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Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

From: Gurth gurth@******.nl
Subject: The Yucatan Beasties
Date: Sat, 21 Oct 2000 11:26:09 +0200
According to Brother Justice, at 16:09 on 20 Oct 00, the word on the
street was...

> Well, I'm finally starting up my Aztlan/Yucatan rebellion campaign
> tonight. So if I'm looking to throw a few norm and Awakened critters at
> them, what types of beasties would be common in that area? I know a
> large amount of that area can be dense jungle/wooded, but with the poor
> organization in the Critters book, I haven't found much that
> specifically mentions being common in that area.

A book or web site about the real-world wildlife of the area is probably
the best way to handle this. That way, you know what basic critters to
harrass your players with, as well as find paranormal equivalents. For am
ore immediate solution, following is a list of critters from Paranormal
Animals of North America whose little map indicates they live in or near
the Yucatan -- or at least the northern half of Mexico, since that's about
how far most of the maps go...

Aardwolf
Bandit
Birdman
Black annis
Boobrie
Chimera
Corpselight
Devil rat
Devilfish*
Dour
Dzoo-noo-qua
Embracer
Fideal*
Firedrake
Gabriel hound
Gila demon
Greater armadillo
Greater unicorn
Hoop snake
Incubus
Juggernaut
Lesser thunderbird
Loup-garou
Man-of-the-woods
Mermaid*
New leatherback*
Nomad
Piasma
Saber-tooth cat
Salamander
Sea drake*
Serpent, freshwater
Serpent, saltwater
Shadowhound
Siren
Stormcrow
Tachypus
Talis cat
Troglodyte
Wodewose
Wyvern

* Sea creature

--
Gurth@******.nl - http://www.xs4all.nl/~gurth/index.html
It was a warning shot that missed.
-> NAGEE Editor * ShadowRN GridSec * Triangle Virtuoso <-
-> The Plastic Warriors Page: http://plastic.dumpshock.com <-

GC3.1: GAT/! d-(dpu) s:- !a>? C+@ UL P L+ E? W(++) N o? K- w+ O V? PS+
PE Y PGP- t(+) 5++ X+ R+++>$ tv+(++) b++@ DI? D+ G(++) e h! !r(---) y?
Incubated into the First Church of the Sqooshy Ball, 21-05-1998

Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.