Tlincalli

Tlincallis, also know as manscorpions, scorpion folk, scorpionmen, and stingers, were terrifying monstrous humanoids with the lower bodies of giant scorpions.

Description
The upper part of a tlincalli was the upper body of a human. The lower part of the tlincalli's body was of a six-legged giant scorpion. Plates of armor made from bone covered the body from the upper abdomen down. Tlincallis were completely hairless. Their hands were not dexterous, as they had two large fingers and a thumb.

Combat
Tlincallis were organized warriors. As they frequently patrolled their territory, squadrons of six to eight warriors were most often encountered by other creatures. The leader of the squadron was also the only spellcaster in the group. The favored weapons of tlincallis were bolas and macas.

A standard tlincalli tactic was to engage an opponent from afar, using their bolas or other ranged weapons. Afterwards, they charged and surrounded their target, engaging in fierce melee combat. In addition to using a maca, they used their sharp claws and strong tail to knock opponents off their feet. The stinger at the end of their tails delivered a fatal venom. Additionally, their bony armor was covered in poison.

Both female and male tlincallis were trained and skilled in combat.

Abilities
Tlincalli spellcasters used divine spells, including hishnashaper spells. They were capable of detecting the vibrations of a walking creature up to away.

Society
Tlincalli lived in tribes, some tribes settling and founding cities and some tribes nomadic. Dwarves and humans were often captured by tlincalli. They were used as slave labor in tlincalli mines and smithies. Nomadic tribes were scavengers, stealing what they required from their victims.

Religion
The tlincalli pantheon contained at least nine major and two minor deities. They used their own zodiac system, which was composed of eleven symbols. Little was known about the tlincalli religion, but it was understood that Corantllil was the tlincalli god of continual labor. The clerics of some tlincalli tribes worshiped Nula, Plutoq, or Zaltec.

Ecology
Tlincallis were obligate carnivores and consumed any meat they could find, either freshly killed or carrion left behind by another predator. Tlincallis were not hunted by other predators. Tlincallis laid their eggs in a dark, warm nest, usually surrounded by cacti. The eggs had firm shells on which a powerful poison was found. Any creature who came into contact with an egg became paralyzed. When the eggs were about to hatch, tlincallis tied captives in the nests. Upon hatching, the young fed on the hapless victims.

A scholarly treatise on tlincallis was found in Tym's Monstrous Book. It contained a detailed analysis of the ecology of tlincallis.

Uses
The poisonous coating of a tlincalli's bony armor was sought after by alchemists, who extracted it and used it as a component.

History
Tlincalli originated in Maztica and eventually spread to Faerûn's Underdark. In, tlincalli diviners in Maztica created a gate and transported an expeditionary force of over a thousand of their people into the caves under Amn. The tlincalli journeyed deeper into the Underdark and founded the realm of Oaxapupta in the abandoned dwarven kingdom of Xothaerin.

Around, a unit of two thousand enslaved tlincallis was part of the army of the City of Brass. The unit was called the Black Darts, and they used javelins in battle.

In, tlincallis erupted from the Underdark and attacked Murann and settlements along the Trade Way from the Cloud Peaks to the Forest of Tethir. They demanded recompense for all treasure looted from Maztica.

Trivia
When a tlincalli was used in heraldic designs, it represented readiness and betrayal.

Appearances

 * Novels
 * The Shattered Mask • Star of Cursrah
 * Video Games
 * Dungeon Hack • Neverwinter Nights: Shadows of Undrentide