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PFS StandardAngheuvore

Angheuvores, or mortic elves, have an insatiable hunger for raw humanoid flesh— though they're reluctant to feed on other elves. Most stalk the streets of human nations, such as Druma, Razmiran, and the River Kingdoms. Impatient and impulsive, they're opportunistic hunters, preying on the wounded and isolated.

Recall Knowledge - Humanoid (Society): DC 21
Unspecific Lore: DC 19
Specific Lore: DC 16

Elite | Normal | Weak
Proficiency without Level

Changes from being Elite are marked in red below.
NOTE: The +2 damage bonus to non-strike offensive abilities (+4 if the ability is limited, such as spells) is NOT factored in.

Elite Angheuvore Flesh-GnawerCreature 3

Legacy Content

Rare NE Medium Elf Humanoid Mortic 
Source Bestiary 3 pg. 174
Perception +9; darkvision, carrion scent (imprecise) 30 feet
Languages Common, Elven, Necril
Skills Acrobatics +10, Athletics +9, Intimidation +7, Medicine +7, Stealth +10, Survival +7
Str +3, Dex +4, Con +3, Int +2, Wis +1, Cha +1
Items composite shortbow (20 arrows), elven curve blade
AC 20; Fort +11, Ref +12, Will +7
HP 45 (negative healing)
Consecration Vulnerability An angheuvore in a place of worship dedicated to a non-evil deity or on sacred ground, such as an area blessed by sanctified ground, is slowed 1.
Speed 30 feet
Melee [one-action] jaws +12 [+7/+2] (finesse), Damage 1d6+2+5 piercing plus paralysisMelee [one-action] elven curve blade +12 [+7/+2] (finesse, forceful), Damage 1d8+2+5 slashingRanged [one-action] composite shortbow +12 [+7/+2] (deadly d10, propulsive, range increment 60 feet), Damage 1d6+2+3 piercingDeath Gasp [one-action] (divine, necromancy) The angheuvore draws in a deep breath and holds it, temporarily suspending their biological processes and becoming undead. The angheuvore gains the undead trait and becomes immune to bleed, death effects, disease, paralyzed, poison, and sleep. Any such effects the angheuvore is currently suffering from are suspended, but take effect again once they take a breath.
Death Gasp lasts as long as the angheuvore holds their breath (up to 8 rounds).
Invigorating Feast [one-action] (manipulate) Requirements The angheuvore is adjacent to a paralyzed, restrained, or unconscious creature, or a deceased creature that died in the last hour; Effect The angheuvore feasts upon the creature, dealing their jaws Strike damage (basic Fortitude save); a corpse automatically critically fails with no save. If the target takes damage, the angheuvore gains 5 temporary Hit Points and a +10-foot circumstance bonus to their Speeds for 1 minute.Paralysis (divine, incapacitation, necromancy) Any living creature hit by an angheuvore's jaws Strike must succeed at a DC 17 Fortitude save or become paralyzed. It can attempt a new save to end the condition at the end of each of its turns, and the DC cumulatively decreases by 1 on each save.

Sidebar - Additional Lore Scholarly Pursuits

Angheuvores retain the elven love of education, although the topics that interest them are decidedly macabre. Many study anatomy, haruspicy, medicine, pain, putrefaction, or trauma, preferring hands-on experiments and research whenever possible.

All Monsters in "Mortic"

NameLevel
Angheuvore2
Etioling10
Gurgist6
Jitterbone4
Lifeleecher8
Relictner12
Shadern1

Mortic

Source Bestiary 3 pg. 174
Mortics are humanoids overwhelmed by negative energy who still cling to life, surviving as twisted amalgams of living and undead. Though they feel unnatural cravings and resemble corpses, mortics live, breathe, eat, sleep, and procreate. However, a mortic can suspend their living functions simply by holding their breath, becoming more like a true undead.

Mortics are largely new to Golarion, with most created in droves when the Whispering Tyrant destroyed entire cities with his Radiant Fire, a magical explosion fueled by the collision of negative and positive energy. From among the corpses of these tragedies rose mortics, living survivors mistaken for corpses and left behind as a result. They found themselves in a twilight state—neither fully alive or undead. The necrotic pollutants of the Gravelands and the Isle of Terror continue to create mortics, seeping into neighboring lands through the air, earth, and water to infect the populace. Though most of the living in these lands fear becoming transformed, some believe becoming a mortic is their best chance of survival in the face of the encroaching hordes of the dead.

A mortic's powers differ by ancestry, though they do have a few commonalities. Reading or hearing scripture induces headaches, and they experience great discomfort when treading upon sacred ground. For those who were religious in life, these new changes can be devastating.

Sidebar - Additional Lore Fun and Games

Many mortics favor games to pass the time. Jitterbones compete in community “bone churns” to see who can contort themselves into the most awkward shapes or fit through the smallest spaces. Shadern enjoy “burn-scream,” a deadly game pitting contenders against one another to see who makes the funniest sounds while being immolated. Relictners coax passersby into visiting their homes before they hunt their victims through a gauntlet of traps.

Sidebar - Locations Home Sweet Home

Most gurgists are survivors from Roslar's Coffer or Vigil who fled together to Nirmathas or Ustalav, where they've since built their own insular communities. Some fled to Absalom but struggle to fit in; most camp in the Cairnlands or form gangs in the city's slums. Shaderns are typically found in Belkzen, Oprak, and Isger, living among goblin tribes. Jitterbones are common in the River Kingdoms and Ustalav, living in rural, all-jitterbone communities. Relictners are widely spread, for they live individually and build their lairs near trade routes, fabled ruins, and other storied locales. They avoid dwarves and refuse to enter the Five Kings Mountains.

Most mortics were created inadvertently by the rise of the Whispering Tyrant—either by the Radiant Fire or through the corruption spreading from the Gravelands and Isle of Terror.

Sidebar - Related Creatures Other Mortics

The mortics presented here are four of the most prevalent variations. Others—such as relictner dwarves, shadern goblins, and jitterbone halflings—are also common.