Five Deadly Low-Level Monsters in Dungeons and Dragons 5e

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @TalonSky
    @TalonSky 5 лет назад +2950

    Shadows kill spellcasters, Intellect Devourers kill melee classes, Gelatinous Cubes kill scouts and sneaks.
    For everything else, there's Master Card.

    • @roccaflocca4312
      @roccaflocca4312 5 лет назад +149

      I've been playing a wizard, so I've been pretending my character was scared of Intellect Devourers. But nope... It's actually me that is.

    • @mute5351
      @mute5351 5 лет назад +22

      Took me a while to get the joke

    • @tkevinh15
      @tkevinh15 5 лет назад +32

      Hey who turned off the lights?

    • @devnull8029
      @devnull8029 5 лет назад +22

      For everything else... Just drop a mountain on it

    • @Archimonde259
      @Archimonde259 5 лет назад +63

      The irony is that wizards are the least threatened by Intellect Devourers because they have a high Intelligence and proficiency on INT saving throws

  • @1B1ueyedwo1f
    @1B1ueyedwo1f 5 лет назад +1843

    1 goblin isn't a threat. 47 goblins, however....

    • @HiopX
      @HiopX 4 года назад +135

      Still not a threat to Goblinslayer.

    • @edwardevans5759
      @edwardevans5759 4 года назад +44

      @@HiopX GAWWWBLINS!

    • @0215YK
      @0215YK 4 года назад +41

      Fireball

    • @kaylarchibald9923
      @kaylarchibald9923 4 года назад +12

      Lvl 3 we killed 44 Orcs 6 bugbear 1 war chieftain 1 hill giant 1orge

    • @cortex6065
      @cortex6065 4 года назад +93

      Kayl Archibald hate to break it to you. Your dm did 1. Not play the monsters right 2. Probably fudge a bunch for of rolls

  • @coreypatterson5827
    @coreypatterson5827 4 года назад +595

    You could easily call this video "Five Ways For a DM to Lose Friends".

  • @benedictwebb3322
    @benedictwebb3322 5 лет назад +883

    Shut up, stop it! My DM watches your channel, you're gonna get my character killed!

    • @Konpekikaminari
      @Konpekikaminari 4 года назад +49

      actually, let them keep going
      if you know where your DM takes ideas from, you can prepare accordingly

    • @lystic9392
      @lystic9392 4 года назад +28

      @@Konpekikaminari Yes just have high int high str, carry a flamethrower and hold it out in front of you to test for cubes.

    • @Konpekikaminari
      @Konpekikaminari 4 года назад +25

      @@lystic9392 few are the problems a flamethrower can't solve

    • @RexTheAlbinoGecko
      @RexTheAlbinoGecko 4 года назад +11

      @@Konpekikaminari encouraging metagaming. For shame

    • @SebastienPatriote
      @SebastienPatriote 4 года назад +5

      Fire elemental says hello

  • @fhuber7507
    @fhuber7507 5 лет назад +1687

    I have killed more PCs with rats than with dragons

    • @natashasurvivallady8021
      @natashasurvivallady8021 5 лет назад +87

      And that might be one of the most useful things to remember as a DM

    • @johnjustjohn5866
      @johnjustjohn5866 5 лет назад +246

      A bunch of rats magically fused into the shape of a dragon

    • @fhuber7507
      @fhuber7507 5 лет назад +85

      never forget the friendly rust monster.
      "This strange looking creature approaches like a big happy St Bernard, Wanting to rub against you and gently hug you with its tentacles."
      (Jester from Critical role loves the cute things)
      "4 more little ones show up also acting like friendly puppies..."
      (Jester wants to adopt the little ones)
      Next thing you know... the Ford's armor is rusting and falling off and everyone's metal items are falling apart (including all magic items) Ford calls forth his falchion and the big one touches it... and the falchion dissolves to rust.
      (Because even an artifact can be taken out by these creatures)

    • @diamondflaw
      @diamondflaw 5 лет назад +7

      @@johnjustjohn5866 The Rat King from the show Hilda....

    • @johnjustjohn5866
      @johnjustjohn5866 5 лет назад +17

      @@fhuber7507 No Rust Monster wants to hurt anyone, just give them your metals

  • @bud389
    @bud389 5 лет назад +357

    "Your favorite low-level monsters" - Honestly, just regular animals. At low levels you can sort of inject a feeling of believability into your setting just by including real animals like wolves and boars and bears. Sure, Goblins are fun, but what about happening upon a small scouting pair of goblin corpses, only to find that a pack of wolves ambushed and killed them? Or when trapsing through the jungle and your party is on the look-out for Yaun-Ti and Lizardfolk, blindly walking into a Gorilla's nesting ground. Moments like these inject a healthy dose of verisimilitude into your setting, (unless you're going for a particularly alien setting on purpose) and makes your party realize the dangers and harshness of the wilderness in general than say happening upon a more fantastical creature like an Owlbear or a Griffon.

