Banderhobb

Banderhobbs were enigmatic monsters of shadow and flesh that seemingly hailed from the Shadowfell. They were known for capturing targets regardless of any correlation, by appearing from the shadows as they slept and stealing them away.

Description
Banderhobbs were humongous humanoid entities that superficially resembled giant bipedal toads. Scraggly sets of limbs ending in long keen claws strangely contrasted their otherwise ogre sized frames. Within the depths of their massive maws lied a serpentine tongue along with two rows of saw-like fangs. Atop their amphibian-like heads was a pair of huge, bulbous eyes that appeared blank and empty. Some banderhobbs lacked the immense size of their kin, being lithe and short where others were stout and tall. Their feet were normally flapping and flat, as they silently moved through the darkness. Other reported traits of the banderhobbs were inconsistent and variable although it was fully possible that all of them were true.

Personality
While most of the malevolent forces of the Shadowfell were driven by dark emotions such as hatred, jealousy, spite or sheer ego, banderhobbs held no such feelings. At the same time no action they committed was based in kindness, respect or adoration. Emotions were an alien concept to the banderhobb mind and even urges like hunger and sleep were not things they desired to do but processes they recognized they had to undergo.

The truly terrifying fact of the banderhobb was that they were completely apathetic to their situation, striving only to complete the missions assigned to them. They could not be driven to acts of anger, frightened away, or made to feel sorrow, nor did they make challenges or waste time gloating. Entirely subservient to whatever nebulous entity commanded it, banderhobbs were practically impossible to manipulate. They had no personal compulsions, completed their mission even if it inevitably ended in it's own death, and kept their assigned goals so well hidden that they could not be used against them.

Assuming that banderhobbs were unthinking soldiers however was a grave mistake that only benefited the monsters. The absolute obedience often mistaken for mindlessness allowed a banderhobb to make completely logical assessments without impulse or emotion impeding its thinking. Both cunning and incredibly aware, a banderhobb could make swift tactical decisions and even decide to retreat if it believed that it was the most efficient path to completing its task. Despite their inability to verbally communicate they could receive commands to an intriguingly deep degree. Unlike automatons they were capable of recognizing idioms, metaphors, dialects, and otherwise reading into the non-literal meaning of commands, with individuals being able to better comprehend different tongues.

Abilities
Great size laid hidden within the seemingly scrawny arms of the banderhobb, with bone crushing claws capable of squeezing the life out of the most physically capable mortals. Their tongues were controlled by a plethora of muscles, faster than a coiled snake, and with a grip tighter than a giant python. Masterfully manipulating their tongues, they could quickly wrap their victims up and drag them towards its gaping maw. Within their gullets laid the bodies of whoever they had consumed, possibly still alive, as well as weapons, clothes, or anything they had been instructed to steal.

One known process by which they found their targets was by being provided some part of their body like hair or blood, or a piece of something they carried, like clothing. Once given the piece,they could track down the person or object so long as they were only a mile away, although they might have possessed other techniques or hunting abilities.

Mysteriously, their inability to form words did not prevent them from communicating with one another. Silent staring with their glassy eyes somehow allowed them to convey complex messages, and their uncanny awareness extended to the motivation and plans of other creatures. It was unknown whether this was the exercise of some kind of telepathic ability. Another unknown factor of the banderhobb's behavior was whether emotion based magic could alter their behavior or if they were entirely cut off from feelings, magical or otherwise.

The most fearsome of the banderhobbs' supernatural powers was their link to the world of shadows. Using their wide eyes and special receptors in their skin banderhobbs were able to uniquely sense the presence of crossings between the other planes and the Shadowfell. Some claimed that they traveled between the realms using ritual markings carved onto their torsos. Even if a crossing point was too small for them to travel between, their unending patience let them wait until they were deeply stretched enough to allow so. Using these shadowy weak points, banderhobbs could appear from places as large as cemeteries and as small as bedroom closets, to ambush their prey, unhampered by outside security measures. Banderhobbs still stuck in the Shadowfell could even reach through the darkness, striking and grabbing the unwary residents of the material world and possibly dragging them back through the relatively small gate. When in need of a hasty retreat, banderhobbs could teleport short distances to nearby shadow or dimly lit regions. Disregarding their space warping means of escape, banderhobbs were often as quiet and creeping as the shadows they resided in, despite their hulking size.

