tzor
First Post
I think I know the answer for the Beholder. It's probably a leftover from the TSR days. Early in the days of D&D much of the intelllectual property rights disputes were in the rules themselves, not in the monstes therein. Many third party companies tried to create cross game manuals, including one series called "All The World's Monsters," which was actually a great softcover series and a foretaste of the age of d20 supplements some 20 years later.
In that series, among the Garlic Bread golem, were the "Wandering Minstrel Eye" and the "Wandering Monster Eye." Athough more of a Gilbert and Sullivan rip off than a TSR rip off, the whole notion of the floating eye is something that TSR started to covet.
Personally I would love to see someone try to argue for a single eye floating monster citing ATWM as precidence.
In that series, among the Garlic Bread golem, were the "Wandering Minstrel Eye" and the "Wandering Monster Eye." Athough more of a Gilbert and Sullivan rip off than a TSR rip off, the whole notion of the floating eye is something that TSR started to covet.
Personally I would love to see someone try to argue for a single eye floating monster citing ATWM as precidence.