Dungeons & Dragons is a sport the place we accumulate numerous concepts from folklore and our favourite works of style fiction, then smash them collectively like dodgem automobiles. We put characters based mostly on Conan, Aragorn, Van Helsing, and Physician Unusual alongside one another to battle horror film zombies and fairytale ogres, like grasping children taking part in with all our greatest toys without delay.
Typically the origins of the weird folks you may meet in D&D are apparent. “They’re like hobbits, however not a lot like hobbits that we get sued,” as an illustration. That is not all the time the case, although, particularly within the case of the creatures Baldur’s Gate 3 places on the middle of its plot, like thoughts flayers and githyanki. Who comes up with all these things? Properly, sit down, cease twiddling with the cube, and I am going to let you know.
Beholder
The concept of a floating bundle of eyeballs, every of which is able to casting a distinct spell, got here from Terry Kuntz. He was a young person on the time, which maybe explains it. After taking part in in one of many first video games run by D&D’s co-creator Gary Gygax, Kuntz was impressed to go away and write a brief story about an eyeball monster who lived on a mountain, which he shared with each Gygax and his sport designer brother, Rob. That story’s sadly been misplaced in response to Rob, however the beholder stays a D&D mainstay to this present day.
Bulette
The burrowing landshark was one among a number of D&D monsters based mostly on a set of prehistoric animal toys that had been extensively accessible within the Nineteen Seventies and conveniently sized to be used as tabletop miniatures. As artist Tony DiTerlizzi has documented, Gygax based mostly beasts just like the rust monster and carrion crawler on these toys, whereas Dragon Journal editor Tim Kask turned one other one into the bulette—with further inspiration from a Saturday Evening Dwell sketch.
As for why such weird-looking monsters had been bundled with a set of semi-authentic dinosaurs, they’d initially been manufactured in Hong Kong as knock-offs of kaiju from the Japanese TV present Ultraman. The creature that grew to become the bulette was most likely based mostly on Ultraman foe Telesdon, who is definitely extra of an earthworm that walks than a shark that swims via the filth.
Cambion
A number of the devils in Baldur’s Gate 3 aren’t really full devils. Mizora, in addition to Commander Zhalk and the infernal troopers encountered on the nautiloid, are cambions—half-humans who come to D&D through demonology texts just like the Dictionnaire Infernal. Normally described because the product of unions between mortals and succubi or incubi, well-known cambions embody Caliban from The Tempest, the wizard Merlin in some variations of Arthurian fantasy, and Hellboy.
Displacer Beast
Gygax admitted the concept for this tentacle panther got here immediately from a science-fiction e-book by A. E. Van Vogt, saying, “the Displacer beasts I ripped off from the novel, Voyage of the Spaceship Beagle”. Van Vogt initially created the creature, which was known as the Coeurl, for a brief story the place it is described as trying, “like a distorted etching of a black tiger resting on a black rock in a shadow world.”
Drow
Within the folklore of the Orkney and Shetland Islands, the phrase drow or trow (pronounced to rhyme with develop and cognate with the phrase troll) refers to a form of fairy. Although generally mentioned to stay below hills, they are not very similar to D&D’s drow (pronounced to rhyme with cow). These owe extra to Norse mythology’s underground-dwelling darkish elves, the Dökkálfar and Svartálfar talked about within the Icelandic sagas of the Prose Edda. That mentioned, D&D’s drow are simply as a lot an authentic creation—their connection to a dominatrix spider queen who generally curses them to turn into half-arachnid driders is all authentic to the roleplaying sport.
Duergar
D&D’s duergar had been created by decreasing a bucket deep into the identical mythic effectively that impressed Center-earth’s dwarfs, taking parts that Tolkien unnoticed—like their capacity to show invisible, as they do within the German saga of The Nibelungenlied because of a magic cloak. The title duergar comes from Previous Norse, the place dwarves had been known as dvergr, which grew to become duergar in Danish. When the Danish conquered Northumberland they introduced their tales of duergar with them, inspiring the tales of the Simonside Dwarfs, nasty folks who lived in hills and led vacationers astray.
Elemental
The sixteenth century alchemist Paracelsus was chargeable for the concept that the 4 classical parts every corresponded to an elemental being, which he known as salamanders (hearth), sylphs (air), undines (water), and gnomes (earth). Clearly D&D’s gnomes haven’t got a lot to do with earth elementals, owing extra to a gnome-shaped doorstop that scared Gary Gygax as a boy.