    • @AndrusPr8
      @AndrusPr8 4 года назад +19

      I hate wolves. For me, wolves are the least imaginative being in the Woods.
      You could fight: deers, carnívoros plants, swarms of wasps, smurfs, a mud elemental, a giant hawk, sentient swamp gas, a duck with a sworded Bill fighting it's territory, the Chupacabra.
      But no, here comes the pack of wolves

    • @valerielusa8000
      @valerielusa8000 4 года назад +11

      @@AndrusPr8 I'm using that sword duck

    • @dokkabaerpg7896
      @dokkabaerpg7896 3 года назад +5

      I like this idea, but I think the more fantastical creatures are more interesting than normal animals. Injecting normal animals every once in a while is fine, but if it’s done too often then it gets boring pretty fast.

    • @alexeyvlasenko6622
      @alexeyvlasenko6622 2 года назад +8

      For me, normal animals constantly attacking humans is unrealistic to the point where it breaks immersion. Animals rarely behave this way, with few exceptions (hungry polar bears, hippopotamus, etc.) If you want to have common wildlife be hostile to adventurers, you should provide a reason why. Perhaps there is a rabies epidemic, or, more fantastically, demonic possession of local wildlife?

    • @Reepicheep-1
      @Reepicheep-1 Год назад

      Party hops a fence. Oh, look, a squad of viscious farm dogs (some can kill packs of wolves in groups), or stampede of cattle. Party goes through forest, attacked by startled moose who does 1d8 plus trample damage to wiz and flees into the underbrush. No fight, just a hit and run.

  • @kylestillwell7031
    @kylestillwell7031 5 лет назад +402

    Something that wasn't mentioned about gelatinous cubes that wasn't mentioned that's really fun to bust out:
    Have a digested adventurer inside the cube, your players will think they are running in to fight a skeleton, and they will end up running smack into a cube

    • @dinohunter6450
      @dinohunter6450 5 лет назад +68

      That's a good trap. I'm gonna steal it.

    • @IAmCasualty
      @IAmCasualty 5 лет назад +31

      when my characters attempted to look into a room they were about to enter they rolled perception (One fumbled he saw the empty blackness inside the room)the other player they saw a floating shield, bones and other bits and bobbles, not moving but sitting in the air, They had opened the door looked in and saw this right past the threshold of the door, the rouge who didn't think much of it (And even though HE knew something was up he didn't quite know what) so he walked right through and wound up inside it on round 1

    • @tomtom7955
      @tomtom7955 5 лет назад +13

      I like putting gelatinous cubes in pit traps or dropping them on players from above

    • @jazzjiggleballs9921
      @jazzjiggleballs9921 5 лет назад +23

      I like putting my cubes in narrow hallways and placing something tantalizing like a chest at the end of said hallway behind the cube. Or better yet have the cube sitting right on top of a magical chest or item lol. The favorite use of a cube I have ever employed though was when I had a magical sentient blade that was stuck inside the cube, and it had exerted its will over the cube and controlled it. That cube wasn't really an enemy though.

    • @austinreed7343
      @austinreed7343 4 года назад +8

      Jazz Jiggleballs
      Have it sit on a mimic!

  • @mathewsmith2281
    @mathewsmith2281 5 лет назад +600

    Y'know what I like about you guys? You have the answers in the description. You don't muck around and play coy with it, you just tell us. Thank you for that

    • @Sargaxiist2022
      @Sargaxiist2022 4 года назад +16

      Exactly. I can look and go: "wait why is this on the list"
      Then go to the timestamps and listen to the reasoning.

  • @friendcomputer5276
    @friendcomputer5276 4 года назад +313

    *Dungeon walls:* start speaking kobold
    *Adventurers:* panic

    • @luzfire7523
      @luzfire7523 4 года назад +28

      almost as bad as when the trees start speaking Vietnamese

    • @friendcomputer5276
      @friendcomputer5276 4 года назад +24

      @@luzfire7523 Or when the snow starts speaking finnish

    • @dagothur5800
      @dagothur5800 4 года назад +9

      (screams in flashbacks)

    • @d1noc
      @d1noc 3 года назад

      Cue music: How could this happen to meee!

    • @lagg1e
      @lagg1e 3 года назад +1

      TUCKERS KOBOLDS!

  • @FROSTYNARWALL
    @FROSTYNARWALL 5 лет назад +229

    Be wary of the elderly in a profession that has a high mortality rate.

  • @EmperorSteele
    @EmperorSteele 5 лет назад +304

    There's a great blog series called "The Monsters Know" which details how to use different monster types effectively. It seems to take inspiration from "Tucker's Kobolds", turns it up to 11 and runs with it.

    • @jordanhazen7761
      @jordanhazen7761 4 года назад +10

      "The Monsters Know What They're Doing"?

    • @maxquayle2519
      @maxquayle2519 4 года назад +2

      There is a book of it now

    • @nightflame69
      @nightflame69 3 года назад +1

      I got the “monsters know what their doing” book.

  • @kotanagant9768
    @kotanagant9768 5 лет назад +747

    Goblin Slayer knows fully well how dangerous low level monsters are.

  • @RIlianP
    @RIlianP 5 лет назад +174

    PC: makes kobold mad.
    Kobold: Throws angry skunk at his face, then kick him in gelatinous cube pit.

