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Raskal's monsters

Posted: Sat Mar 30, 2013 11:44 am
by raskal
BEARWOLF

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The bearwolf is a huge canid resembling a skinny bear. It is located north part of The Wilds where he lives and hunts in packs. Bearwolf has a brown coat, dark gray or white with a profuse mane. It is more than 2m long and weighs more than 200 kg. It is known to attack humans if it considers that it threatens its territory.

Init : +4
Atk: Bite +d4* (Deed Die) melee (1d6). If the attack hits and the Deed Die is a 3 or higher, the attack inflicts damage and the Trips and throws Deed takes place
AC: 13
HD: 2d6
MV : 40' (8 squares)
Act. : 1d20SV: Ref +3, Fort +3, Will +2
AL: L

*The result modifies both attack and damage rolls.

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Re: Raskal's monsters

Posted: Sat Mar 30, 2013 4:29 pm
by GnomeBoy
Nice. :)

Re: Raskal's monsters

Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2013 10:24 am
by oncelor
Very nice. "Bearwulf" is the name of one of the main villains in my mythic Northumbrian campaign. If the party ever finds him I'll have to make him protected by a sleuth (or a pack? a sleuthpack?) of your bearwolfs.

Re: Raskal's monsters

Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2013 1:25 pm
by raskal
oncelor wrote:Very nice. "Bearwulf" is the name of one of the main villains in my mythic Northumbrian campaign. If the party ever finds him I'll have to make him protected by a sleuth (or a pack? a sleuthpack?) of your bearwolfs.
It's very interesting. Bearwulf is not the same persorn that Beowulf i suppose ?

Re: Raskal's monsters

Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2013 4:06 pm
by oncelor
Sort of... Bearwulf is a former great hero who became corrupted and turned into a bad-guy. I think I remember reading that Beowulf means "bee-wolf" but that bee-wolf is an Anglo-Saxon riddle for a bear.