Wererat

Wererats (alternately known as ratmen) are lycanthropes common in urban areas. Wererats could transform into giant rats

Physical Description
A wererat in humanoid form tended to be a thin, wiry individual of shorter than average height. The eyes constantly darted around, and the nose and mouth may have twitched if he or she was excited. Males often have thin, ragged mustaches. The animal form of a wererat was that of a dire rat two feet long from nose to rump. In hybrid form, the wererat was shorter than in its human form and its head, torso and tail were those of a rat while its limbs were a little more humanoid in appearance.

Culture
A wererat never lived alone if they could help it, though they did not tend to form strong interpersonal relationships beyond a pack mentality - love and marriage were almost alien concepts to them. They delighted in pitting their superior cunning against surface-dwellers, seeing the cities that tended to be above their lairs as hunting grounds where they could steal food and wealth by killing its inhabitants in an almost parasitical manner.

Wererats would steal anything that they determined to have any value, resulting in accumulation of piles of junk that could however contain valuable treasures.

When in human form, the stench of the sewers remained, leading to wererats on the surface being relegated to the seedier parts of the city - this suited the lycanthropes though, as those areas frequently contained the dives that served the strong alcohol that they favored and made it easier to attack drunks. .

Ecology
In second edition D&D, ratmen were cannibals, eating uninfected humans and subsisting on what they could scavenge or steal. Wererats were noted to rarely mate with other wererats, instead mating with uninfected humans. The progeny of a male wererat and a human woman was human, but the child would inherit many of the physical characteristics of its father in his human form. The child of a female wererat and a human male were giant rats with paws that resembled human hands known as ratlings. These ratlings grew to maturity by the age of two and had the ability to transform themselves into human children who appeared to be roughly three times their real age.

Dungeon magazine 55 introduced the Wererat Lord, a creature regarded as almost divine by its lessers. They were self-centred to the extreme however and despite an initial increase in the pack's power, the Lord would eventually lead the pack to ruin as it sacrificed its followers and diverted resources to itself.

Habitat
Wererats recognized their relative weakness and congregated in numbers in the sewer systems beneath surface cities. Not only did those who live on the surface maintain their lairs for them but they unknowingly protected the wererat lairs with their fortifications, allowing the wererats to frequently leave their defenses lacking.

Abilities
In second edition D&D, wererats were weaker than normal humans but they were more intelligent. Only silver or magical weapons could harm them and they were adept at surprise attacks.

In third edition D&D, wererats shared the animal instinctiveness of all lycanthropes and were markedly more dextrous than humans as well as a little more hardy. Any damage caused by a weapon not made of silver or coated in alchemical silver would be reduced. Wererats were often carriers of filth fever due to the environments that they lived in.

Appearances

 * Fiction:
 * The Halfling's Gem
 * The Silent Blade
 * Rising Tide
 * Servant of the Shard
 * The Rage
 * Maiden of Pain


 * Video games:
 * Icewind Dale II
 * Neverwinter Nights
 * Neverwinter
 * Sword Coast Legends
 * Idle Champions of the Forgotten Realms