Forgotten Realms Wiki
Forgotten Realms Wiki
(Undo revision 656754 by 134.19.93.179 (talk) single 'p' is correct US English, WotC use it)
Tag: Undo
m (+gal)
Tag: Source edit
Line 152: Line 152:
   
 
==Appendix==
 
==Appendix==
===See Also===
 
 
===Appearances===
 
===Appearances===
 
:;Adventures
 
:;Adventures
Line 168: Line 167:
 
:;Organized Play & Licensed Adventures
 
:;Organized Play & Licensed Adventures
 
::''[[The Occupation of Szith Morcane]]''
 
::''[[The Occupation of Szith Morcane]]''
 
===Gallery===
 
  +
<gallery>
  +
Kuo-toa bg3.jpg|''A kuo-toa [[cleric]], worshiper of [[Bhaal]].''
  +
</gallery>
 
===Further Reading===
 
===Further Reading===
 
* {{Cite dragon/281/By Any Other Name|46-49}}
 
* {{Cite dragon/281/By Any Other Name|46-49}}

Revision as of 03:30, 14 May 2021

Kuo-toa (pronounced: /kˈtɑːkoo-o-TO-a[7]), also known as gogglers and men-fish,[8] were a debased, piscine race of warm-blooded and amphibious creatures that dwelt in the Underdark.[9] Sinister secrets lurked below the surface of their alien minds, for the kuo-toa were fanatics plagued by mental instability[10] that saw things others couldn't and worshiped gods that didn't exist — at least until they believed hard enough.[11]

They invent their own gods… The very definition of insanity.

Description

Kuo-toa were normally 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall and weighed approximately 160 pounds (73 kilograms). Contrasting with their paunchy shape were their arms and legs, slender and lithe despite their relative shortness. At the end of each limb were broad, distended and partially webbed hands and feet. Each extremity had three main digits and one opposing digit at its end. Topping their bodies were bullet-shaped, piscine heads hosting a mouthful of sharp teeth and a pair of bulging silver-black eyes capable of independently swiveling to observe a situation.[1]

Their bodies were covered in gray scales with yellowish undertones in males, which could vary in pigmentation based on their emotional state, such as a dark red when angered and a ghostly white when terrified. Coating their rubbery skin and piscine scales was a layer of slippery slime that gave their bodies a glimmering sheen. Normally the only clothing that they wore were leather straps to hold their gear since their slime made conventional armor and leather highly uncomfortable although some donned armor made of seashells. They did have a fondness for accessories of bone, shell, and gems.[1] A light stench of rotten fish was constantly exuded by their bodies.[12]

Personality

Kuo-toa were extremely suspicious as well as duplicitous, betraying trust for their own benefit so long as they believed they could do it successfully. They would easily turn in family members they suspected of crimes to community officials. Due to these actions, they were normally perceived as cruel monsters by most other races, but this wasn't entirely accurate.[13]

The mental oppression they suffered at the hands of other races broke the already-simple minds of most kuo-toa and as a result madness was a common ailment amongst their kind. Kuo-toa were not all necessarily evil, but within their repressive theocracy, common kuo-toa did not possess anywhere near enough willpower to oppose the ruling castes. When separated from these societies, kuo-toa could adopt neutral or good philosophies such as pacifism.[13]

Abilities

Kuo-toa were an amphibious race, capable of operating with equal or greater mobility underwater as they could on land. The slime produced by their skin was also fairly useful, partially protecting them from poisons and allowing them to wriggle free of most attempts to restrain them.[1] The kuo-toa possessed incredible monocular vision capable of perceiving invisible or even ethereal creatures when they moved, although their time in the Underdark rendered it poor aboveground.[14]

Blibdoolpoolp power

Blibdoolpoolp granting powers to one of her kuo-toa followers.

