Yaarel
🇮🇱 🇺🇦 He-Mage
Yeah, agreeing with @Vaalingrade and @Crimson Longinus.
The statblock for the Owlbear doesnt deserve the Monstrosity creature type.
Obviously, the monstrosity concept comes from the lore that a crazy Wizard did it. But in 5e, this lore is officially uncertain. There is alternative official lore, that elves already knew about the owlbear from thousands of years earlier − implying that it is a natural Beast, like the duckbill platypus. An other alternative origin is it is a fey creature. But the statblock lacks the Fey creature type, which means it is just a normal animal surviving in the material plane, in other words a Beast.
The movie has the Druid "wildshape" into an owlbear. Therefore, according to the setting of the movie, which is the default 5e setting, Forgotten Realms: the owlbear is a Beast. The movie has semi-official status because of its ongoing coordination with the 5e designers.
The best and simplest solution is: the owlbear is a beast. A Druid can do it.
The statblock for the Owlbear doesnt deserve the Monstrosity creature type.
Obviously, the monstrosity concept comes from the lore that a crazy Wizard did it. But in 5e, this lore is officially uncertain. There is alternative official lore, that elves already knew about the owlbear from thousands of years earlier − implying that it is a natural Beast, like the duckbill platypus. An other alternative origin is it is a fey creature. But the statblock lacks the Fey creature type, which means it is just a normal animal surviving in the material plane, in other words a Beast.
The movie has the Druid "wildshape" into an owlbear. Therefore, according to the setting of the movie, which is the default 5e setting, Forgotten Realms: the owlbear is a Beast. The movie has semi-official status because of its ongoing coordination with the 5e designers.
The best and simplest solution is: the owlbear is a beast. A Druid can do it.