Epic Monsters: Cthulhu for D&D!

Epic Monsters: Cthulhu (5E)

Welcome to Epic Monsters, a complementary series to the Mythological Figures column! These are high challenge rating statblocks built to bring a grin to the faces of GMs and strike terror into the hearts of even the most experienced adventurers. Read on only if you have the mettle for it! What better way to kick off the series than with the greatest of the Great Old Ones: Cthulhu!


Cthulhu is the source of anxiety for all mankind and lays dreaming in the underwater city of R’lyeh, waiting to rise once more and lay ruin to creation. I am not personally a huge Lovecraftian fan (Cthulhu Saves the World aside, give me some Poe any day) and to put this build together I worked backwards from Paizo’s statblock for Cthulhu in Pathfinder Roleplaying Game: Bestiary 4. The golems are comprehensive designers that do great work and I’m positive their research would far outweigh mine so I’m making good on that resource.

Cthulhu
Gargantuan aberration (great old one), chaotic evil

Armor Class
24 (natural armor)
Hit Points 585 (30d20+270)
Speed 60 ft., fly 200 ft., swim 60 ft.

STR
DEX
CON
INT
WIS
CHA
27 (+8)​
19 (+4)​
28 (+9)​
28 (+9)​
30 (+10)​
27 (+8)​

Skills Arcana +18, History +18, Insight +19, Intimidation +17, Investigation +18, Nature +18, Perception +19, Religion +18

Damage Resistances
acid, fire, lightning, necrotic, thunder; bludgeoning, piercing, and slashing from magical or adamantine weapons

Damage Immunities
cold; bludgeoning, piercing, and slashing from nonmagical weapons not made from adamantine

Condition Immunities
charmed, diseased, frightened, paralyzed, petrified

Senses
darkvision 200 ft., truesight, passive Perception 29

Languages
Deep Speech; telepathy 300 ft.

Challenge
30 (155,000 XP)

Immortality. If Cthulhu is killed, its body immediately fades away into a noxious cloud of otherworldly vapor that fills an area out to its reach. This cloud blocks vision as fog cloud, but can't be dispersed by any amount of wind. Any creature in this area must succeed at a DC 27 Constitution saving throw or be poisoned for as long as it remains in the cloud and for an additional 1d10 rounds after it leaves the area. Cthulhu returns to life after 2d6 rounds, manifesting from the cloud and restored to life via resurrection, but has 5 levels of exhaustion and cannot take both a move and action in the same turn. At the end of each of its turns, Cthulhu makes a DC 20 Constitution saving throw to reduce its exhaustion level by 1. If slain again while suffering from this effect, Cthulhu reverts to vapor form again and its essence fades away after 2d6 rounds, returning to its tomb in R'lyeh until it is released again.

Innate Spellcasting. Cthulhu’s innate spellcasting ability is Wisdom (spell save DC 27; spell attack +19). It can innately cast the following spells, requiring no material components:
Constant: freedom of movement, true seeing
At will: astral projection, control weather, dispel magic, dream, phantasmal killer, sending, suggestion, teleport
3/day: antipathy, feeblemind, gate, plane shift, weird
1/day: power word stun, symbol, wish

Insanity. Any creature that attempts to interact directly with Cthulhu's thoughts (such as via detect thoughts or telepathy) must succeed at DC 27 Wisdom saving throw or gain an indefinite madness. When using its telepathy to communicate Cthuhlu doesn't activate this feature unless it spends an action to focus its mind on one opponent.

Legendary Resistance (3/Day). If Cthulhu fails a saving throw, it can choose to succeed instead.

Magic Resistance. Cthulhu has advantage on saving throws against spells and other magical effects.

Nightmare Haunting. While on the Ethereal Plane or Material Plane, Cthulhu magically touches a sleeping humanoid on the Material Plane. A protection from evil and good spell cast on the target prevents this contact, as does a magic circle. As long as the contact persists, the target has dreadful visions. If these visions last for at least 1 minute, the target gains no benefit from its rest, and its hit point maximum is reduced by 7 (2d6). If this effect reduces the target's hit point maximum to 0, the target dies and its soul travels to R'lyeh. The reduction to the target's hit point maximum lasts until removed by the greater restoration spell or similar magic. For every 5 minutes the visions last, the target gains a short-term madness. For every 10 minutes the visions last, the target gains a long-term madness.