The psychic damage inflicted by the illithids rendered the kuo-toa mad, but had another, unintended side-effect. In their insane state, the kuo-toa invented gods of their own to protect themselves from the threats they constantly faced. The subconscious energy of belief of enough kuo-toa simultaneously was actually capable of causing the entity to manifest in reality. This subconscious power allowed the kuo-toa to draw power from their own belief in said entity, giving them access to a kind of divine power. The more powerful the gogglers' belief, the greater their abilities, with some individual priests being capable of causing supernatural events.[1] Two priests working in concert could achieve effects like creating blasts of lightning.[12] 

A dangerous ability the kuo-toa possessed was the contagious nature of their madness. Possibly owing to their mental abilities or simply their weak wills, the initial break of a kuo-toa's mind had a 10% chance of causing other gogglers around them to suffer from similar episodes. Even though madness contracted this way was confined to temporary breaks in anyone but the first victim, this was still a very dangerous phenomenon. If not culled or detained quickly, the madness could swiftly infest the entire community, sending it spiraling into chaos, not to mention potentially freeing slaves and killing important leaders.[10]

Combat

Kuo-toa combatants without access to divine abilities had to make use of martial skill and cunning to be effective warriors. Commonly, these types of kuo-toa were martial artists or rogues that employed such tactics as drowning unsuspecting enemies, quick movements with knives to incapacitate, applying adhesive to their blows, and other nasty tricks.[15] Even many priests would incorporate some regular combat training into their regimen in order to better do battle.[10]

While capable of biting their opponents, they more typically employed weapons like spears and shields against their foes. Because of their use of slave labor, they commonly employed nets, harpoons, and pincer staves in order to capture their enemies. They could also secrete an adhesive oil, which they applied to their shields, causing weapons that struck them to become stuck.[1]

Society

Kuo-toa whip-5e

A kuo-toa whip.

Kuo-toa societies were oppressive feudal theocracies ruled by a Vi-Poolgol, which translated to "priest-king", and nine Oorg-Poolgoopan, also known as "priest-dukes". The priest-dukes formed a religious governing body known as the Sunken Council, which exercised complete control over the citizens' lives. Each council member dictated a different element of kuo-toa society, with dukes for fishing, trade, war, agriculture, mining, pilgrimage, sacred sites, slavery, and child-rearing. While the king and dukes theoretically held absolute authority over their subjects, the kuo-toan propensity for madness forced noble elites to forge alliances with other elites to mitigate infighting. Directly below the priest-dukes were the Ba-Poolgol, priest-princes who might rule over smaller cities. Some kuo-toan elites possessed concubines, who were indolent members of the opposite gender.[15]

Serving under the kuo-toan nobility were the Vi-Plagoop and the Ba-Plagoop, inquisitor rogues and normal priests known as the Eyes of the Priest-King and Pincers of the Priest-King, respectively. Handling sacrifices were a lesser caste of priests known as lashes, who specialized in lightning abilities.[15] Enforcing the authority of the Sunken Council upon the fragmented kuo-toa communities were the Va-Scour, otherwise known as whips, fanatics who inspired the kuo-toan militia to fight fervently for the archpriests and their gods.[16] Their power was bestowed on them by archpriests rather than their own belief energy. Whips were normally only the children of archpriests, and would fight to the death for the honor of taking his place after his expiration, although whips who displeased their masters could be stripped of their divine power and even killed.[1]

Blib-sanvu, more commonly known as monitors, were an order of celibate, elite warrior-monks who acted as the secret police of kuo-toan society, whose duties involved the culling of the weak as well as the killing and subduing of the criminal and insane. The monitors practiced a special kuo-toan type of martial art that involved the exercise of mental control and channeling their inner madness through their fists and into their opponents. Other techniques applied by monitors included the smearing of adhesive with their strikes and lunging with abnormal speed for a kuo-toa.[10] Both whips and monitors underwent heavy mental exercise to reduce their capacity for madness.[2]

Whips and monitors were assisted by elite warriors called harpooners, whose job it was to assist in the capture and confinement of crazed citizens using their harpoons, although they were just as capable of using them to fight invaders.[10] Other warriors included cutters and drowners, kuo-toa rogues who used subterfuge and secrecy to do combat and who typically served purely offensive roles in the hierarchy. Kuo-toa who succumbed to madness were captured, with violent ones exiled to regions outside of a settlement to act as a first line of defense, or ushered inside holding cells built into walls of defensive positions to act as disposable shock troops. There also existed kuo-toa marauders, those with slight taints of madness who hunted the Underdark for creatures to enslave and sacrifice.[10]