  • @WiiTara
    @WiiTara 3 года назад +135

    Always remember: Casting a "Protection from good and evil" spell on a person controlled by an intellect devourer will make the creature burst out of its skull. This is a great way to introduce the creature to a new party especially in a mind controll plot:
    My players came into a town which was cut of by heavy snow storms from the rest of the world for longer than usual and discovered that several things seemed odd with the population. Some people there characters personally knew acted strange, others died in that winter. After they consulted a lich about the strange behaviour (Yeah sorry thats my go to support "villain". Ancient liches that just because goofballs after they achieved everything they wanted and got bored for centurys) he recommended to cast this spell onto the person. The characters thought they would be curing the father of the rouge and instead were just like "WHAT THE..." when suddenly his head exploded and this creature popped out.

    • @jefrosiers8880
      @jefrosiers8880 2 года назад +13

      I could see the lich watching their reaction with a spell

    • @nickbradburry5187
      @nickbradburry5187 Год назад +13

      Did you just explain the plot of the “the thing” but just with dnd terms

    • @Reepicheep-1
      @Reepicheep-1 Год назад +14

      I'm loving the idea of lichs becoming deranged clowns because they get So Bored and want some excitement.

  • @Gav_EXE
    @Gav_EXE 5 лет назад +426

    I recently ran a 1-shot where the party had to deal with a mage who'd been taken over by an intellect devourer. The foreshadowing was there well in advance, but when they killed him and the beast popped out of his head, they panicked, as they knew what was going to happen. In one turn, it downed one of the party members and went to devour the brain of their low INT barbarian. Thankfully, he rolled a Nat20 on the save, which let them finish it off in a couple turns. That said, if that barbarian had failed that save, there was most certainly going to be at least one PC death that night. Was a tense couple of rounds.

    • @16theaceman
      @16theaceman 5 лет назад +28

      I TRULY hate Intellect Devours. It was my first death since coming back to 5e.

    • @Quandry1
      @Quandry1 5 лет назад +18

      I've died at least once in every edition I've played in to them. My druid in 2nd ed disabled and murdered his whole party from falling to just 1.

    • @jordanhope7180
      @jordanhope7180 5 лет назад +15

      Had this happen recently.
      Players were tracking a dude who was running away from them, who they didn't know was Intellect Devoured.
      They discovered a small tower where they thought he had decided to stay, so they wander in.
      They find 2 people, a Kenku & a human monk. While two party members talk to the people there, other two investigate the tower & find the dead body of the guy they'd been tracking. Whilst doing this, they discover his head is empty.
      A moment later, the two people attack them, and just before they kill the monk, the ID leaves the body. Party SHAT themself, but they were surprisingly fine; Bard passed on two saves against 'Devour Intellect' whilst they dealt with the Kenku.

    • @Ironfist85hu1
      @Ironfist85hu1 4 года назад

      Saves don'T have natural 20.

    • @ianbaughman
      @ianbaughman 4 года назад +9

      @@Ironfist85hu1 It still exceeds a DC 12 though, which was the point.

  • @randomguy-tg7ok
    @randomguy-tg7ok 4 года назад +250

    The problem with using Rot Grubs to attack a high-level party:
    "I cast fireball on myself"

    • @donaldevans4312
      @donaldevans4312 3 года назад +19

      If I'm going down I'm taking the shrubs with me!

    • @randomguy-tg7ok
      @randomguy-tg7ok 3 года назад +16

      Yeah, but... you're not going down to a mere fireball.

    • @joneskleid9501
      @joneskleid9501 3 года назад +2

      At high level you can kill swarms with regular weapon attacks pretty quickly and if ur a tank ur ac will be so high they won’t be able to touch you

    • @randomguy-tg7ok
      @randomguy-tg7ok 3 года назад +6

      Unless they roll a nat 20, which is always a possibility.

    • @KanedaSyndrome
      @KanedaSyndrome 3 года назад +3

      If the character even knows that fire is a solution. What if the character doesn't know.

  • @brendenwright7346
    @brendenwright7346 5 лет назад +207

    Hey guys, long time fan. I just wanted to point out you actually got the intellect devourer's ability wrong. Their Devour Intellect ability doesn't just stun the target if the 3d6 beats the target's intelligence, it reduces it to zero, meaning the target is stunned until it can regain intelligence. There is only one way by RAW that the ability score can be restored, which is greater restoration, a 5th level spell.
    That also means their intelligence contest for their Body Thief ability AUTOMATICALLY wins.
    Which actually means if you get hit with Devour Intellect, and the 3d6 beats your intelligence, your allies have a single round to kill the devourer or you die. If there are multiple devourers, the target could be dead before any of their allies get a turn.
    They are the single deadliest creature in the monster manual, by far. The DM doesn't even need a "rocks fall" situation. Four or five intellect devourers in an ambush will kill a party very easily.

    • @dcoffinh
      @dcoffinh 4 года назад +54

      Yikes. I remember reading their stat block, looking at their cr, and being like "this can't be right"

    • @silg7262
      @silg7262 3 года назад +22

      Wtf. Both the shadow and the intellect devourer are way way unbalanced.

    • @tinkerer3399
      @tinkerer3399 3 года назад +5

      Plus you aren't even regular dead you are *very* dead. Raise Dead or Revivify won't work, you need at least Resurrection.

    • @whateverhappens4917
      @whateverhappens4917 3 года назад +18

      I came here to point this out too, but I will note that there is an alternative, optional method of restoring an ability score. Xanathar's outlines in the "Downtime Revisited" an option for "Relaxation" which, among other possibilities can restore a missing ability score, but it does take a week.

