Dhampir: Difference between revisions

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m QuietBrowser moved page Dhampyre to Dhampir: Dhampyre is a real name, but Dhampir and Dhampyr are more commonly used.
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Added section on dhampir MGs, will add PC stats from D&D and PF at a later date. Unless somebody beats me, of course.
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==Dungeons & Dragons==
==Dungeons & Dragons==
[[Dungeons & Dragons]] has had a couple of attempts at a dhampyre race, but none have really taken off officially; there was a "Katane" race in [[Dragon Magazine]] #313, and assorted "Half-Vampire" templates. Ironically, the closest time D&D got to it was in 4th edition; the Dhampyre as a feat-based "pseudo-template" was one of their earliest racial experiments in Dragon Magazine, whilst the Vyrkoloka of ''Heroes of Shadow'' was essentially a Dhampyre with its name taken from another kind of vampire.
[[Dungeons & Dragons]] has had a couple of attempts at a dhampyre race, but none have really taken off officially; there was a "Katane" race in [[Dragon Magazine]] #313, and assorted "Half-Vampire" templates, most notably the Dhampir and [[Vorlog]] templates in [[Ravenloft]] 3rd edition. Ironically, the closest time D&D got to it was in 4th edition; the Dhampyr as a feat-based "pseudo-template" was one of their earliest racial experiments in Dragon Magazine, whilst the [[Vyrkoloka]] of ''Heroes of Shadow'' was essentially a Dhampyr with its name taken from another kind of vampire.


The unofficial [[Ravenloft]] 5e corebook from the Fraternity of Shadows fansite features a dhampyre race as one of the options.
The unofficial [[Ravenloft]] 5e corebook from the Fraternity of Shadows fansite features a dhampyre race as one of the options.
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Normally, dhampir have two major weaknesses: they're dazzled in sunlight, like a [[drow]], and, while they are living creatures, they are treated as undead for the purposes of positive and negative energy.  This means [[wat|cure spells fry them and inflict spells heal them]].  While the various sub-races offer replacement penalties for the former, and while it can be removed entirely at the cost of one's racial spell-like abilities, the latter you're pretty much stuck with.  A feat can half-fix it: you'll still take damage from stuff that specifically hurts undead, but you can get half-healing from cure-spells and such.
Normally, dhampir have two major weaknesses: they're dazzled in sunlight, like a [[drow]], and, while they are living creatures, they are treated as undead for the purposes of positive and negative energy.  This means [[wat|cure spells fry them and inflict spells heal them]].  While the various sub-races offer replacement penalties for the former, and while it can be removed entirely at the cost of one's racial spell-like abilities, the latter you're pretty much stuck with.  A feat can half-fix it: you'll still take damage from stuff that specifically hurts undead, but you can get half-healing from cure-spells and such.
===D&D Stats===
{{dnd-stub}}
====Ravenloft Dhampir Template====
====Khatane Template====
====4e Dhampyr Feat Chain====
====Pathfinder Dhampir====


{{Pathfinder-Races}}
{{Pathfinder-Races}}
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They're also mildly infamous for the fact that, because they're born of unnatural magical origins, they don't adhere to the standard rules of baby-making. So, you can get a dhampyre from a homosexual coupling, a female vampire could impregnate her male human lover, and a male vampire could fall pregnant by a female human lover, depending on what rituals are used to make the dhampyre in the first place.
They're also mildly infamous for the fact that, because they're born of unnatural magical origins, they don't adhere to the standard rules of baby-making. So, you can get a dhampyre from a homosexual coupling, a female vampire could impregnate her male human lover, and a male vampire could fall pregnant by a female human lover, depending on what rituals are used to make the dhampyre in the first place.


[[Category: World of Darkness]][[Category: Monsters]]
==Monsters==
{{Monstergirls}}
 
[[File:MGE Dhampir.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The MGE Dhampir, ready to lay some vampires and save some cute guys! No, that's not a typo.]]
 
Ironically, despite the sexual appeal of vampires, the dhampir rarely gets the same treatment. Whilst this may be partially due to the dhampir's relative obscurity, another issue may be that they don't really have anything going for them that the standard vampire-as-monstergirl doesn't. After all, in most depictions, the dhampir is basically a "tamed" vampire, with less raw vampiric power and without the pesky problems of sunlight or needing to worry you'll be eaten alive by one. But most monstergirl depictions of vampires tone down the need for blood and make their vampires "safe", meaning that without any real fear of dying from your vampire lover, a dhampir just looks like a poor man's imitation.
 
