Yabbex
No. Enc.: 0 (1d6)
Alignment: Neutral
Movement: 75' (25')
—Swim: 120' (40')
Armor Class: 4
Hit Dice: 8
Attacks: 2 (2 claws)
Damage: 2d6 / 2d6
Save: L8
Morale: 9
Hoard Class: VI
XP: 2,060
As The Ancients traversed the cosmos and explored distant worlds, water was perhaps the most precious of resources...
...WHICH PROVED QUITE DEADLY TO PROCURE WHEN INHABITED BY AMPHIBIOUS FREAKS WITH A HUNGER FOR HUMAN FLESH!!!
...WHICH PROVED QUITE DEADLY TO PROCURE WHEN INHABITED BY AMPHIBIOUS FREAKS WITH A HUNGER FOR HUMAN FLESH!!!
The yabbex are bipedal crustaceoids with thick carapaces, portly builds, and long, stringy manes. They lurk in the rocky outcroppings of freshwater rivers and lakes to better spy on shorebound targets, and then ambush those that enter the water. Yabbex attack from the depths, Surprising on a roll of 1-4 on 1d6. Anyone targeting a submerged yabbex with a ranged weapon suffers a -2 To Hit penalty.
Yabbex sport two massive pincers that disarm targets on a natural To Hit roll of 18-20.
Mutations: None
Artifact: Spectrum Gun
A spectrum gun emits waves of "chromatic radiation" that alter the colorations of everything targeted—people, objects, environs—to a uniform hue of the wielder's choosing (as long as it's green, red, blue, or yellow, that is).
Yep, that's all it does.
The effect encompasses a 20' radius at a range up to 20', and lasts 2d10 rounds. Each gun carries a battery with 10d10 charges.
(Some Mutant Lords may rule that sudden color shifts grant a bonus to Surprise and/or Initiative rolls, or cause those with color blindness to suffer penalties.)
Yep, that's all it does.
The effect encompasses a 20' radius at a range up to 20', and lasts 2d10 rounds. Each gun carries a battery with 10d10 charges.
(Some Mutant Lords may rule that sudden color shifts grant a bonus to Surprise and/or Initiative rolls, or cause those with color blindness to suffer penalties.)
Green |
Red |
Blue |
Yellow |
If Jaws doesn't keep you out of the water, those will!
ReplyDeleteThat spectrum gun must be a lot of fun at parties.
ReplyDeleteHow much time does it take you to create the models? That's still Spore right?
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of this one, although I might have to seek it out. I do love amphibious monsters.
@Mr. CJ: They just want a hug!
ReplyDelete@Dr. Trey: It's indispensable at lightswitch raves across the galaxy!
@Mr. Blu: Yep, I still use the Spore software. It takes me anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours per beastie, and it's the hardest part of "my process".
As for the movie, I gotta warn you...it's...it's an experience.