The concept of elementals as vaguely humanoid creatures composed of that ingredient comes as an alternative from Michael Moorcock’s Elric tales, the place between summonings they serve a set of Elemental Lords identical to they do in D&D.
Ghoul
Ghouls hang-out graveyards and eat corpses in Arabic myths, and their cannibalistic D&D incarnation owes a debt to the H. P. Lovecraft quick story Pickman’s Mannequin as effectively. Their capacity to paralyze their prey would not come from both of these sources, nonetheless.
Within the proto-D&D wargame Chainmail, ghouls got the identical stats as wights, which had been an specific carry of the barrow-wight who magically freezes the hobbits in The Lord of the Rings earlier than they’re rescued by Tom Bombadil. Whereas wights misplaced this capacity as a part of D&D’s shift away from blatantly borrowing from The Lord of the Rings after a stern letter from the Tolkien property (a transfer that additionally noticed D&D rename hobbits to halflings, ents to treants, wargs to worgs, and balrogs to “sort VI demons” and later balors), ghouls stored the wight’s paralyzing assault.
The actual fact elves are proof against ghoul paralysis appears to come back from Tolkien as effectively, the place Legolas is the one member of the Fellowship unaffected by the Paths of the Useless as a result of elves, being borderline immortal, aren’t fairly as bothered by ravening spirits from past the grave.
Githyanki
The early problems with Video games Workshop’s White Dwarf journal included a column known as Fiend Manufacturing unit that printed new monsters for D&D, some contributed by readers, a lot of which had been collected and expanded in an official e-book known as the Fiend Folio. The githyanki had been one such race, having been submitted to White Dwarf by a younger Charles Stross, who would later go on to be a science-fiction writer of some be aware.
Stross took the title githyanki from Dying of the Mild, George R. R. Martin’s first novel, although the main points had been both his personal invention or borrowed from one other sci-fi novelist. As he mentioned in an interview, the concept of individuals with psionic powers who had been at struggle with their former slavemasters most likely got here to him from Larry Niven’s World of Ptavvs, including, “I believe whoever got here up with the Illithids had been studying Larry Niven, too.”
White Dwarf’s Fiend Manufacturing unit column was the supply of two different D&D icons that seem in Baldur’s Gate 3, the hook horrors and loss of life knights, the latter of which had been one other Charles Stross contribution.
Gnoll
Fantasy writer Lord Dunsany’s quick story assortment The E-book of Wonders launched the “gnoles”, although just like the githyanki D&D merely took the title and not one of the admittedly sparse particulars. Initially, D&D’s model of gnolls had been described as a cross between gnomes and trolls—an unlikely scenario that did not final lengthy, they usually shortly grew to become the hyena-people we all know and loot at this time.
Illithid
The squid-headed illithid clearly replicate one thing of the Cthulhu mythos, however we all know the supply of them much more particularly: The Burrowers Beneath by Brian Lumley. Particularly its cowl artwork, which incorporates a mass of ropy tentacles bursting out of the bottom. Seeing that image made Gary Gygax assume, in his personal phrases, “Now what kind of nasty bastard is that?” The reply he got here up with was a species of brain-eating aliens that bedevil D&D gamers to this present day.
Lich
Lich is an old school phrase for corpse, and in that sense was a favourite synonym of fantasy writer Clark Ashton Smith, whose tales of necromancy and the undead had been a particular affect on D&D. The specifics of the lich as a wizard who considers loss of life to be non-obligatory come from Gardner F. Fox’s tales of Kothar the Barbarian, as does their capacity to paralyze.
One other supply was most likely chargeable for the concept of liches storing their souls in objects for safekeeping, and that is the Russian legend of Koschei the Deathless. Koschei maintained his immortality by hiding his soul inside an egg, which he hid inside a duck, which he hid inside a hare, which he hid inside a chest, which he hid on a distant island—a form of magical turducken that allowed him to return from the grave so long as it was stored secure.
Mimic
When Gary Gygax was requested to clarify the inspiration for this rubbery shapeshifter, he mentioned, “Plastic Man from the comedian e-book of that title was the mimic.” The shapeshifting superhero, who did spend a good period of time disguising himself as furnishings for fun, led to D&D’s mimic and that, in appropriately altered type, influenced the Baggage in Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels (Pratchett was a D&D participant himself) in addition to the numerous mimic varieties in videogames like Darkish Souls, Terraria, Enter the Gungeon, and Torchlight.
We have beforehand traced this lineage within the murderous historical past of mimics, which incorporates feedback from Ed Greenwood—writer of the influential Ecology of the Mimic, in addition to creator of the Forgotten Realms.