    • @Oscar_Milde
      @Oscar_Milde 3 года назад +15

      @@whateverhappens4917 Not like the 0 intelligence-having PCs have too many plans at this point, why not plop down on the couch and relax a while?

  • @darknight910
    @darknight910 5 лет назад +112

    One of my favorite monsters I've come across for 5th Edition has been the Fire Snake. It's a CR 1 elemental that works as a great wake-up call to players who are getting complacent or new players realizing that there's more than just "hit the thing till it dies" as a tactic. It has a multi-attack of a bite and tail whip that does 1d4+1 physical damage and 1d6 fire damage on a hit. And when it gets hit in melee, the sheer heat of its body is enough to hurt the player for 1d6 fire damage.
    If you have some smug level 1-2 Min-Maxing fighters or barbarians who thought they made impenetrable characters, throw a couple of these at them and watch the horror in their faces as they find themselves scrambling for ranged weapons and the mage cursing himself for only taking Fire Bolt and Burning Hands for damage dealing spells.

    • @darknight910
      @darknight910 4 года назад +7

      @Jake Bear Heh, thanks. Granted, I wrote that when I was in a bit of a bad mood with my table last year. But I do think the Fire Snake is a great monster to shake up how combat is handled and gives players with range specialties (archers, spellcasters and the like) a chance to shine.

    • @idiom4037
      @idiom4037 2 года назад

      Wouldn't use it to counter the spell caster. That is a dm vs player mindset. However, against the fighters and other brawlers, these creatures aren't necessarily a counter. They merely test exactly what the melee characters are good at. If you hit it enough it will die, but you will take damage as well. Agaisnt the spell caster, if you weren't already planning on using the fire snake, then that is toxic mindset. Honestly, do not do this. Settings are much better with plausible encounters and versatility in your monsters.

  • @Draeckon
    @Draeckon 5 лет назад +361

    The fact that such low CR monsters can still be a legitimate threat to higher level PCs in the right circumstances is one of the things I love about 5E. In some of the previous editions, some of my favorite monsters just became completely superfluous without monkeying with their stats a lot.
    EDIT: Also I am legit super happy that kobolds came out as the deadliest low CR monsters. Not enough DMs play them the way they would actually behave when you look at their stats and the kobolds' awareness of their own capabilities compared to adventurers.

    • @johnjustjohn5866
      @johnjustjohn5866 5 лет назад +18

      My party's rogue hired a kobold as his servant,

    • @natashasurvivallady8021
      @natashasurvivallady8021 5 лет назад +18

      I KNOW!!! I love kobolds, and honestly get frustrated when people (and certain modules) describe them as dumb weaklings so much. I love to use them to set some of the deadliest traps I can create.

    • @EpherosAldor
      @EpherosAldor 5 лет назад +16

      I was watching this and toward the end thinking "damn, they better not forget kobolds". Suddenly their first place creature is the kobold. Fist pumps!!

    • @RokuroCarisu
      @RokuroCarisu 5 лет назад +4

      Praise the egg!

    • @SiberianPhoenix
      @SiberianPhoenix 5 лет назад +1

      *pokes you* Spoiler alert.... lol

  • @FantasyAngel-zj7bw
    @FantasyAngel-zj7bw 5 лет назад +168

    Suddenly I feel a lot better about giving all of my characters unnecessarily high intelligence. . .

    • @jean-christophearsenault2104
      @jean-christophearsenault2104 5 лет назад +10

      It is not very rewarding indeed, but you know, that history check might make your entire game more interesting ! :D

    • @trequor
      @trequor 5 лет назад +4

      I like high intelligence characters, but I also like Monks and unless you roll godly you wont get both

    • @tkgwildfire5339
      @tkgwildfire5339 5 лет назад +6

      @@trequor Yeah I rolled a 17, 20, 18, 6, 16, 20 wizard. I laughed.

    • @duraemakye1384
      @duraemakye1384 5 лет назад +5

      @@tkgwildfire5339 wait how does one roll a 20 for stats??????

    • @tkgwildfire5339
      @tkgwildfire5339 5 лет назад +6

      @@duraemakye1384 Used a d20 instead of 4 d6s. I re-rolled stats afterwards with DM.

  • @ZeMalta
    @ZeMalta 5 лет назад +336

    Know what my dirty DM secret use of swarm is? Big baddies and lieutenants with plague and terror themes call upon swarms who mount on the them and serve as armor, terrible, disgusting and terrifying armor, which attack, and only after the death of the swarm, the baddie begin to take hits on their Health Points. Nasty.

    • @MrMoshmuma
      @MrMoshmuma 5 лет назад +41

      Stolen

    • @MarkATorres1989
      @MarkATorres1989 5 лет назад +21

      Your tactic reminds me of Ram from Gears of War with his shadow swarm thingys.

    • @AnthanKrufix
      @AnthanKrufix 5 лет назад +8

      @@MarkATorres1989 I literally clicked the "View more replies" button hoping that someone would mention that fight. One of the most epic fights in videogame history right there.

    • @ragepaint
      @ragepaint 5 лет назад +4

      I believe they were called krill.