Still, in more honest [[Dark Fantasy]]-leaning settings, dhampirs may get the credit they deserve. And there is one montergirl setting where dhampirs are embraced: in the [[Monster Girl Encyclopedia]], dhampirs are born on those rare occasions when a vampire gets pregnant without having come to truly love/respect the father of her child. This results in the offspring being a "half-vampire", with her own entirely unique set of powers. MGE Dhampirs are basically non-arrogant, non-tsundere vampires in terms of sex. In fact, they think that true vampires are stuck up bitches who need to be taken down a few pegs. Thusly, they like to roam the world and fight vampires, breaking their arrogance by basically dom-sexing them until their mind breaks and they become more submissive. They especially like going after vampires who have a guy they're being all tsundere-bitch to and simultaneously breaking the vampire down and building the guy up, with lots and lots of vamp-subbing threesomes. Sometimes the dhampir will stay with the couple if she really likes the guy, other times she'll move on and leave them to a, in her eyes, happier relationship.
 
[[Category: World of Darkness]][[Category: Monsters]] [[Category: Dungeons & Dragons]]

Revision as of 20:03, 11 December 2017

Although the idea of vampires being sexy is generally associated with the Gothic Horror novels of the late 1800s, even before that, in the Balkan region of Europe, it was believed that some vampires would come back from the dead and have sex with their wives - sex that could lead to the birth of half human, half vampire offspring. Known various as Dhampyres, Dhampirs, Dhamphirs or Dhampyrs, these mythological beings were believed to have certain vampiric strengths, which made them excellent vampire hunters, but none of their vampiric weaknesses, such as an aversion to sunlight or need to feed on blood.

In /tg/, dhampyres are a comparatively rare sight; they're considered too much the natural fit for "edgelords" - the kinds of players who usually migrate to drow or tiefling PCs because they think the "dark, brooding, angsty character" is awesome - or else they're seen as too rooted in Gothic Horror. Others even think they're too fantastical to believe in their existence, even by the standards of your typical fantasy world. But, they do survive here and there.

Dungeons & Dragons

Dungeons & Dragons has had a couple of attempts at a dhampyre race, but none have really taken off officially; there was a "Katane" race in Dragon Magazine #313, and assorted "Half-Vampire" templates, most notably the Dhampir and Vorlog templates in Ravenloft 3rd edition. Ironically, the closest time D&D got to it was in 4th edition; the Dhampyr as a feat-based "pseudo-template" was one of their earliest racial experiments in Dragon Magazine, whilst the Vyrkoloka of Heroes of Shadow was essentially a Dhampyr with its name taken from another kind of vampire.

The unofficial Ravenloft 5e corebook from the Fraternity of Shadows fansite features a dhampyre race as one of the options.

Pathfinder is the only "D&D edition" thus far to feature a fully supported dhampyre player race, with four sub-variants to reflect the four specific kinds of vampire present in Golarion. Svetochers are descended from classic movie vampires, ru-shi are the children of jiang-shi (Chinese hopping corpses that suck chi), ajibachana are the progeny of vetala (Indian thought vampires), and ancient-born come from nosferatu.

Normally, dhampir have two major weaknesses: they're dazzled in sunlight, like a drow, and, while they are living creatures, they are treated as undead for the purposes of positive and negative energy. This means cure spells fry them and inflict spells heal them. While the various sub-races offer replacement penalties for the former, and while it can be removed entirely at the cost of one's racial spell-like abilities, the latter you're pretty much stuck with. A feat can half-fix it: you'll still take damage from stuff that specifically hurts undead, but you can get half-healing from cure-spells and such.

