Tripkee Scout

Level 1
Creature· humanoidSmallRemaster
AC
16
HP
20
Speed
25 ft.
Perception
+8
Fort
+7
Ref
+9
Will
+6
Languages common, tripkee
Senses darkvision
Skills acrobatics +7, stealth +7, nature +6, survival +6, athletics +4
Other Speeds climb 20 ft.
Recall Knowledge DC 15 (society)

Attacks

Melee Sickle +9 (agile, finesse, trip), Damage 1d4+1 slashing
Melee Dart +9 (agile, thrown 20 ft.), Damage 1d4+1 piercing

Abilities

Hurl Net

Requirements The tripkee is wielding a net in two hands


Effect The tripkee makes a ranged Strike (with a attack modifier) against a Medium or smaller creature within 20 feet. On a hit, the target is Off-Guard and takes a –10-foot circumstance penalty to its Speeds. On a critical hit, the creature is Restrained instead. The DC to the net is 16. A creature adjacent to the target can Interact with the net to remove it.

Effect: Hurl Net

Jungle Passage

Tripkees ignore difficult terrain in forests and jungles.

Tripkee scouts typically keep watch on the outskirts of tripkee settlements.


Tripkees make their homes in the treetops of jungles and forests. These frog-like humanoids are uniquely adapted to their environment, with oversized eyes that give them keen vision in both light and dark and large toes that allow them to easily scale trees. Tripkees vary widely in physical appearance, with their physiologies influenced by their surrounding environment. Typical tripkees stand just over 2 feet tall and weigh approximately 30 pounds.

Whatever region they come from, tripkees tend to be peaceful hunter-gatherers. They cultivate mushroom patches and gather a wide array of fruits from the surrounding wilderness.

A History of Neutrality Tripkee villages rarely get involved in the conflicts of other communities despite various trade-based alliances, preferring to focus on maintaining relative peace within their own small societies. Legends explain this attitude with a tale of a tripkee champion who dragged his people into a war between humans and charau-ka. The stories differ as to which side the tripkees took, but every version ends with the bloody deaths of the hero and his family. Since that time, village elders claim, tripkees have done their best to remain far from the conflicts of others.