Common kuo-toa performed menial labor, such as fishing, farming, or guard duty, although without supervision by a whip or monitor they would normally flee dangerous combat situations. Gogglers were excellent fishermen, capable of diving deep to collect mollusks, crustaceans, and fish from the depths of their pools. Although a diet of flesh was preferable, they were equally capable of living off of plant matter and would create fields of mushrooms and kelp lit by phosphorescent fungi that were tended to by slaves. Due to their poor mining skills, they would employ slave labor in order to conduct mining operations. While they possessed a mild fondness of gemstones, they much preferred sacred relics, shells, or pearls and would gladly trade the former to obtain any of the latter.[16][14]

Within the rigid caste system of the gogglers, those of higher status were fanatically fawned over while inferiors were treated like slaves. Even fingerlings felt the bindings of the caste system, with normally only noble spawn becoming priests or monitors, and young ones grouped in pens sorted by gender, fitness, and nobility. However, kuo-toa society was also extremely meritocratic, with skill being a major determinant in an individual's place. Although the ability to rise and fall existed, superiority itself gave individuals the right to lord over others, which was where its true rigidity laid. It was common for kuo-toa to plot against their superiors in order to gain an edge against them, even planning to kill them, although the monitors usually kept the latter from happening.[10] The primary flaw in their system was a combination of the kuo-toa's own propensity towards insanity and the structure of the justice system. Because the system was designed not to remove those unfit for power, nobility suffering from madness of their own would retain their positions, forcing monitors to apply interpretation to their teachings, with some monitors becoming inefficient themselves because of their own mental disorders.[14][17]

Architecture

Kuo-toa communities were centered around pools used for a wide range of activities including recreation, transportation, religious offerings, exercise, eating, spawning, and fingerling care. They were believed to be highly traditional areas, hearkening back to their past presence in aboveground tidal pools and were occasionally covered by glass domes.[14] Kuo-toan nobility commonly possessed private royal spawning pits, where only they, their concubines, and kuo-toa above them could enter. There also existed noble fingerling pools, in which pampered young were brought their food.[14]

All Blibdoolpoolp-worshiping communities contained shrines, with larger communities holding major temples that served as hubs for smaller, primitive settlement clusters radiating out from them. Most kuo-toa lived in small tribes far from their ancestral homes, and would make great pilgrimages to reach the temples. The shrines were often in damp caverns surrounded by great bodies of water and welcomed all kuo-toa as well as other races, serving as forums for inter-group trading, council meetings, neutral zones, and Sea Mother worship. Although communities were usually not cooperative they would band together to defend such spots from destruction. Within the Underdark lay a sacred shrine known as the Holy Mother's Cauldron that every kuo-toa aimed to visit at least once in their lifetime. Other large ziggurats were normally constructed within shallow pools encircled by stones that served the dual purpose of staircases and amphitheaters from which the adults could watch and conduct unholy rituals.[14]

Kuo-toan architecture was one of the few areas not heavily monitored by the ruling clergy. It retained marine elements, with blue and green gems as well as shells embedded in objects being primary focuses and artisans working endlessly to imitate alien thought patterns into their shell-like patterns. It was rumored that those who looked at kuo-toan architecture for too long and hard would succumb to madness. Home decorations also included beds of seaweed and silken cloths. There were few freestanding buildings, as the central caverns served as market, communal area, and places of worship, with individual residences simply being carved into preexisting walls. Apartment systems existed for pilgrims to take refuge in after long journeys. Sea mother statues were a common sight, often placed on top of temples built by other races.[14] Throughout the shrines were various icons, carvings, and other artistic works made to venerate the Sea Mother.[10]

Religion

Kuo-toa archpriest-5e

An archpriest of Blibdoolpoolp.

