Li Shenron
Legend
"Immortal Guardian" just equals Outsider... why a different type? All Outsiders are "immortal" (of course, in the D&D sense that they don't die until they meet a party of PCs), and "guardian" is just a job.
I kind of like the Immortal Guardian idea, as long as it's not a unique creature type - maybe a sidebar or subtype.
When reading the article, I didn't actually get the impression he was suggesting Immortal Guardian as a type, just a justification for the typing them as 'Celestial' because they've already described Celestials as immortal (or immune to aging or whatever), where as if they were monstrosities, having them locked in a tomb would raise such questions as 'why is it still alive?' and 'what did it eat?'
Monstrosities are, for lack of a better term, natural. They may or may not be native to the prime material, but they are mortal. They eat, breed and die like any other creature. Celestials (and presumably fiends, elementals and the like) are immortal, not bound by such terrestrial concerns.
Probably fey.Yes, I dig that, is what I'm hoping for.
What would the Rilmani be in 5th Ed?
Probably fey.![]()
The problem I have with calling them celestials is that I'm not sure they should all be outsiders. Conceptually, I like that they're moving from a taxonomy approach to more of a world-view one. Beasts are beasts. Monstrosities are giant, evil, and dangerous creatures. But what are powerful, good aligned, intelligent, non-humanoid beings called? Noble beasts, maybe? I'm not sure. Western culture doesn't seem to have a developed concept of these in the same way Asian cultures do.