Aspect of BOZ
First Post
i'm pretty sure you're "safe" with all of those. 

demiurge1138 said:Dragon Magazine had a peluda? I wrote one up a few years ago, without knowing there'd been another conversion (they're native to a French folktale, I believe). Also, for some reason, I called it the "pedula". Serves me right for working from memory. My version can be found here, and might be a good launching point for that conversion if it gets accepted.
demiurge1138 said:As for my offering up lambs of obscurity to the slaughter of conversion (great metaphor, eh?), I'm not exactly the most qualified here. I got into D&D via 3rd Edition, so all my exposure to previous editions has been retroactive. I have no idea if the creatures I'll be offering are actually one-hit wonders, or if there's another source I've missed.
demiurge1138 said:Murdrakus (Dragon 270): Creations of the Boneheart of Iuz, the murdrakus is a two headed draconic creature ninety feet long. It breathes lines of fire, and is so hot that merely touching the creature deals fire damage. Its tail can sever limbs on a successful critical hit. It regenerates rapidly, but can be permanently slain with fire and negative energy. (I have a feeling James Jacobs might like this one, because he wrote it back in the waning days of 2e).
The Wyrd was reprinted in the Mystara Monstrous Compendium Appendix. (But it is still a cool creature.)Alzrius said:Wyrd - I think this was the creature's name. It was that elf-like creature, that might have been undead, from the D&D Creature Catalog, that hurled energy spheres. There was also a Greater Wyrd as well.
I like this one too, but it has probably appeared in print too many times to make the cut. The Decapus originally appeared in Palace of the Silver Princess (B3), and then again later in the Mystara Monstrous Compendium Appendix after the Creature Catalog. There are also 3.X versions in our Creature Catalog, over on the Vaults of Pandius and in the Tome of Horrors (and ToH revised). I think that makes the Decapus an ideal creature for a Dragon query, but not this one.Decapus - Also from the CC, this funny little guy was an arboreal octopus that had ten tentacles, and dropped onto you from above. I love this guy, and think he'd be great fun to have back.
This one too was eventually reprinted in the Mystara Monstrous Compendium Appendix.Gray Philosopher - Another CC critter, this undead sat and did nothing while the malevolent thoughts he conjured up attacked adventurers as small ghost-like creatures.
Okay, this would definitely get my vote. I have a thing for heart-themed undead.Birch Spirit - From White Dwarf #28, these are the souls of murdered dryads, which now live in birch trees and spectrally reach into a humanoid's heart to kill it.
This is another one that seems to have appeared in print a few times (Dragon #190, Spellbound: Thay, Rashemen & Aglarond, Monstrous Compendium Annual Volume Three and as demiurge1138 points out, in Monsters of Faerûn), although I'm not sure if the Faerûnian version is quite the same as the one from WD.Black Unicorn - Also from WD #28, these are good unicorns superior to the normal breed, and live in mountainous forested regions.
Echohawk said:There are also 3.X versions in our Creature Catalog, over on the Vaults of Pandius and in the Tome of Horrors (and ToH revised). I think that makes the Decapus an ideal creature for a Dragon query, but not this one.
Aspect of BOZ said:Edit: better yet, we'll just do the conversion of the gray philosopher in the Mystara thread.anyone know where, if anywhere, it appeared before the AC9 Creature Catalog?
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Alzrius could take a look here until we get around to converting it.Aspect of BOZ said:Edit: better yet, we'll just do the conversion of the gray philosopher in the Mystara thread.anyone know where, if anywhere, it appeared before the AC9 Creature Catalog?
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In that case Lesser Wyrd and Greater Wyrd.i'll also nix the wyrd, particularly because we're considering it for a different query.
Aspect of BOZ said:OK, was that a TSR module? i'm not immediately familiar with it.