Myconid
These fungal folks come from a 1963 Japanese horror film known as Matango, also called Assault of the Mushroom Individuals or Fungus of Terror, which was loosely based mostly on a William Hope Hodgson quick story. Ishirō Honda’s film, through which a band of ravenous castaways are trapped on an island the place it is forbidden to eat the mushrooms, was doing creepy fungus-people a long time earlier than The Final of Us.
Owlbear
One other beast borrowed from the packet of plastic prehistorics purchased by Gary Gygax, the owlbear started its life as a counterfeit kaiju identical to the bulette. On this case, it appears to have been modeled on Zaragas, although the design maybe took some turns alongside the best way.
Whereas the toy model seems to be prefer it has a beak, you need to actually squint to see a lot of an owl in it, or truthfully a lot of a bear both. And whereas D&D’s early owlbear paintings was fairly clearly copied from the toy, the title gave later artists extra to work with and owlbears advanced to resemble a cross between their ursine and avian namesakes as an alternative. Which is sweet, as a result of it makes their cubs a lot cuter.
Sahuagin
There is a flood of fish-folk in D&D, with mermaids and tritons coming from mythology whereas the kuo-toa borrow from H. P. Lovecraft. The sahuagin—scaly, sharky guys who favor tridents—had been created by Steve Marsh, who mentioned, “An previous Justice League of America animated present and my very own creativeness offered the idea,” in a discussion board Q&A. He was most likely referring to an episode of the Superman/Aquaman Hour of Journey from 1967, through which Aquaman fought the Rampaging Reptile-Males.
As for the title, it got here from Bernardino de Sahagún, a Franciscan missionary known as “the primary anthropologist,” who Marsh had seen referenced on the again of a Mormon pamphlet. The sahuagin had been additionally impressed by the Remaining Fantasy video games, the place they’re known as sahagin, or within the all-caps limited-space of the NES, the SAHAG.
Tiefling
Whereas heroes with horns and different fiendish touches go method again in D&D (take a look at the primary inside illustration from 1981’s Skilled Set for one), tieflings had been written up and given guidelines within the Planescape setting by David ‘Zeb’ Prepare dinner. Wolfgang Baur got here up with the title, based mostly on the German phrase “tief”, which implies deep, suggesting “a creature from the depths.”
They had been supposed to be rather less blatantly fiendish than cambions, and had been extra various of their designs at first, although later editions codified them into the comparatively commonplace mixture of horns, brightly coloured pores and skin, and mistrusted outsider standing they preserve because the band of unfortunate refugees we rescue repeatedly in Baldur’s Gate 3.
Tressym
Apparently the matted hair of domesticated cats can generally resemble wings, or at the least individuals used to assume it did, maybe as a result of they did not have social media accounts full of individuals determined to inform them they had been unsuitable about the whole lot again then. Tales about flying home cats are surprisingly widespread, although in the event that they existed certainly pigeons would have been pushed to close extinction by now.
In Henry David Thoreau’s memoir Walden he writes about one such “winged cat” who lived in a Lincoln farm-house: “within the winter the fur grew thick and flattened out alongside her sides, forming strips ten or twelve inches lengthy by two and a half broad, and below her chin like a muff, the higher facet free, the below matted like felt, and within the spring these appendages dropped off. They gave me a pair of her ‘wings,’ which I hold nonetheless. There is no such thing as a look of a membrane about them.”
Vampire Spawn
D&D co-creator Dave Arneson was a fan of Hammer horror motion pictures, and far of the RPG’s vampire lore comes from Christopher Lee’s portrayal of Dracula, together with the best way that these he unfold his curse to would fall below his thrall. Arneson ran a marketing campaign set in his world of Blackmoor that includes two teams of gamers, one heroes and one villains, and when one of many villains grew to become a vampire referred to as “Depend Fang” it was explicitly the Hammer Dracula he drew from. The hero workforce wanted a counter to this highly effective vampire, and so Arneson got here up with a category based mostly on Van Helsing and the varied vampire-hunting monks and professors who saved the day in Hammer motion pictures, which ultimately noticed print because the cleric.
Whereas the concept of clerics as mace-wielding holy warriors got here from Bishop Odo of Bayeux, the cleric’s capacity to show undead—which initially required a crucifix relatively than a non-specific holy image—was a direct copy of the best way Peter Cushing may repel Christopher Lee and his spawn with something vaguely cross-shaped within the motion pictures.