Treant
Climate/Terrain:
| Any forest
|
|
Frequency:
| Rare
|
Organization:
| Grove
|
Activity Cycle:
| Any
|
Diet:
| Photosynthesis
|
Intelligence:
| Very (11-12)
|
Treasure:
| Q (x5), X
|
Alignment:
| Chaotic good
|
No. Appearing:
| 1-20
|
Armor Class:
| 0
|
Movement:
| 12
|
Hit Dice:
| 7-12
|
THAC0:
| 13 (7-8 HD),
|
| 11 (9-10 HD),
|
| 9 (11-12 HD)
|
No. of Attacks:
| 2
|
Damage/Attack:
| Variable
|
Special Attacks:
| See below
|
Special Defenses:
| Never surprised
|
Magic Resistance:
| Nil
|
Size:
| H (13'-18')
|
Morale:
| Champion (15-16)
|
XP Value:
|
|
7 HD
| 2,000 (+1000 per Hit Die)
|
Treants are strangely related to both humans and trees, combining features of
both species. Peaceful by nature, treants can cause great damage when roused to
anger. They hate evil things and the unrestrained use of fire.
Treants are almost indistinguishable from trees. Their skin is a thick,
textured, brown bark. Their arms are gnarled like branches and their legs fit
together when standing like the trunk of a tree. Above the eyes and along the head are
dozens of smaller branches from which hang great leaves. In winter the leaves
of a treant change color but rarely fall out. Treants are very intelligent and
often speak a number of languages including their own, elf, dwarf, common, and
a smattering of just about all other humanoid tongues (at least enough to say
"Get out of my trees!").
Combat: The combat ability of treants varies with their size. Young treants (13 or 14
feet) have 7 or 8 Hit Dice and inflict 2-16 points of damage per attack.
Middle-aged treants (15 or 16 feet) have 9 or 10 Hit Dice, respectively, and inflict
3-18 points of damage per attack. Elder treants (17 or 18 feet) have 11 or 12
Hit Dice and inflict 4-24 points of damage per attack.
Due to their tough, barklike skin, treants have a superior Armor Class rating
against almost all weapons. Their only weakness is fire. Any fire-based attack
against a treant is at +4 to hit and +1 damage. In addition, treants save
against all fire-based attacks at -4. This weakness to fire also applies to animated
trees controlled by a treant.
Treants have the ability to animate normal trees. One treant can animate up to
two trees. It takes one round for a normal tree to uproot itself. Thereafter
the animated tree can move at a rate of 3 per turn and fights as a full-grown
treant (12 Hit Dice, two attacks, 4-24 points of damage per attack). A treant
must be within 60 yards of the tree it is attempting to animate. Animated trees
lose their ability to move if the treant who animated them is incapacitated or
moves more than 60 yards away.
Treants (regardless of size) and treant-controlled trees can inflict
structural damage when attacking a building or fortification.
Habitat/Society: Treants live in small communities, usually amidst old hardwood forests (oak,
maple, mahogany, etc.). In the forest treants rarely reveal themselves,
preferring not to interact with the more transient lifeforms (anything with a lifespan
of 500 years or less). Humans and demihumans have only a slight chance of
spotting a treant who is trying to blend in with the trees. Rangers have a fair
chance of spotting a treant (10% per level).
Treants are intolerant of evil, particularly when fire and the wanton
destruction of trees is involved. They hate orcs and goblins with a passion and tend to
be suspicious of anyone carrying an ax.
Treants have no use for treasure, and usually place all such items somewhere
out of sight, such as under a great rock. Occasionally a treant can be convinced
to give up his treasure but only when some great good will be accomplished by
this generosity.
Ecology: Treants, like all trees, gain sustenance via photosynthesis. Treants often
sleep for long periods of time (anywhere from a few days to several years) during
which short roots grow into the ground beneath them gathering water and
minerals from the soil. Reproduction is via off-shoot stalks which the female treants
then protect and care for until the stalks are grown.
The lifespan of a treant is not known, but is several thousand years at least.
As they grow older, treants become slower and less agile, sleeping for longer
periods and talking less of things that are and more of things that were.
Eventually an old treant will not wake up, taking permanent root in the spot where
he sleeps and living out the rest of his life as a normal tree.
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