D&D Stats

This article related to Dungeons & Dragons is a stub. You can help 1d4chan by expanding it

Ravenloft Dhampir Template

Khatane Template

4e Dhampyr Feat Chain

Pathfinder Dhampir

The Races of Pathfinder
Player's Handbook: Dwarf - Elf - Gnome - Half-Elf - Half-Orc - Halfling - Human
Advanced
Race Guide:
Aasimar - Catfolk - Changeling - Dhampir - Duergar
Drow - Fetchling - Gillman - Goblin - Grippli - Hobgoblin
Ifrit - Kitsune - Kobold - Merfolk - Nagaji - Orc - Oread
Ratfolk - Samsaran - Strix - Suli - Svirfneblin - Sylph
Tengu - Tiefling - Undine - Vanara - Vishkanya - Wayang
Bestiaries: Android - Astomoi - Caligni - Deep One Hybrid - Gathlain
Gnoll - Kasatha - Munavri - Naiad - Orang-Pendak
Reptoid - Rougarou - Shabti - Trox - Yaddithian
Adventure Paths: Being of Ib - Kuru
Inner Sea Races: Ghoran - Monkey Goblin - Lashunta - Skinwalker
Syrinx - Triaxian - Wyrwood - Wyvaran
Ultimate Wilderness: Vine Leshy
Blood of the Sea: Adaro - Cecaelia - Grindylow - Locathah - Sahuagin - Triton
Planar Adventures: Aphorite - Duskwalker - Ganzi

Chronicles of Darkness

Dhampir in the original World of Darkness were introduced in the Time of Thin Blood sourcebook. Full-on kindred couldn't have kids at all. But "thin bloods," fourteenth or fifteenth generation vampires whose connection to Cain is extremely tenuous can, though the pregnancy is long and difficult because undead bodies aren't well suited to carrying kids.

The result is a dhampir, a creature mechanically all-but-identical to a revenant, or hereditary ghoul that produces its own vitae. Dhampir are living creatures, and have a pool of vitae separate from their normal blood, though they do get tired if they exhaust it. They suffer frenzy like a vampire, but can resist it much more easily, and like ghouls can go out in the day light and so on. Because thin-bloods have only started showing up in the last twenty or so years, no one knows what happens to an old dhampir.

Dhampyres were introduced to the New World of Darkness in the Vampire: The Requiem sourcebook Night Horrors: The Wicked Dead. Born of either blasphemous occult rituals or deep, sincere, obsessive love between a vampire and a mortal, dhampyres are cursed creatures who are hypnotically alluring to vampires, but whose blood is not only devoid of nutritional value for them, but exposes the vampire to a powerful curse if they share the same clan.

They're also mildly infamous for the fact that, because they're born of unnatural magical origins, they don't adhere to the standard rules of baby-making. So, you can get a dhampyre from a homosexual coupling, a female vampire could impregnate her male human lover, and a male vampire could fall pregnant by a female human lover, depending on what rituals are used to make the dhampyre in the first place.

Monsters

The MGE Dhampir, ready to lay some vampires and save some cute guys! No, that's not a typo.

Ironically, despite the sexual appeal of vampires, the dhampir rarely gets the same treatment. Whilst this may be partially due to the dhampir's relative obscurity, another issue may be that they don't really have anything going for them that the standard vampire-as-monstergirl doesn't. After all, in most depictions, the dhampir is basically a "tamed" vampire, with less raw vampiric power and without the pesky problems of sunlight or needing to worry you'll be eaten alive by one. But most monstergirl depictions of vampires tone down the need for blood and make their vampires "safe", meaning that without any real fear of dying from your vampire lover, a dhampir just looks like a poor man's imitation.

Still, in more honest Dark Fantasy-leaning settings, dhampirs may get the credit they deserve. And there is one montergirl setting where dhampirs are embraced: in the Monster Girl Encyclopedia, dhampirs are born on those rare occasions when a vampire gets pregnant without having come to truly love/respect the father of her child. This results in the offspring being a "half-vampire", with her own entirely unique set of powers. MGE Dhampirs are basically non-arrogant, non-tsundere vampires in terms of sex. In fact, they think that true vampires are stuck up bitches who need to be taken down a few pegs. Thusly, they like to roam the world and fight vampires, breaking their arrogance by basically dom-sexing them until their mind breaks and they become more submissive. They especially like going after vampires who have a guy they're being all tsundere-bitch to and simultaneously breaking the vampire down and building the guy up, with lots and lots of vamp-subbing threesomes. Sometimes the dhampir will stay with the couple if she really likes the guy, other times she'll move on and leave them to a, in her eyes, happier relationship.