Gurglegut (Level 12)

Level 12
Creature· evilUniqueLargeRemaster
AC
32
HP
216
Speed
25 ft.
Perception
+23
Fort
+23
Ref
+20
Will
+23
Languages common, fey, goblin
Senses low-light-vision
Skills athletics +25, nature +23, intimidation +22, arcana +20
Recall Knowledge DC 40 (society)

Attacks

Melee Kukri +26 (agile, finesse, magical, reach 10 ft., trip), Damage 2d6+13 slashing
Melee Crossbow +23 (magical, reload 1 ft.), Damage 2d8+6 piercing plus 1d6 fire

Abilities

Command Onidoshi

Frequency once per round


Effect Gurglegut barks out a command to a single mountain oni in area D1 . That oni can use a reaction to attempt a melee Strike against an adjacent foe.

Spit Fire◆◆

Frequency once per day


Effect Gurglegut drinks the contents of his jug of rice wine (consuming one of the gulps contained in his jug), then spews it out across the flaming tip of a bolt in his crossbow, filling a 20-foot area with a blast of fire that inflicts 10d8 fire damage (DC 32 reflex save) to all creatures in the area.

Busos are tree-dwelling folk with a simmering desire to consume the flesh of others. They to heavily supplement their food with leaves and root crops, possess significant knowledge of agriculture, and boast innate powers over plants and their growth. In regards to meat, however, busos reject the flesh of beasts; they instead consume other humanoids. Not only do they find the taste of other creatures repulsive, but their bodies reject non-humanoid meat since it provides them no nutritional value and consuming it leaves them sickened and weak.

Busos' unusual dietary needs mean they're almost always at odds with neighboring cultures. They typically maintain decent relations only with goblins, who are as a people less prone to judging others based on diet. Other communities fear busos-with some justification-though aside from the occasional forays to harvest someone for their next meal, busos tend to keep to themselves. In some desperate locations, communities faced with famine or other natural disasters might even seek out busos' aid, offering victims in exchange for knowledge or magical assistance that might save their communities from slow and terrible deaths through starvation.

A buso's single eye sometimes leads to them being compared to cyclopes. However, both types of creatures deny any common ancestry, and they first appeared independently in entirely different parts of the world with substantially divergent abilities. For their part, busos believe that their ancestors' deeds gave rise to their single eyes. When faced with a famine that threatened their existence, these ancestors each cut out one of their eyes as an offering to the malevolent spirits of the forest, imploring for their salvation. Busos say that these spirits, whom they call the busaw, gave them their knowledge of agriculture, power over plants, and craving for sentient flesh. Henceforth, they revered the busaw as gods and called themselves buso: those who worship the busaw.