Tarrasque (Dungeons & Dragons)
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Dungeons & Dragons creature | |
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Tarrasque | |
Alignment | |
Type | Magical beast |
Source books | |
First appearance | |
Mythological origins | Tarasque |
Image | Wizards.com image |
Stats | OGL stats |
In the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, the tarrasque is a magical beast. Tarrasques are gigantic, terrible, monstrous engines of destruction which exist only to eat, kill and destroy. Only one tarrasque is said to exist in each gameworld.
Tarrasques have low intelligence and cannot speak. They are neutrally aligned, despite their violent and savage nature.
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[edit] Physical description
They are very large, 50 feet tall and 70 feet long, and have a tyrannosaurus rex-like form (despite being much more muscular, broad, with a different shaped head, and with much larger and more useful front arms). It is brown in color, with scabs and warts and bits of encrusted dung all over it which are grey in color. Protecting its back and tail is a large, thick, glossy shell of caramel color. It has spikes coming from its chin, sides of the mouth, the underside of its neck, the elbows of its front arms, and its shell. It also has two horns coming forwards from the top of its head. The tarrasque's skin is very hard and thick, and provides excellent armor. The second edition of the game included rules for extracting treasure from the creature's carcass.
Variant Tarrasques[1]
- Tarrasque of Legend (d20 Modern Game).
- Five-Headed Pyrotarrasque (D&D Game)
- Spellwarped Woodling Tarrasque (D&D Game)
[edit] Society
As has already been implied and can be easily guessed, the Tarrasque is a most feared creature. Mercifully, however, it spends most of its time sleeping deep in an underground lair in dormancy. Its sleeping periods range between 2 - 4 months to 1 - 16 years. After these periods, however, the Tarrasque awakes. Erupting from its underground lair, the behemoth starts on a rampage, terrorizing the nearby area, smashing every structure, devouring both plant and meat alike, killing anyone who opposes it, and basically turning the land into a barren wasteland. Only until the Tarrasque has been killed (which is very hard to do and a seldom occurrence) or until it returns to its lair to sleep again is the land safe again. Very fortunately, the older a Tarrasque gets, the longer its periods of sleep seem to last, sometimes eventually lasting for thousands of years. Never, however, do Tarrasques get weaker or lose their lust for destruction. Even in Campaign settings where multiple Tarrasques exist, such as Faerûn (in most settings the Tarrasque is an individual beast), Tarrasques are fully solitary; one of them is more than enough to extract the destruction the beasts are intended for.(there only exist 1 of this creature)
[edit] Combat
The tarrasque is a highly destructive creature. It needs to eat constantly and savors its desire to destroy in order to survive. As a result, it has many combat methods. It can attack with its tail, its claws, its spikes and horns, by stomping, by grabbing and by slamming its massive, 130 ton body into opponents. It does not have a breath weapon, but it can swallow victims whole. It can inspire terror in people by charging or rushing. Its armor, in addition to giving excellent melee protection, can also deflect all manner of offensive spells. To top it all off, the tarrasque has regeneration abilities. Despite all this, it is possible to defeat the tarrasque, albeit exceedingly difficult; the only method of actually killing it is to reduce it to -30 hit points, then use a Wish or Miracle spell to keep it dead.
[edit] Origin
Various explanations of the tarrasque's origins exist: some claim it is a curse from the gods, while others say it was created by evil wizards. Neither TSR nor Wizards of the Coast has ever provided a definitive answer.
[edit] Trivia
The tarrasque from the Dungeons & Dragons universe somewhat bears a resemblance to the rancor from the Star Wars universe. A few people have even attempted to create a custom Tarrasque D&D miniature (an official one does not currently exist) by remodeling the rancor's action figure.
A tarrasque miniature can be made by remodeling Godzilla (from the 1998 movie)with a Gamera model
The tarrasque has possibly been referenced by Blizzard Entertainment in their hit real-time strategy title StarCraft: the "hero" version of a very large, very powerful Zerg unit (the Ultralisk) is named "Torrasque" [sic]. Furthermore, in the fan-made Defence of the Ancients: Allstars custom map for Blizzard's WarCraft III, a strength-imbuing artifact is available called the "Heart of Tarrasque".
[edit] References
- Cagle, Eric. "Worshipers of the Forbidden." Dragon #296 (Paizo Publishing, 2002).
- Ward, Kyla. "The Petit Tarrasque and Other Monsters." Dragon #329 (Paizo Publishing, 2005).
- Williams, Skip, Jonathan Tweet, and Monte Cook. Monster Manual (Wizards of the Coast, 2000).
- The Tarrasque Creature Incarnations By Robert Wiese (Wizards of the Coast, D&DFight Club column 11/09/2005).[1]
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