Saturday, May 9, 2020
Underground denizens for D&D 3.5
"Monster Geographica - Underground" by Various
Published and Distributed by Expeditious Retreat Press
ISBN-10: 0-972-9376-2-5 Digest Sized - 200 Pages
This slim volume is simply a collection of creatures and monsters from several other sources.
The entries are not sorted alphabetically (there is a Table of Contents that does this), but by Creature Rating, so that GM's can turn to an appropriate CR for the group playing their game.
There's also an index of monsters by type in case you need a specific type. So, instead of seeing an Arboleth (for instance), the first creature in the book is a "Barrow Rat" CR rating 1/4! The final entry is for a "Quickener", CR 20!
There are 200 critters to baffle your players with. There are no drawings in the book, which might prove to be a problem, but I found that this made the book smaller and less expensive. You should normally give players just a description of a creature anyway. The format of the book is digest-sized, making it easier to carry around for outside the home gaming. This particular book lists creatures the prefer Underground locations. This unique idea allows a GM to quickly seize a book that complements the environment that players are passing through.
A good majority of these creatures are not from any of the regular sources, such as the various D&D "Monster Manuals", but from other sources that GM's may not have in their current collection!
There's also an index of monsters by type in case you need a specific type. So, instead of seeing an Arboleth (for instance), the first creature in the book is a "Barrow Rat" CR rating 1/4! The final entry is for a "Quickener", CR 20!
In the upper corner of every page is the creature's CR. This feature makes it easy for a GM to choose creatures that perplex characters, and give them a workout without Total Party Kill. This unique idea is almost invaluable to a harried GM!
There are five of these books altogether, making a library of various monsters that might be in your setting. At first, I thought that not putting them in alphabetical order was a bit strange, but I quickly warmed up to the idea of sorting by Challenge Rating. Although this is the first in the series, this is the second of these that I have bought, but it will =not= be the last! Even though the statistics for creatures is for D&D 3.5, most GM's can convert these easily. Based on my reading of this volume (#1 of 5), I shall be looking for the other three very soon!
My recommendation for GM's needing a few unusual monsters is very high!
You should also consider looking for the remaining volumes:
#2 = "Marsh and Aquatic" Creatures.
#3 = "Forest" Denizens.
#4 = "Hill and Mountain" Types.
#5 = "Plain and Desert" Beings.
There seems to have been a plan to do a sixth volume called "City" but I do not believe they ever did that one.
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