Kuo-toa societies were almost all based around the worship of Blibdoolpoolp.[12] While earlier reports describe her as an ancient eldritch deity, more recent ones believe her to be a figment of the gogglers' imagination given divine form. Either way, the diligence of Blibdoolpoolp's whips made her the dominant deity among all other kuo-toa and the focus of the kuo-toas' lives,[12] even creating her own chosen out of gifted whips and monitors, known as kuo-toa leviathans.[13]

Her priests conducted constant sacrifices in her name in ceremonial drowning pools, usually choosing of captives and slaves, although kuo-toa perceived to be mad or defiant could also be sacrificed. The duties of the archpriests involved communication with outsiders, judging criminals, conducted rituals during breeding seasons, and the growth/culling of fingerlings.[18]

Demogorgon shrine

A kuo-toan shrine to Demogorgon.

The ruling archpriests of a kuo-toa community decided which gods the lower kuo-toa had to exclusively worship, many of which being imagined by the specific priest. Some kuo-toa tribes did worship more conventionally divine beings such as the brutal Demogorgon, trying to appeal to him so he would aid them in the restoration of their empire.[18] Other worshiped entities included the slimy and eldritch Ghaunadaur, tyrannical Bane, the water deity Istishia, and the mistress of darkness Shar. Kuo-toa might also worship krakens, aboleths, morkoth, and other eldritch horrors, with their madness having blinded them to their manipulation by said entities.[1] Sometimes they worshiped these beings under different names; they might call Demogorgon "Leemooggoogoon",[19] or refer to Bhaal as "BOOOAL".[20]

Relations

Kuo-toa were antagonistic to almost every other subterranean race and all surface-dwellers. They had no qualms about kidnapping others and sacrificing them to their gods or using them as slave labor, with one-quarter of their population comprising slaves. They had a special enmity with the drow, who had exterminated them on sight at one point in their history.[1] Despite hating and fearing the drow, the dark elves were among the kuo-toa's most common trading partners, and they would even cooperate to raid deep gnome settlements and capture them for sacrifice. This partnership was strictly business and the two would still hold minor skirmishes and would capture each other's people.[12]

Kuo-toa recognized the need for trade and would conduct it with practically any race, the exception being the mind flayers and their allies, who were invariably attacked without warning.[14] This was most likely due to the mental oppression inflicted upon the kuo-toa by the mind flayers that crippled the remains of their once mighty empire.[1] Among the few races kuo-toans freely associated with were ixzan, whose respective deities had good relations. Within the kuo-toan cities, ixzans lived separately from the men-fish.[21]

In centuries past, before the abandonment of wizardly pursuits to the power of religious institutions, kuo-toan clerics and arcane masters worked together to create titanic siege crabs to lay waste to their enemies.[22] Other mounts utilized by the kuo-toa included a rare species of giant sea slug known as seryulin[23] and even willing morkoth.[24]

Ecology

Similar to how normal fish spawned, females would lay eggs in the communal pools that were later fertilized by the males. Young kuo-toa, known as fingerlings, resembled a cross between tadpoles and fish. They were a foot tall and entirely aquatic, living in the pools for a year before they grew to about three feet tall and became fully amphibious. These older fingerlings were raised in separate pens based on various factors until reaching five years old and becoming full-grown adults.[10]

When kuo-toa reached semi-maturity, culling rituals would take place in order to reduce the large number of them that were spawned. Amongst these rituals was an underwater maze filled with ixzan that would weed out weak, slow, and gentle fingerlings. Fingerlings were generally not treated as individuals until they'd survived to adulthood. Kuo-toa lived to be approximately sixty years old. When Blibdoolpoolp wished it, a single kuo-toan egg would give rise to an exalted kuo-toa, mentally and physically powerful gogglers who would quickly ascend the hierarchy as whips.[10]

Kuo-toa were capable of interbreeding with humans to produce offspring physically similar enough to infiltrate human society.[24]

History

Loopadoop

Blibdoolpoolp's form manifesting from a worshiper.

