed hands. I briefly considered buying him out but the economy just doesn't seem right. Perhaps in 2-3 years I will open an aquarium store...hrmm... Finland? ;)


Had not thought about looking into a tank for monster and dungeon inspiration; what a great idea! Huge anemones and tunnels dug by enormous yellowhead jawfish....
As I have posted elsewhere, I like to interject a bit of reality into my fantasy; my blinogo (sea goblins) were inspired by goblin sharks, iblishi (sea kobolds) by blue-dot stingrays, koolocanth (sea bugbears by coelacanth, and krana (sea orcs) by black chimaera.
 

Dannyalcatraz

Schmoderator
Staff member
Supporter
As Aeolius knows well, there have been a quite a few threads about aquatic menaces, many drawn from real life. Here are some of them, for those who weren't involved with them at the time:

http://www.enworld.org/forum/general-rpg-discussion/224858-underwater-shipwreck.html
http://www.enworld.org/forum/general-rpg-discussion/202233-real-sea-monsters.html
http://www.enworld.org/forum/genera...-south-pacific-islands-flavored-campaign.html
http://www.enworld.org/forum/general-rpg-discussion/181377-aquatic-campaigns.html
http://www.enworld.org/forum/homebrews/185243-giant-harpoon-snail.html
http://www.enworld.org/forum/homebrews/179818-giant-shrimp.html
http://www.enworld.org/forum/general-rpg-discussion/179402-populating-tropical-archipelago.html
http://www.enworld.org/forum/general-rpg-discussion/179508-giant-crayfish.html

And a little post from a thread about "creepy" critters:
<snip>
3) Anything that eats its live prey whole...sloooooowly...creeps people out. Most people would think constrictor snake first, but they don't do the live part. Cone Snails, OTOH, use a harpoon-like radula to inject a nonlethal paralytic poison into small fish (and other prey) and eat them whole. I used a Giant sized one of these in a campaign once...the hate of the thing was almost visceral.

Elsewhere, I had even posted about an aquatic Monk variant that, like nudibranchs, had the class ability to consume anemones and incorporate the nematocysts into their bodies...
 
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Aeolius

Adventurer
Elsewhere, I had even posted about an aquatic Monk variant that, like nudibranchs, had the class ability to consume anemones and incorporate the nematocysts into their bodies...

In my games, I had the Prophet A'nan, whose followers were anemoids, small humanoid anemones.

As for incorporating the abilities of consumed creatures, I am reminded of the golden hammerhead, which consumes certain fish and shrimp high in yellow pigments. Their young are born yellow in color, which apparently affords a degree of camouflage as they swim in the shallows. As the shark ages, it takes on a typical gray color.
 


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