Medusa

A medusa (NaN undefineds NaN undefineds) was a monstrous and hateful creature that was capable of petrifying any creature that met its gaze.

Description
Typical medusae had scaly skins of either pale or earthy color. Their eyes glowed with an intense red color and, instead of hair, their heads were covered in a mass of living venomous serpents. Despite those features, from large distances they could easily be mistaken by ordinary humans. For that reason, it was common for medusae to hide their features behind hoods or veils.

People cursed into becoming medusae could belong to either sex and both male and female medusae created by such curses were similar in form and capabilities.

Variants
An uncommon variant of medusa known as a greater medusa had the lower torso of a snake and its entire body covered by thin scales, with a total body length of. They produced considerably more potent poison, which rendered even their skins harmful to the touch. They also used their innate poison to coat their weapons and arrows.

In the Utter East, variants of medusae similar to greater medusae were sometimes referred to as "gorgons" (not to be confused with the iron-skinned bulls of the same name). While their look could petrify a living creature, it was reported that the effect was usually temporary. They lurked within the ruins of Phantom Pass and Old Stone Keep and in the Puzzle Palace.

An extremely rare variant of male medusa was known as a maedar, which lacked the head serpents and the petrifying gaze of regular medusae, but possessed great physical strength and in some cases a poisonous weakening gaze.

Personality
Most medusae despised their own powers and viewed their abilities as a curse. They directed their frustration and anger outwards, seeking to petrify any living creature they encountered, and only used restraint when hunting prey for food or when searching for a mate.

Abilities
The glowing red eyes of a medusa were feared for their petrifying power. Anyone within a range of of a medusa who looked at its eyes could be transformed into lifeless stone within seconds, at the medusa's discretion. It was possible to resist that power through extraordinary physical resilience,  or by averting one's eyes from the medusa's.   The petrification was permanent, unless reversed with magic such as a greater restoration spell or similar.

A medusa's vision and petrifying gaze also reached into the Ethereal and the Astral Plane. In the Border Ethereal, as a result of the plane's obscuring nature, the creature's features could only be recognized at dangerously close distances: its bright red eyes could only be seen from or less, while the serpents were only visible from a distance of less than. Although a medusa's gaze affected creatures in the Ethereal, its head snakes and physical attacks had no effect on ethereal targets.

A medusa was immune to the petrifying stare of other medusae, but was susceptible to be turned into stone by its own gaze, for example when looking at its own reflection in a mirror or other reflective surface. Even after death, a medusa's eyes retained their power for several days, becoming weaker as the corpse decayed.

Combat
A medusa's typical strategy was to lure potential victims within the range of its gaze and then induce them into looking in its eyes. If the victims managed to avert their eyes in time, the medusa followed up with powerful attacks from its head serpents, whose venom was potent enough to severely poison or even kill a creature. If none of those strategies succeeded, medusae were also competent with a number of weapons, such as knives, short swords shortbows, and longbows. Many medusae were considered skilled archers and some greater medusae were known to coat arrows with their poisonous saliva or blood.

Society
Medusae prefered to live alone or in small groups, but they desired treasures and dominance over other humanoid societies. It was common for a group of medusae to seek to rule a rural community as a recluse royal family, or for a lone medusa to become a crime lord or the leader of an assassin's guild. They were typically seen in the company of creatures who were immune to their gaze, such as grimlocks and gargoyles, though they were also known to gather humanoid servants. Medusae and maedar formed monogamous relationships and usually mated for life, forming a powerful emotional bond that bordered on obsession.

Medusae typically made their homes in dark caves or large abandoned structures. Their lairs progressively fell into a state of disrepair, riddled with shadowy overgrowth, hiding places, and obstacles, usually inhabited by nests of venomous serpents. While they enjoyed keeping the petrified statues of their victims as trophies or decoration for their lairs, some medusae also destroyed most of their victims' remains in order to make their lairs less immediately recognizable by wary adventurers.

It was common for medusae to associate with equally powerful or stronger creatures. In particular, medusae held yuan-ti in high regard, so small groups of medusae and maedar often allied with them to work together.

