Grauladon

Grauladon

Creature 2

Perception +7; darkvision, scent (imprecise) 30 feet

Languages Draconic (can’t speak any language)

Skills Athletics +10, Stealth +6, Survival +5

Str +4, Dex +0, Con +4, Int –3, Wis +1, Cha –2

AC 17; Fort +12, Ref +6, Will +7

HP 35; Immunities paralyzed, sleep

Reactive Breath Trigger The grauladon takes damage from an adjacent creature. Effect The grauladon uses Noxious Breath, including the triggering creature in the area.

Speed 20 feet, swim 30 feet

Melee jaws +10, Damage 1d12+4 piercing

Melee tail +10 (agile), Damage 1d8+4 bludgeoning

Body Slam Requirements More than one enemy is adjacent to the grauladon. Effect The grauladon swings its tail at each adjacent enemy and attempts to Trip each creature adjacent to it. It rolls only a single Athletics check and compares the result to the Fortitude DC of each target.

Deep Breath A grauladon can hold its breath for 225 rounds (22-1/2 minutes).

Noxious Breath The grauladon hisses and unleashes a nauseating cloud of halitosis in a 15-foot cone. Each creature in the area must succeed at a DC 18 Fortitude saving throw or be sickened 1 (sickened 2 on a critical failure). The grauladon can’t use Noxious Breath or Reactive Breath again for 1d4 rounds.

Grauladon

Grauladons are vicious predators that appear crocodilian in form, but are in fact distant offshoots of dragonkind. They make their dens in the shallows of fetid ponds or isolated corners of larger bodies of water, usually in rural swamps or woodlands. Driven almost entirely by their base desire to feed, grauladons spend most of their time swimming leisurely underwater looking for prey such as fish or waterfowl. Possessed of a greed befitting their more majestic dragon cousins, grauladons often take down prey larger than they need, jealously guarding the corpses to keep scavengers away even as the meat rots. A typical grauladon is 16 feet long from its snout to the tip of its tail and weighs 1,500 pounds.

A grauladon’s stench may seem supernaturally disgusting, but it is simply the result of the creature’s fetid habitat and diet of rotting, waterlogged meat. As grauladons’ exhalations bear a passing resemblance to dragons’ breath, they have earned the nickname “mud drakes” from rural folk.

Grauladons can be found in both fresh and brackish water in most temperate climates. They prefer to lair in shallow waters, particularly where reeds or other foliage conceal their bulk from unsuspecting prey. Grauladons are highly territorial and won’t tolerate other predators living or hunting near their homes.

Saltwater Grauladons