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Thursday, May 16, 2013

Green Grabber: New Monster

Holmes Basic (and OD&D in general) is short on monstrous plants, despite having a Ring of Plant Control. The ring will affect plants or fungi, but the only monsters in this category in the Monster List are Shriekers and Yellow Mold, both fungi. Dr. Holmes' FRPG book (1981) has a beginner's sample dungeon (The Eye of Arzaz) with a few new low level monsters in it, including "Tentacles" and "Flower Stalks" hiding in adjacent rooms. Due to the similarity of these two creatures, here I've combined them into one new plant monster for Holmes Basic.


Green Grabber

Move: 5 feet/turn
Hit Dice: 1 HD per tentacle
Armor Class: 9
Treasure Type: M x 3
Attacks: 3 tentacles
Damage: 0 (see below)

These dungeon-dwellers are actually carnivorous plants distantly related to bladderwort. Adapted to life in the dark, they lurk in pits, chimneys, closets and other small spaces, reaching silently for passersby with three thirty-foot-long tentacles (surprise on 1-4 in 6). Each tentacle attacks independently as a 1 HD monster, and on a successful hit grabs the target but does no immediate damage. If the captured character is holding a weapon, a successful 3d6 dexterity check indicates that the weapon arm remains free and able to attack. On the next round, the victim will be dragged into the monster's central mouth and take 2d6 points of damage per round thereafter. Each tentacle can take 1 HD of damage before being destroyed, and the creature will die rapidly from loss of fluid if it loses all of its limbs. Green Grabbers do not normally move about, but if necessary can pull themselves along slowly with their tentacles to a new hiding spot.


Periodically the monster enters a flowering phase, called Sleepflower, in which the tentacles are weaker but have a large yellow flower at each end. These flowers produce a blood-like nectar that attracts stirges, which pollinate the plants while feeding. In this form the plant protects itself with its pollen. If approached, the monster will extend a tentacle with a yellow flower that opens and sends out a puff of pollen in a 5' area. Any character in this area must Save vs Poison or fall asleep for 1d6 turns. Each flower can send 3 puffs of pollen per day.


They do not hoard treasure, but are occasionally found with incidental treasure (such as a handful of coins) from previous victims.

Bladderwort Traps, picture from Wikipedia



Edit
: I also checked on the mobile plants I remembered from Holmes' other stories:


In "The Adventure of the Giant Chameleon" (A&E #14, 8/76) they are described as having "big open flowers and moving tentacles" - which fits well the Green Grabber. In that story the plants are growing in a chasm in a underground cavern lit by a luminescent green glow.  

In Maze of Peril, near the end of chapter 1, there are mobile carnviorous plants that snap their "spine-fringed jaws like a startled starfish" in a floral room in the dungeon but lit by sunlight from above. These seem more like Venus-fly trap type plants.

See also Tony's comment about the tentacle roots in "In the Bag".

Update:
See this post on the Scribblings or Something blog for illustrations of the two life stages of the Green Grabber.

My write-up of the Green Grabber now appears in the Blueholme Journeymanne rules, available at DriveThruRPG.

7 comments:

  1. I love it, I especially like the thought / image of running into one changing hiding places. “What are these tentacle things that lead around this corner?”

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    Replies
    1. Thanks! That makes me think of something from the old Far Side cartoon. Relocating Green Grabbers could be added to wandering monster tables as a rare encounter (1 in 100).

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  2. I am also reminded of the monstrous tree roots in Holmes' "In the Bag" story in Dragon magazine issue #58. While exploring underground, Boinger & co. were attacked by "great grey tree roots" cursed by an "age-old evil" or perhaps by "angry forest gods." The roots grew "as broad as a man’s torso" and writhed "like a blind boa constrictor." The roots could be severed by bladed weapons but wouldn't stop moving until burned (at which point they smelled like cooked carrots).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, I'd forgotten about those roots - I haven't re-read "In the Bag" in a while. Mobile monster plants are definitely a minor monster theme running through his stories.

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  3. I've had a quick go at visualising one...

    http://bit.ly/10YYSPV

    ReplyDelete
  4. Another try (this time including the Sleepflower)...

    http://bit.ly/Z5kgmB

    ReplyDelete