    • @cyclonicoverride4337
      @cyclonicoverride4337 5 лет назад +5

      Shamelessly stolen

  • @Hromovlad1
    @Hromovlad1 5 лет назад +94

    Slew trolls, giants, and demons with little drama.
    Goblins, Kobolds, and rats still terrify me.

  • @frankmueller2781
    @frankmueller2781 5 лет назад +101

    Something far too many DM's fail to remember is monster intelligence. I've nearly TPK'd several high level parties with Kobolds and Goblins. Have them react to parties like parties do to them.(started before these two got there)
    Played by their intelligence, dragons and vampires should be nearly impossible for even very high level parties.

    • @TheAchilles26
      @TheAchilles26 5 лет назад +30

      Dragons and Vampires are incapable of being smarter than the DM and have known exploitable weaknesses for an intelligent party to target. I agree with the primary sentiment of your comment, but disagree with that closing remark.

    • @dascientist8443
      @dascientist8443 4 года назад +12

      TheAchilles26 They are smart enough to know what their own weaknesses are and strategise around them. The DM knows they will be running these monsters and they have the whole internet to search for intelligence-appropriate strategies.

    • @robertburns4429
      @robertburns4429 3 года назад +15

      @@dascientist8443 Humans are smart enough to know what their own weaknesses are and strategize around them as well...this does not make them undefeatable.

    • @dollarestoreoffbrand5545
      @dollarestoreoffbrand5545 3 года назад +1

      @@robertburns4429 corect but we arnt imortal so we cant plan for hundreds of years

    • @Quiczor
      @Quiczor 3 года назад +3

      ​@@dollarestoreoffbrand5545 It is less the fact that they are immortal and more the fact that the human's are trying to punch typically very far up when it comes to Dragons and Vampires.
      Until you are very late game with endgame equipment a Vampire or (Big) Dragon is stronger than almost any individual PC in a straight fight.
      This is why I agree with OP's sentiment about them being nearly impossible since a lot of how players beat enemies as by using mechanics or strategies to make up for a lack of overall power. But when fighting intelligent enemies that aren't going to blindly attack your frontline while they dodge action every turn and your backline whittles it down it becomes a whooole lot harder and reqipres a lot more tactical accumen.
      And that is all assuming that the dragon/Vampire is caught by surprise. If they have time to notice/plan/avoid the party they might just do that, or just ambush the party themselves, slap/kill a player and disengage before they can do as much in return. There is a lot of factors to combat.

  • @kiranodin
    @kiranodin 5 лет назад +35

    Enjoyed the details and tactics.
    1. Shadow
    2. Swarm
    3. Intellect Devourer
    4. Gelatinous Cube
    5. Kobolds

  • @LezerniWolf
    @LezerniWolf 5 лет назад +63

    *when you have a 19 in Str and a 17 in Int* I'm a glass cannon susceptible to everything *except* these monsters!

  • @Duppa81
    @Duppa81 5 лет назад +26

    Oh god, a pit trap with a gelatinous cube in it?!
    That's terrifying

  • @robertstegmann9260
    @robertstegmann9260 5 лет назад +53

    I'm just imagining a mountain with a dragon's lair, and then camps of kobolds throughout the whole mountain.

    • @TopTierKnees
      @TopTierKnees 5 лет назад

      I jsut ran Rise of the Redscales for my players the past 2 weeks www.dmsguild.com/product/266042/Rise-of-the-Redscales. Though they didn't even make it to the big pile they did manage to kill their rivals Frank, Paul and Martha Stewart. Iit was a blast! If you're looking for a kobold-focused adventure it's a great choice.

    • @Xanador1
      @Xanador1 5 лет назад +6

      Sounds like the Dragon Mountain boxed set from '93.

    • @TheValhalla1234
      @TheValhalla1234 5 лет назад

      Exactly what our GM did few days ago. My warrior almost lost an arm there 😶

  • @guilhermepeixoto3150
    @guilhermepeixoto3150 5 лет назад +18

    21:43 Oh god **flashbacks to total party kill at the second encounter of our first session when the DM rolled 3 nat 20s in a roll, causing 4-5 kobolds to absolutely demolish us**

  • @ethancordray8006
    @ethancordray8006 5 лет назад +41

    You're doing a great service, sharing the ancient knowledge of Tucker's Kobolds with the newest generations of DMs. Keep it up!
    And GREAT advice at the end, about not busting out some of these asymmetrical threats against brand new players. Many of them take a good deal of system mastery to understand how to effectively fight them, and new players are likely to feel confused and frustrated instead of feeling like it's an exciting challenge. As always, every DM should know their group, and design their game to give them the kind of fun that they're after. But these monsters are GREAT tools for throwing some curveball creative challenges at experienced players.

    • @Barlmoro
      @Barlmoro Год назад +1

      thats good advice, i start my own newbie group at the moment and i plan on give them something to think about. i like the idee of traping kobolds, but i would not let them surpise my new player, i would do it like before the enter the dungeon the wittnes how one kobold is setting up a trap like a bear trap and if the look at them the see that is more than a simple trap, like beartrap with a little bomb below that blows up after few moments of beeing trapet. Like: i show you in a smal encounter what will happen and then escalate it in the real fight.