Non-Euclidean. Cthulhu does not exist wholly in the physical world, and space and time strain against its presence. Its apparent and actual position are never quite the same, and creatures have disadvantage on attack rolls against it. A creature with truesight does not have disadvantage but a DC 17 Wisdom saving throw is needed each time it looks at Cthulhu. On a failure, the creature gains a short-term madness. On a failure by 5 or more, the target also gains a long-term madness.

Regeneration. Cthulhu regains 30 hit points at the start of its turn if it has at least 1 hit point. Cthulhu dies only if it starts its turn with 0 hit points.

Starflight. Cthulhu can survive in the void of outer space and flies through the cosmos at incredible speeds. The exact travel time varies from one trip to the next, but a trip within a solar system normally takes Cthulhu 2d6 hours, and a trip beyond normally takes 2d6 days (or more, at the GM's discretion).

Summon Alien. Cthulhu can use a bonus action to conjure any aberration of CR 12 or lower. The creature appears in an unoccupied space that Cthulhu can see within 100 feet. This feature otherwise functions as conjure elemental but does not require Cthulhu’s concentration.

ACTIONS

Multiattack. Cthulhu can use its Mind-Shattering Presence. It then makes six attacks: two with its claws and four with its tentacles.

Claws. Melee Weapon Attack: +17 to hit, reach 40 ft., all targets in a 10-foot square (any creature in the area whose AC is equal to or less than the result is hit). Hit: 26 (4d8+8) slashing damage plus the target is grappled (escape DC 25).

Tentacles. Melee Weapon Attack: +17 to hit, reach 30 ft., one target. Hit: 26 (4d8+8) bludgeoning damage plus the target is grappled (escape DC 25). A target that takes 20 or more damage makes a DC 27 Wisdom saving throw or gains a short-term madness. On a failure by 10 or more, the target gains a long-term madness instead.

Mind-Shattering Presence. Each creature of Cthulhu's choice within 300 feet of it and aware of it must succeed on a DC 17 Wisdom saving throw or die from terror. A creature immune to fear that fails its saving throw is stunned 1d4 rounds instead of killed. On a success, a creature is immune to Cthulhu’s Mind-Shattering presence for 1 minute.

Swallow. Cthulu makes one tentacle attack against a Medium or smaller creature it is grappling. If the attack hits, that creature takes the tentacle’s damage and is swallowed, and the grapple ends. While swallowed, the creature is blinded and restrained, it has total cover against attacks and other effects outside Cthulhu. At the start of each of Cthulhu’s turns the swallowed creature takes 42 (12d6) necrotic damage and makes a DC 27 Wisdom saving throw. On a failure, the creature gains one short-term madness. On a failure by 5 or more, the creature also gains a long-term madness, and on a failure by 10 or more the creature gains an indefinite madness as well.
If Cthulhu takes 30 damage or more on a single turn from a creature inside it, Cthulhu must succeed on a DC 15 Constitution saving throw at the end of that turn or regurgitate all swallowed creatures, which fall prone in a space within 10 feet of Cthulhu. If Cthulhu dies, a swallowed creature is no longer restrained by it and can escape from the corpse using 15 feet of movement, exiting prone.

Design Notes: Obviously for 5E we need something less complicated than a top level Pathfinder monster—it’s a different game system with different goals. That said this is a top level 5E monster so it’s still packing a wallop. Lair actions seemed extraneous and while my Lovecraft-fu is weak, I get the impression that killing Cthulhu while in R’lyeh is intended to be impossible so taking those out of the mix sort of displaces that eventuality anyway. On one hand it’s a little bit easier to hit and less beefy than a tarrasque, but on the other hand Cthulhu just straight up kills creatures that can’t handle its Mind-Shattering Presence, and even if the party has a paladin handy they are still in for some unpleasantness on a failed save. Speaking of saves some of the astute readers have probably already picked out a few weaker save DCs that are bereft of an ability modifier in the equation; this is to make the monster survivable and something that might judiciously be used at someone’s table for either a really, really epic fight or a descent into TPK madness.

