Difference between revisions of "Subterranean (range)"
Tao alexis (talk | contribs) |
Tao alexis (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 120: | Line 120: | ||
* [[Huge Frog|Frog (huge)]] | * [[Huge Frog|Frog (huge)]] | ||
* [[Frogling]] | * [[Frogling]] | ||
− | * [[Fungus (violet)]] | + | * [[Violet Fungus|Fungus (violet)]] |
* [[Gargoyle]] | * [[Gargoyle]] | ||
* [[Gelatinous Cube]] | * [[Gelatinous Cube]] |
Revision as of 23:03, 4 September 2020
Subterranean environments include underground lairs, cave labyrinths and dungeons, where the setting is below the land's surface in a dark and dangerous place. Some of these places are merely a burrow carved into the earth, which can be explored in a few game minutes and the creatures within met almost at once. Another form is a humanoid garrison that has been built below the surface to allow raids upon the local area through providing a refuge that is difficult to find. These can develop into underground villages for races that are comfortable dwelling below ground, where crops and animals bred to the subterranean environment can be raised to provide food.
Still other subterranean places are sprawling, multi-layered palaces, protecting ancient cult, humanoids that dwell very deep in the ground or where fiercely malevolent creatures make plans to wreak destruction upon the surface world. Another form consists of secret rooms and chambers beneath vast citadels and fortresses, where even the owners of such places remain certain of what spaces exist "down there," built by some mad ancestor generations ago.
Common Features
Below is a list of elements and features that are common to subterranean areas.
- Alarm
- Altar
- Armoury
- Barracks
- Bench
- Cave-in
- Chamber
- Chasm
- Chimney
- Chute
- Cistern
- Concealed Door
- Continual Light
- Crypt
- Dead End
- Ditch
- Drafts & Winds
- Dungeon Door
- Dungeon Level
- False Magic
- Fire Trap
- Flagstone
- Flooding
- Floor Plan
- Fountain
- Fracture
- Furnishings
- Gaol
- Gas
- Gate
- Glyphs & Runes
- Gong Pit
- Guardroom
- Guards & Wards
- Hall
- Hallucinatory Forest
- Held Portal
- Hoist
- Hot Spring
- Ice Cave
- Illusion
- Kennel
- Kitchen
- Laboratory
- Lake
- Magic Mouth
- Maze
- Monster
- Natural Bridge
- Observatory
- Passage
- Pit
- Pool
- Portcullis
- River
- Room
- Rope Bridge
- Rubble & Trash
- Secret Compartment
- Secret Door
- Shrine
- Sink Hole
- Smithy
- Sounds & Noises
- Spiral Stair
- Spring
- Stairway (steep)
- Stalactites & Stalagmites
- Statue
- Stores
- Stream
- Submerged Cave
- Sump
- Throne Room
- Traps & Tricks
- Treasure
- Vegetation
- Vent
- Wall of Force
- Wall of Iron
- Wall of Thorns
- Wandering Monster
- Waterfall
- Well
- Wizard-locked Portal
- Workshop
Dungeon Creatures
The following monsters are common to subterranean areas.
- Badger
- Balrog
- Bear (cave)
- Beetle (fire)
- Beetle (giant water)
- Beholder
- Bugbear
- Carrion Crawler
- Centipede (giant)
- Cockatrice
- Crocodile
- Devil (horned)
- Devil (ice)
- Doppelganger
- Dragonis Apokrousi (bronze dragon)
- Dragonis Fotia (red dragon)
- Dragonis Oxychalkos (copper dragon)
- Firenewt
- Frog (huge)
- Frogling
- Fungus (violet)
- Gargoyle
- Gelatinous Cube
- Ghast
- Ghost
- Ghoul
- Giant (fire)
- Giant (hill)
- Giant (stone)
- Glabrezu
- Goblin
- Golem (clay)
- Golem (flesh)
- Golem (iron)
- Golem (stone)
- Hezrou
- Homonculous
- Hydra
- Kobald
- Larva
- Lemure
- Lizard (fire)
- Lizard (subterranean)
- Manes
- Marilith
- Nalfeshnee
- Ooze (grey)
- Pit Fiend
- Pudding (black)
- Slime (green)
- Wyvern Watch (spell)
See List of Ranges