    • @ethancordray8006
      @ethancordray8006 Год назад +2

      @@Barlmoro Yes! It's a very good idea to have a "training" situation to introduce a new type of challenge (like tricky kobolds) to your players. Not only does it help them feel better prepared for the mechanics of the challenge, it also can help them get into the story themes that the challenge conveys. Similarly you might have a dragon fly over the party to let them know they should worry about fighting a dragon later, or have a complex Dwarven door to prepare them for a bunch of high-tech Dwarven traps later on, etc. It sets the scene, both for gameplay and story.

    • @Ishlacorrin
      @Ishlacorrin Год назад

      Funny thing is, I have been playing D&D for the last 3 or so decades but had missed that Dragon Mag and the entire story of Tucker's Kobolds. I have been playing ALL humanoids based on their Intelligence stat from AD&D onwards, so hearing that someone else did the same and became famous in the community for it is amusing. 1st time I heard about Tucker's Kobolds my first questions were "Haven't all DMs been doing this? Isn't it just the standard way to play average+ Int monsters?"

  • @TheMacksTube
    @TheMacksTube 4 года назад +7

    We took this to another level on our one-shot night. 5:1 kobold vs premade basic adventurers in a defend the abandoned tower game. The kobolds were given a number of traps, and a few secret doors to build thier defenses before the adventures arrived.
    Nobody has taken kobolds for granted since.

  • @raginbacon1160
    @raginbacon1160 5 лет назад +36

    As a Kobold fan and user of the Kobold monstrous adventurer, I approve of this video.

  • @stefanavic6630
    @stefanavic6630 5 лет назад +20

    Kelly makes a blind turn into a narrow, squeaky-clean dungeon corridor:
    "Chewy, no, wait, DON'T!!!"

  • @wright534
    @wright534 5 лет назад +11

    Great discussion, showing how creatures can be used entertainingly as well as realistically. Good points on how to implement such encounters in a balanced way, too.
    Appreciate the tribute to Tucker's Kobolds, too. I was inspired by that article to have a lone PC encounter goblins that dropped narcotic seedpods into his campfire from overhanging trees: his dismay and rage at waking up hogtied, surrounded by goblins happily looting his gear was truly beautiful. He escaped (of course) and eventually got his revenge, but was much more wary about adventuring on his own afterwards...

  • @evolution031680
    @evolution031680 5 лет назад +120

    I would rule that a paladin would lose all divine abilities if he was taken over by an intellect devourer.💀

    • @theodorejrcarpenter3717
      @theodorejrcarpenter3717 4 года назад +33

      Yah same for cleric. Warlock maybe maybe not depending on the pact the old one might get a kick out og it.

    • @paulmccaffrey2985
      @paulmccaffrey2985 3 года назад +1

      I agree.

    • @cmdrwraithe1857
      @cmdrwraithe1857 Год назад +5

      I agree with that, as well. Even if there was memory stealing, how would the intellect devourer commune with the paladin's or cleric's chosen diety? These classes can't be treated as mages since they gain power from favor of their god. I would say all power stops at that point, as well.

    • @XxChancex
      @XxChancex Год назад

      Clerics that would make sense. However according to RAW, Paladins do not get their powers from a deity, but rather the strength of their oath. 😮

  • @yaboiinlouisiana4169
    @yaboiinlouisiana4169 5 лет назад +19

    Funny you mention kobolds. I've got a party that just lost their fighter to a flame trap surrounded by kobolds. The idea was that it was a false encampment; they'd been slaying kobolds for the past five or so sessions for a Dwarven noble. Lo and behold, a Dwarven friend they knew fell from a tree, hanging dead and mangled. They immediately rushed out to find the kobolds and followed tracks the kobolds had laid, leading into a thicket. As soon as the fighter saw huts in the thicket and a pile of dwarves, he rushed in, tripling a rope that lit the thicket on fire. He had already noticed the wet matting of the forest but continued, not realizing it was oil. The thicket surrounding the hits (maybe a fifteen foot space) lit aflame. He was trapped, surrounded, targeted through the brush. The kobolds couldn't see what triggered the trap, but didn't need to. Their projectiled, covered in a deadly poison, stunned and held the fighter in place while the oxygen around him grew thin. His compatriots rushed to his aid. After being poisoned, burned, and eventually suffocated, the kobolds retreated only after the corpse of the fighter that had destroyed a kobold nest single-handedly lie bloody, torn, and defeated. All in all, the party thought it a valuable lesson and thoroughly enjoyed it. They knew there were kobolds. They knew they were prone to trappings and trickery. They realized they could have been more careful and they shouldn't be as overconfident. The next session is tomorrow; with a new character they plot vengeance for their fallen friend.

  • @chunchunmaru123
    @chunchunmaru123 5 лет назад +101

    I'm currently playing a barbarian and have 78 HP and one kobolt inventor dowend me in a single round.

    • @trarzene
      @trarzene 5 лет назад +1

      How

    • @aidenmarques7413
      @aidenmarques7413 5 лет назад +2

      OMG 😂😂😂

    • @chunchunmaru123
      @chunchunmaru123 5 лет назад +34

      @@trarzene well naturally it crit on it's role. So every single scropian in the basket landed on me. I then rolled really badly on my con save and that was it poison just melted my health and the gm rolled really well on damage.

