Ghoul

Ghouls were undead humanoids who devoured the flesh of corpses.

Description
A ghoul appeared as an emaciated, roughly humanoid creature with an almost-hairless mottled, decaying hide stretched tight over its bones. It had the sharp teeth of a carnivore and sunken eyes that burned as it they were hot coals.

Abilities
Ghouls could paralyze their victims with a claw or bite wound, though elves were immune. Paralysis lasted at least a dozen seconds and up to half a minute.

The bite of a ghoul also inflicted a terrible disease, ghoul fever, deteriorating health and agility within a day. Any who died from the illness rose as a ghoul at midnight.

Combat
Ghouls sought to ambush and surprise unwary victims wherever they could, usually hiding behind gravestones or in shallow graves they could swiftly burst out of.

Activities
Ghouls had a terrible hunger for carrion. They not only ate the dead, but also preyed on the living. They lurked in graveyards and on battlefields, wherever their foul food was plentiful and the air was thick with the smell of death.

Creation
It was believed that a living man or woman who'd tasted the flesh of people would rise again as ghouls after they died. This was not proven, but it fitted their cannibalistic behavior. However, others believed that anyone who indulged in extreme debauchery and evil could become a ghoul after death.

Whatever the truth, it was clear that any humanoid who was bitten by a ghoul, contracted ghoul fever, and died of it would inevitably rise as a ghoul themselves the following night, at midnight.

The new-risen ghoul lost all the skills and powers it had in life. Their minds became warped, turning them feral yet cunning and hungry for living flesh, becoming in all ways like another ghoul. They were not bound to serve other ghouls, however.

A more experienced or powerful victim would instead became a ghast.

Society
Ghouls hunted alone, in gangs of up to four, or packs of seven to twelve members.

Ghouls spoke whatever languages they'd known in life, typically Common.

History
In the Year of the Prince, 1357 DR, Vajra Valmeyjar, Cybriana, Timoth Eyesbright, Onyx the Invincible, and Priam Agrivar were camping at the base of Stoner's Needle in the Sword Coast lands when ghoul warriors clawed their way out of the earth and snatched at them shortly before dawn. Their blades soon dismembered the undead, though the once-paladin Priam wished he could still turn them.

Variants
Aside from the standard ghoul, a number of other varieties existed:
 * Lacedon: An aquatic breed of ghoul, powerful swimmers that lurked near reefs, waiting to prey on stranded vessels.
 * Ghast: A more powerful breed of ghoul, distinguished by its foul stench.
 * Abyssal ghoul: An extraplanar ghoul with fiendish characteristics that made them far more formidable.

Background
The ghoul is of course based on the ghūl, a demon of Arabic mythology that entered western mythology as the ghoul, with various meanings. Within D&D, in the Al-Qadim setting, the Arabic ghūl was translated more directly as the great ghul and ghul-kin.

Appearances

 * Adventures:
 * ... And a Dozen Eggs
 * City of the Spider Queen
 * The Accursed Tower
 * The Dungeon of Death
 * The Inheritance
 * The Secret of Spiderhaunt
 * The Twilight Tomb
 * Comics:
 * The Bounty Seekers Of Manshaka
 * Computer Games:
 * Al-Qadim: The Genie's Curse
 * Descent to Undermountain
 * Icewind Dale
 * Icewind Dale: Enhanced Edition
 * Idle Champions of the Forgotten Realms
 * Neverwinter Nights
 * Spelljammer: Pirates of Realmspace
 * Sword Coast Legends
 * Treasures of the Savage Frontier
 * Novels:
 * Baldur's Gate
 * Canticle