Fiend Folio: Difference between revisions

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* [[Hound of ill omen]], when a character does something to seriously offend their deity, this hound may appear and put a curse on them that prevents them from healing and quadruples all damage they take until they take a certain number of wounds.  There is no saving throw for this curse, the ''remove curse'' spell is only partially effective and only has any effect if applied immediately, and the hound is impossible to harm in any way.  This probably was put into the book to give DMs a way to more easily kill off misbehaving player characters without having to resort to falling rocks or sending monsters that risk a TPK.
* [[Hound of ill omen]], when a character does something to seriously offend their deity, this hound may appear and put a curse on them that prevents them from healing and quadruples all damage they take until they take a certain number of wounds.  There is no saving throw for this curse, the ''remove curse'' spell is only partially effective and only has any effect if applied immediately, and the hound is impossible to harm in any way.  This probably was put into the book to give DMs a way to more easily kill off misbehaving player characters without having to resort to falling rocks or sending monsters that risk a TPK.
* [[Huecuva]]
* [[Huecuva]]
* [[Ice lizard]]
* [[Ice lizard]] a small winged lizard with magical abilities, including the power to turn into a white dragon twice per day.
* [[Imorph]]
* [[Imorph]]
* Iron cobra
* Iron cobra

Revision as of 19:04, 7 July 2020

The Fiend Folio was a 1981 Monster Manual-like book for Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 1st edition. It served to gather up the various monsters that had been submitted to TSR works but not made the MM itself as of its 1978 edition - for instance, kuo-toa, svirfneblin and of course the official full writeup of drow. Most came out of White Dwarf's Fiend Factory as of then. Many of the latter monsters are laughable crap, like the Xvart which sounds like Fart, so have fallen into obscurity or - like the Flumph - notoriety.

But a few gems do appear amongst the dross: usually cited here, Charles Stross' badass Githyanki and Githzerai. We could also shout-out to the Dark Ones, the Creepers and Stalkers. Who knows why later publishers didn't publish stuff featuring those guys, they were fucking sweet.

A 3rd-party company called Necromancer Games vaguely affiliated with White Wolf released a spiritual successor to the Fiend Folio in "The Tome of Horrors", which adapted many, if not all, of these monsters to Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition. WotC for 3e did its own Fiend Folio, figuring that was a decent brand for niche monsters - so Caryatid Columns and those Dark Ones were here. Others were brought back for Pathfinder. With the release of Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition, many of these monsters are starting to be revived and return to the spotlight. The Lava Children, Flumph, and Berbalang all entered the canon here, among others. 5th edition also has a new series of PDF supplements called Mordenkainen's Fiendish Folio which updates even more obscure monsters from the original Fiend Folio to 5th edition.

List of Monsters

(Under construction)

1st Edition

2nd Edition

2rd Edition's version of the Fiend Folio was the 14th volume of the Monstrous Compendium series.

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3rd Editon

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5th Edition

See Mordenkainen's Fiendish Folio.