Kuo-toan history was difficult to compile as the race had existed long before human recordings, although lore suggests that they were distant relatives of the locathahs. While some legends held that they evolved amphibious traits and established an empire on the surface before being driven back by surface dwellers, others thought that land-dwelling, but sea-modified races like the sea elves drove them to near extinction and toppled their underwater empire It was likely that both were true, with man-kind's growing power and numerous surface world allies wiping out the initial invasion and those that sought refuge in the seas being killed by the various monsters that swam within it.[14]

In recorded history, by the end of the Second Serôs War beneath the Inner Sea in −8282 DR, the Kuo-Toan Consortiums had been wiped out. On the Plains of Duna, their cavern cities all collapsed and the kuo-toa there were slaughtered. This genocide left them still practically extinct in the Inner Sea until the 14th century DR.[25]

Either way, the kuo-toa were forced to reside in Underdark caverns and continue their empire within its murky depths. The kuo-toan version of this tale had the gogglers leave their ancestral domains. During this migration, the gogglers encountered mentally domineering races like the illithids, who enslaved and mentally mangled the minds of the kuo-toa race, driving most of them mad. With the race rendered useless as servants for their lack of sanity, the illithids abandoned them, and the kuo-toa would kill them on sight.[4]

Other reasons for the widespread madness of the kuo-toa included mental domination by other eldritch monsters, genetic degradation due to inbreeding, the dark rituals made to their mad gods, the mental strain caused by constant suspicion and brutality, and the spread of insanity like a disease in their communities. A similar racial hatred existed between the gogglers and the drow, although mitigated by the drow's possession of useful trade goods. It was theorized by many that one of the primary reasons that neither of the three races had attempted a large-scale invasion of the unsuspecting surface was that they were locked in constant battle against one another.[4]

Their empires entered a state of decline and only a few of their once great cities remained with other kuo-toa forced into hiding in small underground oases.[14] Some of their cities were Sloopdilmonpolp, the City of Pools;[26][27] Looblishar, the City of Welcome Darkness;[28] and the magocratic Arcanum of Olleth.[24]

Notable Kuo-toa

  • Nogah, a one-time senior whip and a cleric of Blibdoolpoolp. She found the ancient aberrant artifact Dreamheart and attempted to start her own cult. Later she lost Dreamheart to a Kraken - Gethshemeth and was killed by aberrant kuo-toa enslaved by the magical orb.[29]
  • Curampah, Nogah's second whip who aided her in their quest to discover the Dreamheart.[30]
  • Shuushar the Awakened, a peaceful kuo-toa hermit. He had adopted a pacifistic philosophy and refused to fight even to defend himself.

Appendix

Appearances

Adventures
City of the Spider QueenShadowdale: The Scouring of the LandOut of the AbyssWaterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage
Novels
Plague of SpellsThe Sentinels
Referenced only
Homeland
Gamebooks
Escape the Underdark
Video Games
Eye of the BeholderBaldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn
Board Games
Dungeons & Dragons Dice Masters: Trouble in Waterdeep
Organized Play & Licensed Adventures
The Occupation of Szith Morcane

