Converting monsters from Dragon magazine (Part Two)

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In that case...

Lindworm
CLIMATE/TERRAIN: Variable (see text)
FREQUENCY: Very rare
ORGANIZATION: Solitary
ACTIVITY CYCLE: Any
DIET: Carnivore
INTELLIGENCE: Low (5-7)
TREASURE: B
ALIGNMENT: Variable, but always evil
NO. APPEARING: 1 (20% of 2)
ARMOR CLASS: Variable (see text)
MOVEMENT: 12
HIT DICE: 5
THAC0: 15
NO. OF ATTACKS: 3
DAMAGE/ATTACK: 1-8/1-6/2-12
SPECIAL ATTACKS: Breath weapon
SPECIAL DEFENSES: Immune to attacks similar to those of breath weapon
MAGIC RESISTANCE: Nil
SIZE: H (20’ long)
MORALE: Steady (11)
XP VALUE: 650

The lindworm is a deficient form of evil dragon, one that may be born to a black, blue, green, red, or white dragon. This may be due to a curse of the gods or simply nature’s way of insuring that the population of true dragons doesn’t grow too large. Either way, the lindworm, while formidable, is not nearly as dangerous as a regular dragon. It looks like a two-legged dragon, rather like a wyvern, but without wings or the wyvern’s poison stinger. The lindworm has a typically draconic head and long neck, but the creature’s body is built like that of a huge scaly bird. Its color and other details of its appearance are similar to those of its parents.

Combat: The lindworm has three physical attacks: a bite (1-8 hp), a clawing attack (1-6 hp; only one clawing attack can be made, since the lindworm must have one leg to stand on), and a tail lash (1-12 hp). No lindworm can cast spells, but they do inherit their parents’ breath weapon, which has only half the physical dimensions of the usual form and does 5d8 hp damage (half if a successful save vs. breath weapons is made). The breath attack may be used three times a day. All lindworms are also immune to attack forms similar to those of their breath weapons (e.g., fire and heat for the lindworm spawn of red dragons). As a final defense, the lindworm’s armor class is equal to the parent dragon’s base armor class.

Habitat/Society: Lindworms are the result of a dragon couple’s breeding failures (one appearing every 100 births), and as such they are quickly driven forth from the den. Eighty percent of the time, only one lindworm is encountered; otherwise, there are twins. Because they are effectively banished from draconic society, lindworms are extremely vicious, selfish, bitter creatures seeking revenge on the world. Twins are quite loyal to each other, as each is the only creature in the world that provides companionship for the other. If one is killed or injured, the other attacks with no thought for its own life (Morale 20). They speak their parents natural tongue only, but rarely speak before or instead of attacking. Lindworms have no true society, despising even each other unless they are twins.

Ecology: The lindworm has no ingrained hunting technique, having to learn through trial and error. (Even if dragons knew how to kill through instinct instead of being taught by their parents, the lindworm’s lack of wings and forelimbs would make this knowledge useless.) All lindworm hunting methods are essentially variants on the ambush: hiding in thick brush or woods, waiting behind boulders, sitting submerged in murky water, or burying itself in sand or snow (depending on the lindworm’s parentage and environment). Lindworms eat anything they can catch and are almost always hungry, a state that only adds to their generally bad dispositions. They don’t value treasure for its own sake as their parents do, but often leave the spoils of a previous hunt as bait for intelligent prey.

Though dangerous, lindworms are often deposed from the top of the local food chain by even more dangerous predators. Dragons who were not their birth parents will willingly slay them out of hand, without eating the bodies; other powerful monsters find them to be interesting prey, and adventurers regularly reduce their ranks. Wizards have yet to find a use for lindworm parts.

Originally appeared in Dragon Magazine #182 (1992).
 

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Sigh, this is gonna be a beast.

Are we doing a baseline for this creature i.e. huge, set HD, set Breath Weapon, set feats. or we doing a scaling/table based conversion here for what looks like 5 different colors.

I'm sorry, huge with only 5 hit dice? No way.
 

Definitely need to bump the HD. Up to 15 or so?

I think a base design with a table for the different colors (breath weapon and immunities) would suffice. What do you all think?
 

Definitely need to bump the HD. Up to 15 or so?

I think a base design with a table for the different colors (breath weapon and immunities) would suffice. What do you all think?

Agreed on both counts.

Since it sounds like they are based off the wyvern, we can probably upsize a wyvern to Huge to get the ability scores.

That would give us...

Str 27, Dex 10, Con 19, Int 6, Wis 12, Cha 9
 

AS it is huge we are going off the baseline of an Adult instead of a wyrmling or smaller? Did we want to start small and work up or start off with Adult as the baseline?

Reason I ask is that Huge is usually adult size and the stats we are using lead to that conclusion.
 


Yeah, lindworms do not appear to follow true dragon age categories. Makes things much easier on us.

Shall we call them "false lindworms" or something? Linnorms, after all, have different context in D&D already.
 

Definitely need to bump the HD. Up to 15 or so?

I think a base design with a table for the different colors (breath weapon and immunities) would suffice. What do you all think?

Agreed on both counts.

Since it sounds like they are based off the wyvern, we can probably upsize a wyvern to Huge to get the ability scores.

That would give us...

Str 27, Dex 10, Con 19, Int 6, Wis 12, Cha 9

I get the impression these are supposed to be small 'runts', so making them Huge as adults seems off to me. Many true dragons are Large size as adults (e.g. Black, Brass, Copper, White). Besides, if the 20' length is mostly tail and neck it probably fits the 3E Large category.

So, I'd drop the Lindorm to Large like a Wyvern and keep the 5HD.

The advancement could go up to Gargantuan, also like a wyvern, say 6-8 HD (Large); 9-15 (Huge); 16-25 HD (Gargantuan)?
 

Shall we call them "false lindworms" or something? Linnorms, after all, have different context in D&D already.

I get the impression these are supposed to be small 'runts', so making them Huge as adults seems off to me. Many true dragons are Large size as adults (e.g. Black, Brass, Copper, White). Besides, if the 20' length is mostly tail and neck it probably fits the 3E Large category.

So, I'd drop the Lindorm to Large like a Wyvern and keep the 5HD.

The advancement could go up to Gargantuan, also like a wyvern, say 6-8 HD (Large); 9-15 (Huge); 16-25 HD (Gargantuan)?

All this sounds good.

In that case, just use wyvern ability scores? Or modify slightly?
 

All this sounds good.

In that case, just use wyvern ability scores? Or modify slightly?

I'd say modify them slightly.

Hmm, all the SRD's Large adult true Dragon havs Str 23, Dex 10, Con 19.

A Wyvern is Str 19, Dex 10, Con 15.

How about averaging them to Str 21, Dex 12, Con 17?

I chose the higher of the Dex's because our previous wyrm had a good Dex.

The AC may be a problem, we don't want to give them their parent dragon's natural armour or else they'll have ACs way too high for their CR. An adult black dragon has +18 natural, we'd end end up with a Lindorm with AC28 and a +9 bite attack (+5BAB +5Str -1 size) - it would barely be able to hit itself!

Maybe parent dragon's Adult natural armour -10? (black +8NA, blue +10NA, green +9NA, red +11NA, white +7NA)
 

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