I recently reacquired the D&D Creature Catalog. I had a copy back in my Rules Cyclopedia days, and as I was working on my megadungeon I remembered a few choice entries that I wanted to make use of.
E-Bay delivered me a well loved copy for $4. It complements my well loved Rules Cyclopedia, but I do wish I still had my original. For one thing I think it was in better condition... but it was lost somewhere in one of many moves, sad to say.
For those unfamiliar with this fine volume, it is the equivalent of the Monster Manual II for later editions. The Rules Cyclopedia includes 179 different monster listing (in this case counting "Bears", "Dragons", "Spiders", etc. as one entry). The Creature Catalog adds an additional 154 critters. There are some that I'm not sure ever made it into any future products, and others that I think are just cool, so I'm going to share some of them with you, my dear readers.
The Gray Philosopher tops the list of my favorite creatures from this volume. This poor tormented gent was a chaotic priest who was so distraught at various internal philosophical debates that his soul refuses to move on until they're resolved. Over time his dark thoughts begin to take on a malicious form. While the Gray Philosopher will ignore you, his malice won't! He isn't much of an team player, but he can make for a spooky encounter.
The Nosferatu is a vampire variant who has control over whether those he kills return as vampires. A good alpha villain who can be a former fighter, thief, cleric, or magic user!
Dragonflys are giant magical insects with breath attacks that mirror those of the dragons.
The faithful Dog is also listed, with 3 varients: Dog, War Dog, and Elven Dog. A well trained war dog makes a nice addition to any adventuring party, especially if you get it some armor.
In addition to the elven dog, there are a number of other fey creatures included like Brownies, Red Caps, Coltpixy (fairy horse), Faedorne, Flitterling, Shargugh, Silver Warriors, and Wood Imps.
The Rakasta also make an appearance, though not as they appear in later editions. In this edition, the Rakasta are a humanoid species that seems to be as native to the Known World as orcs and goblins. They are cat people who's society mimics that of the Mongols. When they appear in the D&D Thunder Rift adventure Rage of the Rakasta their society more closely resembles that of feudal Japan (aka samurai and ninjas). Either way they employ metal claws that do 1d4 damage each.
Other notable humanoids are the Gator Man, Hutaakan (jackal people), Kara-Kara (tropical orc like people), Lupin (dog people), Nagpa (vulture people), Pachydermion (elephant people), Shark-Kin, Sis'think (The Desert Scourge - Lizard people), Snappers (chaotic turtle people), and Tortles (lawful turtle people).
In addition to the creatures there are a couple of pages discussing using the various creatures and suggestions for creating your own variations on existing creatures. Everything from re-skinning monsters to adding new powers is covered, along with making unique named monsters to really amp up the cool factor.
At the end of the book are a variety of wandering monster charts, and an index of all D&D creatures for the Rules Cyclopedia era, and in what product they can be found in.
The art in the book is overall pretty solid. Most of it is fairly basic pen and ink, some more detailed than others. There are a number of creatures all done in the same style, mostly undead that give us remarkably similar headshots. Granted there often isn't a whole lot that makes various undead look different from one another, even if they function in completely different ways, but the artwork is just too similar. My favorite artwork has to be that of Dave Simons, of which there is remarkably little to be found via Google search. It's definitely the best of the book. Here are two pieces I really like: The Gray Philosopher and the Iron Gargoyle.
I'm looking forward to incorporating some of these beasties into my megadungeon.
If you come across a copy, it makes a nice addition to the monsters included in the Rules Cyclopedia, and I heartily recommend you add it to your collection.
**Entry edited for spelling**
I love my Creature Catalog. Like you, I find the Grey Philosopher to be a really cool monster.
ReplyDeleteI've always found the Nagpa really cool as well. They remind me of the Skexies in The Dark Crystal, so I love to throw one in and use a Skexie voice for it now and then.
Anal rententive pedantic note--it's a Rakasta, not a Rakshasa. Similar, and since it's a Zeb Cook monster from X1 Isle of Dread, it could be related to the Indian demons (he also wrote Oriental Adventures), but the spelling is different enough and the creatures themselves different enough that I've never thought they were supposed to be the same.
And now that I think about it, Nagpa are also Cook monsters (from the X4/5 Desert Nomad modules)...
@Lord Gwydion~
ReplyDeleteI thought that looked funny as I was typing it. I wrote most of the entry without having the book at hand, and I didn't bother to double check that. Entry will be edited for spelling!