Subtypes
What made it difficult to obtain conclusive information on the banderhobbs was that they were incredibly diverse both in physiology and abilities. The most comparably strange of these varieties was the banderhobb filch. Unlike their gargantuan kin, filches could fit down chimneys, and through windows, allowing them to access places other banderhobbs simply couldn't. The drawback to their diminutive stature was their inability to swallow their victims like normal banderhobbs could. Instead, filches grabbed their victims alive and placed them in sacks they hefted over their backs. Filches were almost skittish in behavior, quickly lashing out at any noise that caught their angular ears and jumping at those who surprised them. Whether this constituted an emotional response, or simply a hyperactive mind was not known, as most who suffered their outbursts were dragged off along with their targets.

Banderhobb warders specialized in the chase, hunting down their targets ruthlessly until caught. Wherever their targets attempted to flee there was a solid chance the warder had already teleported their, cutting off their prey at every turn. They were especially adept at snatching their marks through the shadows using either claws or tongues. For most banderhobbs doing so in the day could be difficult, as the shadowy fissures from which they crossed over were tenuous and constantly in flux. Warders however excelled in this task, for the darkest shadows could only appear where the brightest of lights shone to contrast them.

Some banderhobbs were rumored to have extra-dimensional caverns within their true stomachs. Those that they swallowed were taken to a strange room, fifteen feet in every direction. Within the depths of the stomach was a giant face, about half the surface area of the room, with a hole in the middle leading to the true stomach. The ghastly outline was no a true face as it lacked eyes, and was distorted, elongated and a ghastly white that contrasted the rest of their flesh colored insides. After being swallowed by a banderhobb it was possible to carve a path out of them from the inside, but it had to be done quickly to prevent the devoured from becoming digested. Although many banderhobbs, known as abductors, specialized in consuming prey whole before regurgitating them later it was not known if the strange stomach rooms were limited to these variants.

Society
Banderhobbs exited portals from their realms in groups of ones and twos, but the exact numbers varied based on the scale of the invasion. They maintained an orderly march through areas of thin shadows, and when returning with their quarry, allowed the carrier to pass first while the others remained to clean up anyone who heard of their escapades. Those who heard anything about them were eliminated within the next year, and anyone who leaked their secrets was practically doomed to be stolen away. Shadow wolves and howlers were the only entities they were known to collaborate with when pulling off their kidnappings. Their also existed a ritual to conjure a banderhobb through the combination of flesh and shadow. Hags were chiefly in possession of this knowledge but other dark fey, great fiends, and corrupt mortal wizards knew the secrets to such a process. Some other evil fey and powerful fiends also know of the process, as do a few mortal mages. Instructions might also be found in a tome devoted to debased wizardry. Once a banderhobb completed their mission they would expire leaving behind only shadowy wisps and tar-like slime. What was done to their captive victims in absence of the above masters' plans was often thought to be consumption, although it might have been a process to create more of their kin.

Origins and Creation
As one would expect, knowledge of the banderhobbs' beginnings was almost entirely speculative or conjecture, although most had some solid reasoning behind them. There were claims that goblins and boggles were both linked to the banderhobbs by the way of some kind of common ancestor or source. The divergence between banderhobb physiology between say the filch and the abductors, was often compared to that of the goblinoid species, and the abilities for some to understand goblin furthered this hypothesis. Some legends claimed that banderhobbs were the original goblins and ancestors of their kind, or perhaps Maglubiyet's special elite. Archfey often supported the interpretation that they were the shadowy cousins of the dimension hopping boggles, although these stories had a tendency to blend with those of the goblinoids. Astral Sea denizens of significant strength and age sometimes claimed the banderhobbs were of an elder race and that only nineteen truly exist.

More modern claims purported that the first banderhobb was created in the earliest day of the world by a coven of night hags, although whether they were truly created by the night hags or if they were simply the first to summon them was not understood. However the most horrifying of these tales was based within the Shadowfell itself. Legends told of a place beyond the Shadowfell's Stormy Sea, between the endless night of the shadowy realm and the ethereal path of the realm of dreams. Travelers claim that on a big black rock was a dark tower in which banderhobbs roamed freely pursuing their ominous agenda. It was impossible to find the name of the place as it seemingly existed nowhere at all, but the Vistani of Ravenloft referred to it as No-Place. The malevolent entity that watched over No-Place was an abominable supernatural power, but in no words could it be described as a god. This being was claimed to be the creator of the banderhobb race, and commanded them to commit their terrible thefts. Most terrifying of the legend of the black tower was that the banderhobbs built it themselves, with every whispered tale of their existence acting as a brick in its walls, and that through every incomprehensible act of terror the tower grew in size.