    • @Mr_Maiq_The_Liar
      @Mr_Maiq_The_Liar 5 лет назад +4

      curtis cokayne That takes a statistical minimum of 10 d8 and an average of 19 d8 wtf?

    • @christopherclubb9167
      @christopherclubb9167 5 лет назад +14

      Scorpions fall, everyone dies.

  • @YoshionoKimochi
    @YoshionoKimochi 5 лет назад +85

    ....is there a swarm that's immune to the gelatinous cubes damage after being swallowed? That would be a crazy symbiotic relationship between the two...

    • @RW77777777
      @RW77777777 5 лет назад +5

      crawling claws maybe

    • @johnjustjohn5866
      @johnjustjohn5866 5 лет назад +8

      Anything immune to acid damage

    • @dgtlrn
      @dgtlrn 5 лет назад +15

      Shove a clay Golem inside there.

    • @abot4029
      @abot4029 5 лет назад +37

      @@dgtlrn No, a SWARM of clay golems.

    • @Quandry1
      @Quandry1 5 лет назад +26

      You can always alter something to work. Take a beetle or snake swarm and make them mechanical or golem like in nature that is immune to the cube.
      The cube could be altered to suit certain types of beasts for the same synergy. In an underdark or subterranean adventure perhaps its in a volcanic area and surves a simular function but with fire or lava instead. Striking out with gouts of flame or streams of molten rock that pool back into its form. Its surface black and crusty and seeming wall like while its idle but its surface becomes cracked and molten when it surges forth. More pouring itself forward than sliding along.
      Or one that freezes and lives in the halls of an icy ruin. Hidding like a glossy frosted surface until it fractures and strikes forth with shards of deadly ice. Wrapping around its victims in flowing arctic water and a latice of freezing crystals. Leaving statues in its wake and eventually shattering its victims or leaving them to be devoured by other things as you see fit.

  • @curtisbrown547
    @curtisbrown547 5 лет назад +9

    I remember reading a dnd story where a group invited a vietnam vetran into a game of dnd and they had a "tuckers kobolds" scenario planned. It was a *very* intense gaming session.

  • @Grease-Goblin
    @Grease-Goblin 5 лет назад +6

    When you started talking about rot grubs, it reminded me of my group's first encounter with them. Our fighter had opened a standing casket filled with them, and they collapsed on him and started to begin their burrowing. Just five minutes before, I had given him a potion of fire breath that I had. Now, none of us were familiar with this enemy, so it was by pure luck that he decided that he would chug that potion and breathe fire on the entire swarm, setting them and himself on fire. It killed the entire swarm all at once, and our DM told us following this encounter that him choosing to set himself on fire to kill the grubs was the one thing our party could have done in that circumstance to prevent him from certain death. He was initially suspected of meta-gaming (which our group heavily frowns upon), but he was just as shocked by the information as the rest of us. He just wanted to kill a lot of enemies at the same time (fighter, remember? And a bugbear on top of that), and figured a free fire breath was the best option. One of our players who wasn't present for that game was told about the encounter, and he would have been the only person other than the DM who knew the severity of this swarm.
    After we finished that particular dungeon (which our DM warned us at the start was specifically designed to kill the party), he congratulated us on how incredibly smart/lucky we were to only have one player die. It didn't even end up being permanent, because our party hired a high level cleric to cast resurrection on my bard's corpse, and he was reborn as an Aasimar. Our DM gave out a huge laugh before revealing what he was reborn as, because that's a hell of an upgrade for a narcissistic wordsmith.

  • @bodenham3555
    @bodenham3555 4 года назад +6

    I threw a few shadows at my party in an outsider/Un-dead themed dungeon once, one player had a magic dagger that allowed them to raise up a creature they killed for the next few hours, and I had a Shadow demon encounter planned after that fight. For those who don't know it from memory, shadow demons have a 1 for their STR scores, so this shadow the party re-animated was able to One shot the boss monsters, and frankly I never saw that coming

  • @p45yourfired3
    @p45yourfired3 5 лет назад +125

    I just shared this with my dm, i feel our party just overpowers him a little too often with our tactics.....

    • @zalgore2347
      @zalgore2347 5 лет назад +44

      YOU FOOL YOU FOOLISH FOOL, YOU'VE DOOMED YOURSELF.

    • @davidjarkeld2333
      @davidjarkeld2333 5 лет назад +14

      Prepare to roll up a new character ...

    • @Quandry1
      @Quandry1 5 лет назад

      Depending on your ability allocation and how much he sticks purely to by the book encounter design and lack of enemy intelligence. You just might be overwhelming his encounters. At least as low level.

    • @strygian192
      @strygian192 5 лет назад +9

      You done messed up A-A-simar

    • @jackson0335
      @jackson0335 5 лет назад +4

      He/she probably knows about stronger characters but like me is terrified of making the game impossible. I'm often slapping my forehead after I fight I thought was fairly balanced lasts about 3 turns with the party remaining at 80% HP.

  • @mindofthelion712
    @mindofthelion712 5 лет назад +71

    The deadliest monster for a low-level party is a Tarrasque.

    • @zaclittlejohn2701
      @zaclittlejohn2701 5 лет назад +18

      Me the lvl 2 tabaxi monk running away at mach 3.

