Wight

A wight was an undead creature given a semblance of life through sheer violence and hatred. They could drain the life energy out of victims by touch, turning them into new wights upon death.

Description
Wights appeared as weird and twisted reflections of the forms they had in life. They existed in a state between being alive and being dead. When attacking their prey, wights' eyed glowed like white-hot embers. Their mummified flesh covered the twisted skeleton, the hands ended up in deadly claws.

Personality
Wights were evil undead creatures brought back to unlife. By their vanity, evil deeds, and desires. Upon the ends of their mortal lives, the dying spirits reached out to Orcus or another evil deity, receiving undeath in exchange for spending eternity, hating and trying to destroy all living beings.

Wights retained their personalities and memories in the undeath. They possessed free will at the same time as they were tasked to perform the bidding of the evil powers that brought them back.

Combat
Upon touching someone living, wights drained the life out of the victim through flesh, clothing, and armor.

Wights were known to serve other stronger undead creatures like wraiths and other evil beings. When they followed a leader, they often avoided strategy and planning, relying on their drive for death and destruction instead.

Ecology
Wights were active at night, retreating away from the hated sunlight into crypts, tombs, burial mounds, where they dwelt during the day. Their lairs were easily detected by eerie silence surrounding the area, abandoned by birds and wild animals, and abundant dead plant life.

Humanoid victims of the wights were returned as zombies controlled by their killer. The creatures that were killed with the life-draining attacks came back as enslaved wights themselves. If the master was slain, the wights that were created regained their malicious free will.

Like other undead, wights did not need air, food, drink, or sleep. They were resistant to necrotic damage and to damage dealt by non-magical and non-silvered weapons and immune to poison.

History
The word "wight" meant "person" in the Realms' past. Centuries later, the word came to be exclusively used to describe these catacomb-dwelling undead creatures.

In 1357 DR wights could be found infesting the Burial Glen in Myth Drannor along with other undead creatures.

In 1371 DR a group of ten undead Purple Dragons wights roamed the High Road in Cormyr looking for the “enemies of Cormyr". In their twisted undead stare, of course, the enemies were all living beings.

Notable Wights

 * Na (wight) was a raised shell of a "resurrection agent" only knows as Harlot in 1463 DR.
 * Akar Kessell was a mage in Icewind Dale who attempted to conquer the region using Crenshinibon. He returned as a wight in 1485 DR attempting to poison the region with Black ice.

Appearances

 * Adventures:
 * Curse of Strahd
 * Lords of Darkness: The Tombs of Deckon Thar
 * Shadowdale: The Scouring of the Land
 * The Rise of Tiamat
 * The Twilight Tomb
 * Tomb of Annihilation
 * Waterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage
 * How the Mighty Are Fallen
 * Curse of the Azure Bonds
 * Pool of Radiance: Attack on Myth Drannor
 * Vale of the Dragon Oracle
 * Into the Dragon's Lair


 * Card Games
 * AD&D Trading Cards
 * Novels:
 * Extinction
 * Realms of the Dead
 * Video Games:
 * Baldur's Gate: Siege of Dragonspear
 * Dungeon Hack
 * Icewind Dale
 * Icewind Dale: Enhanced Edition
 * Idle Champions of the Forgotten Realms
 * Neverwinter
 * Pools of Darkness
 * Pool of Radiance
 * Spelljammer: Pirates of Realmspace
 * Treasures of the Savage Frontier