Physiology
Medusae ate sparingly and had small appetites. Mated couples of medusae and maedar usually fed by the use of the maedar's ability to turn broken fragments of petrified victims back into flesh. Among vegetable sources of food, medusae were particularly fond of shriekers and other fungi.

Reproduction
Medusae could reproduce by mating amongst themselves and with other humanoids. If mating with a human, a female medusa produced a clutch of between two and six eggs that always hatched into female medusae. The fate of a human after mating with a medusa was usually death by petrification.

If a medusa and a maedar mated, the eggs produced human offspring in 99% of the cases, in which case the babies were immediately petrified upon seeing their mother. In only 1% of the cases, a maedar was born.

Medusae laid their eggs within one month of mating, and the eggs had an incubation period of eight months. Young medusa hatchlings resembled human baby girls with green stubby tendrils growing from their heads, which came alive as serpents once they reached two years of age. Young medusae matured at the same rate as humans, and acquired the ability to petrify others upon reaching adolescence.

Uses
The blood of medusae had special properties that allowed it to reverse the process of petrification. In order for it to work, the blood needed to be applied to the petrified creature's mouth or lips by a skilled healer. It could only reverse the condition if the victim had been petrified within 24 hours. Medusa blood could also be used to craft potions of human control and potions of mammal control. Older medusae were capable of brewing potions that could restore petrified creatures, which they traded amongst themselves and employed to restore petrified creatures by accident.

The venom from a medusa's snakes was renowned among assassins for its potency. It was one of the required material components to scribe a scroll of protection from petrification. Each scroll required of venom, in addition to other ingredients. A medusa's eyes could also be used as an ingredient for the scroll.

The head snakes themselves could be harvested to produce potions of reptile control. However, they were rarely harvested due to the horrible stench that emanated from them after death.

The stone from petrified corpses of medusae victims, when pulverized, could be used as a material component for spells that contacted denizens of other planes. This practice, however, tended to be restricted to evil priests.

History
Some vain mortals could strike bargains with powerful fiends such as archdevils and demon lords, offering everything in exchange for the gift of long-lasting beauty, power, and the admiration of others. Upon the expiration of the splendorous years bargained for, the price was collected and the mortals were turned into medusae.

In the mid‒14 century DR, members the Zhentarim were rumored to pursue an alliance with medusae and maedar of the Goblin Marches and the Stonelands, offering treasure in exchange for recruiting them as agents of the Black Network. They conducted negotiations while under the protection of an unknown spell that purportedly protected them from the medusae's gaze.

Around the same time, the inhabitants of Minroe developed a defense against a colony of medusae that lurked in a system of nearby caves, which were the source of prized pixie cap mushrooms that the inhabitants gathered and sold at high prices. The farmers domesticated a variety of hedgehog shrieker that had developed a natural defense against medusae and only reacted to their presence. The citizens planted shrieker gardens around town to protect themselves from attacks, while gatherers carried them in carts when entering the caves.

Notable Medusae

 * Marlos Urnrayle, the leader of the Cult of the Black Earth in the late 15 century DR.
 * Neheedra Duskryn, a former drow priestess of Lolth from Blingdenstone in the late 15 century DR.
 * Yashar, a sorcerer who guarded the Undying Templein the 14 century DR.
 * Zalkoré, an Omuan queen who was transformed into a medusa by an erinyes and subsequently lost her sanity.

Appearances

 * Adventures
 * Dungeon #48, "Khamsa's Folly" • The Dungeon of Death • "Green Bones" • City of the Spider Queen • Princes of the Apocalypse • Out of the Abyss • Tomb of Annihilation • Waterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage
 * Novels
 * The Spectral Blaze • The Last Threshold
 * Video Games
 * Eye of the Beholder II: The Legend of Darkmoon • Pool of Radiance • Curse of the Azure Bonds • Secret of the Silver Blades • Pools of Darkness • Gateway to the Savage Frontier • Dungeon Hack • Neverwinter Nights • Neverwinter Nights: Shadows of Undrentide • Neverwinter • Baldur's Gate: Siege of Dragonspear
 * Card Games
 * AD&D Trading Cards