FormerlyHemlock
Hero
Kender.After all, what do rot grubs turn into when they mature?
Kender.After all, what do rot grubs turn into when they mature?
That was part of the old-school Gygaxian approach to discouraging poison - make it so book-keeping- and risk- heavy that it wasn't worth the busywork of determining if you poisoned yourself, let alone the actual risk, itself.If I had a group carrying rot grubs around to infest random foes, I would:
(2) Make them roll each time they handled the colony to keep from being infested themselves. After a few characters have died or nearly died due to accidents, they might decide it's not so clever an idea after all...
Grub certainly implies a life-cycle stage of an insect to a modern reader. The common medieval belief, even among the learned (going all the way back to Aristotle), however, was that maggots arose from rotting meat via spontaneous generation. Thus rot grubs, as lethal, monstrous maggots, might be assumed to arise from the death & putrescence of, well, monsters, embodying their monstrous qualities.After all, what do rot grubs turn into when they mature?
You could, but which one would be the perfect answer?...
But, I suppose you could pick any insectile dungeon denizen whose larval forms aren't specified, and make them the adult form.
Carrion Crawler leapt immediately to mind, since it does lay its eggs on live victims. But the adult from is already caterpillar-like, and vastly larger than a rot grub - each grub would have to polish off a lot of corpses to grow into one.You could, but which one would be the perfect answer?
Ooh, this is interesting. Carrion crawlers and purple worms are the easy answers. Not necessarily wrong, but, not very creative. Could it be more than one? Maybe their is a whole family of beasties that the larval form is a rot grub. Maybe a whole new beastie?
It'd be amusing if they were a more innocuous dungeon denizen (not that those get detailed much), like the firebeetle or something. More out-there possibilities might include the infamous ear-seeker, stirges (they look like bats but they're chitinous), and, of course, pixies.
That's a lotta blood...Don't tell my players, but at my table stirges are the larval form of dragons.
That's a lotta blood...
I was thinking instead of wyrmlings, stirges hatched from the eggs. So a nice fat, happy, blood-bloated stirge pupates and emerges as a wyrmling? OK. Doesn't say much for draconic parenting, though....Fantasy physiology.(And wyrmlings aren't that big anyway.)
I was thinking instead of wyrmlings, stirges hatched from the eggs. So a nice fat, happy, blood-bloated stirge pupates and emerges as a wyrmling? OK. Doesn't say much for draconic parenting, though....
... oh, unless stirges are orphaned dracolarvae, and normally they feed on the parent?
Dragon moms will tell their young adult offspring the equivalent of, "Better study hard, sweetie, or you might grow up to be a white!" (White dragon = Stupid, brutal. Black dragon = vicious, cruel. Red dragon = commanding, powerful, unscrupulous. Copper dragon = frivolous. Gold dragon = benevolent, pompous. Etc.)