Gallery

Further Reading

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 Mike Mearls, Jeremy Crawford, Christopher Perkins (2014-09-30). Monster Manual 5th edition. Edited by Scott Fitzgerald Gray. (Wizards of the Coast), pp. 198–200. ISBN 978-0786965614.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Mike Mearls, Stephen Schubert, James Wyatt (June 2008). Monster Manual 4th edition. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 172. ISBN 978-0-7869-4852-9.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Skip Williams, Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook (July 2003). Monster Manual v.3.5. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 163. ISBN 0-7869-2893-X.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 David "Zeb" Cook, et al. (1989). Monstrous Compendium Volume Two. (TSR, Inc), p. 74. ISBN 0-8803-8753-X.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Don Turnbull (1981). Fiend Folio. (TSR Hobbies), p. 57. ISBN 0-9356-9621-0.
  6. Skip Williams, Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook (July 2003). Monster Manual v.3.5. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 165. ISBN 0-7869-2893-X.
  7. Frank Mentzer (January 1985). “Ay pronunseeAYshun gyd”. In Kim Mohan ed. Dragon #93 (TSR, Inc.), p. 28.
  8. Gary Gygax (August 1978). Shrine of the Kuo-Toa. (TSR, Inc.), p. 13. ISBN 0-935696-06-7.
  9. Skip Williams, Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook (July 2003). Monster Manual v.3.5. (Wizards of the Coast), pp. 163–164. ISBN 0-7869-2893-X.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 10.7 10.8 10.9  (July 2007). Monster Manual V. (Wizards of the Coast), pp. 94–99. ISBN 0-7869-4115-4.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Mike Mearls, Jeremy Crawford, Christopher Perkins (2014-09-30). Monster Manual 5th edition. Edited by Scott Fitzgerald Gray. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 199. ISBN 978-0786965614.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 Skip Williams, Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook (July 2003). Monster Manual v.3.5. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 164. ISBN 0-7869-2893-X.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Bruce R. Cordell, Gwendolyn F.M. Kestrel, Jeff Quick (October 2003). Underdark. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 92. ISBN 0-7869-3053-5.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 14.5 14.6 14.7 14.8 14.9 Eric L. Boyd (November 1999). Drizzt Do'Urden's Guide to the Underdark. Edited by Jeff Quick. (TSR, Inc.), pp. 25–27. ISBN 0-7869-1509-9.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 Mike Mearls, Greg Bilsland, Robert J. Schwalb (June 2010). Monster Manual 3 4th edition. Edited by Greg Bilsland, et al. (Wizards of the Coast), pp. 124–125. ISBN 978-0-7869-5490-2.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Bruce R. Cordell (December 2008). Plague of Spells (Mass Market Paperback). (Wizards of the Coast), p. 18. ISBN 978-0-7869-4965-6.
  17. Eric L. Boyd (November 1999). Drizzt Do'Urden's Guide to the Underdark. Edited by Jeff Quick. (TSR, Inc.), pp. 118–119. ISBN 0-7869-1509-9.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Rob Heinsoo, Stephen Schubert (May 19, 2009). Monster Manual 2 4th edition. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 42. ISBN 0786995101.
  19. Christopher Perkins, Adam Lee, Richard Whitters (September 1, 2015). Out of the Abyss. Edited by Jeremy Crawford. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 52. ISBN 978-0-7869-6581-6.
  20. Larian Studios (October 2020). Designed by Swen Vincke, et al. Baldur's Gate III. Larian Studios.
  21. Jon Pickens ed. (November 1996). Monstrous Compendium Annual Volume Three. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 65. ISBN 0786904496.
  22. Andrew Finch, Gwendolyn Kestrel, Chris Perkins (August 2004). Monster Manual III. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 156. ISBN 0-7869-3430-1.
  23. Andrew Finch, Gwendolyn Kestrel, Chris Perkins (August 2004). Monster Manual III. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 149. ISBN 0-7869-3430-1.
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 Bruce R. Cordell, Ed Greenwood, Chris Sims (August 2008). Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide. Edited by Jennifer Clarke Wilkes, et al. (Wizards of the Coast), pp. 174–175. ISBN 978-0-7869-4924-3.
  25. Brian R. James, Ed Greenwood (September 2007). The Grand History of the Realms. Edited by Kim Mohan, Penny Williams. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 16. ISBN 978-0-7869-4731-7.
  26. Eric L. Boyd (November 1999). Drizzt Do'Urden's Guide to the Underdark. Edited by Jeff Quick. (TSR, Inc.), p. 97. ISBN 0-7869-1509-9.
  27. Bruce R. Cordell, Gwendolyn F.M. Kestrel, Jeff Quick (October 2003). Underdark. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 174. ISBN 0-7869-3053-5.
  28. Bruce R. Cordell, Gwendolyn F.M. Kestrel, Jeff Quick (October 2003). Underdark. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 159. ISBN 0-7869-3053-5.
  29. Bruce R. Cordell (December 2008). Plague of Spells (Mass Market Paperback). (Wizards of the Coast), p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7869-4965-6.
  30. Bruce R. Cordell (December 2008). Plague of Spells (Mass Market Paperback). (Wizards of the Coast), p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7869-4965-6.

Monstrous humanoids