Thanks for checking out the new column and stay tuned for more Great Old ones! :D
[FONT=&amp]Save[/FONT][FONT=&amp]Save[/FONT][FONT=&amp]Save[/FONT][FONT=&amp]Save[/FONT]
 
Last edited by a moderator:

log in or register to remove this ad

Mike Myler

Mike Myler

Mike Myler

Have you been to LevelUp5E.com yet?
It is. The vast majority of the time Cthulhu will make the save but occasionally it won't--I'm not buck wild on inner belly fights and figure that at least once a minute somebody that's been swallowed should be able to get out and participate in the battle again.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

77IM

Explorer!!!
Supporter
Very nice. I particularly like the spell list (very nice selection of D&D spells that back up the Cthulhu mythos), and the Summon Alien ability. Also the claw attack that affects an area AND grapples -- that's nasty. I am totally stealing that.

Here's some hopefully-constructive criticisms:

1) Legendary Actions are super fun in a boss fight. I'd recommend that you reduce his multiattack to (Mind-Shattering Presence + 2 claws + 1 tentacle) and then make the other 3 tentacles into Legendary Actions.

I'd make Swallow into a Legendary Action too ("costs 3 actions") because otherwise it is too expensive to ever use in a fight (since it replaces Cthulhu's entire multiattack routine).

2) Mind-Shattering Presence: I like how characters immune to fear don't die, they just get stunned. However, "stunned for 1d4 rounds" is very atypical in 5E -- we don't usually track numbers of rounds like that, because it's too easy to lose track by accident. Instead of counting rounds, most abilities of this sort are phrased, "The target can repeat the save at the end of each of its turns, ending the effect on a success."

Similar phrasing could apply to Immortal's "1d10 rounds." The "2d6 rounds" for Cthulhu to return to life is a little more tricky here. I think it would be easier to just say "1 minute" or something. You could also look at the vampire's Misty Escape ability for a similar trick that allows a creature to continue to be alive while at 0 hit points, and then bounce back later.
 


TheSalemLord

First Post
Love this!, Can we have the King in Yellow next? Hastur is one of my favorites, planning to use it soon on my campaign. Keep up the good work!
Cheers!
 



MPA2000

Explorer
I find Lovecraftian monsters to be the very foundation for many things. Sorry folks, but I like Immortals over Deities. Ergo my concept is always that of Mystara. That being said, I like to use the Marvel Comics (not movie universe) as something to borrow from.

Basically the planet (ie the world of the PC's) was run amuck with creatures, created by some omnipotent being. The being was not good or evil, so the creatures he created had free will to chose, and they chose evil. The omnipotent being was disappointed because his creation only knew destruction and mayhem, so he sought to obliterate them. Some of his creatures, the more intelligent and self-aware (Orcus, Demogorgon, Cthulhu, Asmodeus, etc.), weaved spells of incredible power to escape to other planes and dimensions. Gaea (Terra), who alone did not succumb to evil, was spared. The omnipotent being decided he no longer wished shackled to his omnipotence, committed cosmic suicide and dispersed his energies to the infinite planes of the multiverse. In doing so, he made Gaea, the first Immortal. Gaea would be in charge of and ensure the development of the new organisms, being born from both the destruction of the evil ones, and shards of omnipotence from the death of the omnipotent. As a result of his death, the immortal's energies also created a triumvirate called, The Old Ones. The Old Ones thus would be responsible for developing mortals on the world of Mystara, until they could be developed to a point to reach Immortality. Unfortunately, every time they attempted to create Immortals, they failed, and the undead were created as result. Hence was born the Sphere of Entropy. The Old Ones determined that mortals cannot be "made" Immortal, without careful monitoring and culling. Over time they developed and were patrons for the Spheres of Energy, Time and Thought, while Gaea master the Sphere of Matter. Once the Immortals were established, The Old Ones implemented the primary directive: No Immortal shall take direct action against mortals on the Prime Plane, and then retired from the world and wiped the Immortals minds of their direct involvement in their development. This is why elder Immortals such as Terra, Hela, Odin and Thanatos, do not remember their sponsors.
 

Remove ads

Latest threads

Remove ads

AD6_gamerati_skyscraper

Remove ads

Recent & Upcoming Releases

Top