Llorona

Level 12
Creature· evilMediumLegacy
AC
32
HP
165
Speed
0 ft.
Perception
+20
Fort
+19
Ref
+23
Will
+20
Immunities bleed, death-effects, disease, paralyzed, poison, precision, unconscious
Resistances all-damage 10
Languages common
Senses darkvision
Skills deception +25, athletics +23, intimidation +23, stealth +23
Other Speeds fly 60 ft.
Recall Knowledge DC 30 (occultism, religion)

Attacks

Melee Ghostly Hand +25 (agile, finesse, magical), Damage 2d6+11 void

Abilities

Rejuvenation

When a llorona is destroyed, they re-form after at the site of their death. Resolving the injustice that led to a llorona's death puts them to rest permanently. Alternatively, successfully performing a Consecrate ritual at the site prevents them from re-forming.

Void Healing
Constrict

(2d6+12)[void] DC 31 fortitude


Funereal Touch

A creature touched by a llorona must attempt a DC 29 fortitude save. On a failure, the creature becomes Drained 1 (drained 2 on a critical failure) or increases their drained value by 1 (2 on a critical failure), up to a maximum of drained 4. Every time a creature becomes drained in this way, the llorona gains 10 temporary Hit Points for 1 hour.

Ghostly Grasp

A llorona can Grapple corporeal creatures despite being incorporeal. The llorona uses their Athletics check to Grapple as normal but can't use Athletics for other actions that require corporeal contact, like Force Open or Trip.

Wail◆◆

The llorona unleashes a somber wail. Each living creature within 120-foot area must attempt a DC 31 will save. Regardless of its result, the creature is then temporarily immune for 24 hours.


Critical Success The creature is unaffected.

Success The creature is Stunned 1.

Failure The creature is Fascinated with the nearest body of water and compelled to move toward the water and drown itself. If there's no nearby body of water, the creature instead remains still. The creature can attemp

Grab

Vengeful spirits called lloronas arise from people who died overcome with the grief and shame that comes with the tragic drowning of a child. In life, a llorona may have contributed to the child's death or simply lost the child to a horrible accident. In death, a llorona's pain manifests as a malevolent desire to drown others, imparting the same grief that they share with the person's loved ones. To this end, lloronas remain along riversides and other bodies of water in hopes of drawing their next victim and compelling them to drown themselves.

Lloronas look much like they did in life, except they wear elegant funeral attire in undeath. Though stories typically describe lloronas as women, reports from seasoned adventurers include accounts of lloronas appearing as different genders and with a variety of appearances.