    • @lorekeeper685
      @lorekeeper685 4 года назад

      Nah do time dragon

    • @ricardobarsch4117
      @ricardobarsch4117 4 года назад +3

      Technically can be deadliest for every level party's

    • @ryangudger91
      @ryangudger91 4 года назад +2

      Vampire hydra

    • @Glenn138horror
      @Glenn138horror 3 года назад +1

      Nah. Its the commoner. Why? They can destroy a parties reputation and lead a mob to kill the party.

  • @SquatBenchDeadlift455
    @SquatBenchDeadlift455 5 лет назад +71

    I was going to put a beholder zombie in my dungeon for Saturday... not anymore ;)

    • @catman9222
      @catman9222 5 лет назад +4

      Infest him full of rotgrubs

  • @chaddickerson1887
    @chaddickerson1887 5 лет назад +21

    Thank you for introducing me to Tucker's Kobolds

  • @strider2175
    @strider2175 5 лет назад +215

    SPURT! "I WIN!"

    • @asdasdasdasd714
      @asdasdasdasd714 5 лет назад +53

      - How long you lived down here?
      + ELEVEN DAYS.
      - How long do Kobolds live?
      + ELEVEN DAYS.
      And eleven days it was.

    • @rinconusmc
      @rinconusmc 5 лет назад +13

      @@asdasdasdasd714 lol a natural 20 with a scorpion on a stick for 7 damage had me dying.

    • @Xenibalt
      @Xenibalt 5 лет назад

      @bryan diaz varela do you even dnd bro?

    • @Marijn_92
      @Marijn_92 5 лет назад +1

      @bryan diaz varela critical role

  • @JC34258
    @JC34258 5 лет назад +18

    Regarding the gelatinous cubes, I had a GM pull out a Black Dragon who lined their lair with the damn things. It's too big to use their engulf on, and it's immune to acid anyway.
    In 3.5 I remember legion devils being the "Kills things WAY above their CR" hammer with which to slap down munchkins. Their pile of infinitely stacking bonuses based on how many of them are in the area just scaled way too hard.

  • @BeaglzRok1
    @BeaglzRok1 5 лет назад +50

    My character died two weeks ago to two mimics. He's a level 11 Ranger with 100 maximum hitpoints, but we had just slogged through a deathtrap of an assassin's hideaway (which included a Gelatinous Cube falling from the ceiling on top of him), he got locked in the room alone with only about 30hp remaining, and he was down to one weapon after two of the ones he had were destroyed by black puddings, so he couldn't benefit from his Two Weapon Fighting fighting style and Dual Wielder feat. A few good attack and damage rolls later and the rest of the party shows up to open the door and dispatch them just a little too late for me to fail my last death save.
    It was a great session, I'd do it all over again with all the mistakes because almost immediately beforehand he found a treasure cache with a diamond in it that allowed the bard to cast Raise Dead on him. Even without that, seeing the characters different reactions for that watching your own funeral feeling was priceless. AND I finally get to put a years-old joke to rest that my character would be the first in the party to die.

  • @Leo.Labine
    @Leo.Labine 5 лет назад +7

    18:00
    The ghostly three facing the gelatinous cube in the sewer of Drakkenheim 😉

    • @Quandry1
      @Quandry1 5 лет назад +2

      It was hilarious watching that. Kelly realizing what was happening just before Sebastion face plants into it as its revealed.

  • @queenannsrevenge100
    @queenannsrevenge100 5 лет назад +14

    I remember Tucker’s Kobolds! Thank you for bringing up that classic story. 😃

    • @solar4planeta923
      @solar4planeta923 2 года назад

      I still have my Dragon magazine issue 127, and I'm going to sit and read the editorial all about Tucker's Kobolds right now.

  • @sambobsam
    @sambobsam 5 лет назад +6

    The quality of the content continues to improve. Keep up the good prep work and solid editing. It makes them so much more compelling than videos of people rambling unprepared.

  • @Burori1
    @Burori1 5 лет назад +10

    Dopplegangers. Just. Dopplegangers. It only takes 2 to mess up an upstart 5 person party of 4th level characters.

  • @OneHundredZombies
    @OneHundredZombies 5 лет назад +2

    “They can be messy if they get all up in your space...” That is both hilarious and frightening at the same time.

  • @jjkthebest
    @jjkthebest 3 года назад +3

    Honestly, I'd probably run intellect devourers differently. The "teleport inside your brain to kill you and take over your body" is insane. Maybe make them sit on top of your head and control you. That way you can kill the devourer and get back your character. Makes the combat itself just as challenging, while being way more forgiving in the long run.

  • @leatherneck4811
    @leatherneck4811 5 лет назад +1

    All hail Mr. Tucker and his Kobolds!! As a long time D&D player, you two get an instant like and sub for bringing up not only Tucker's Kobolds, but the genuine uses for the other four creatures were spot on as well. Very sneaky, and much applause as a player and DM.

  • @KurouAkuma
    @KurouAkuma 5 лет назад +3

    Intelect devourer is still one of my favourite low cr monsters.
    Used it against a wizard, on a short solo section of the campaign, and even though he survived being hunted down, he was scarred by the experience ^_^

  • @emeraldgale603
    @emeraldgale603 5 лет назад +3

    my personal favorite encounter for early encounters (haven't tried higher levels, but I'd imagine it scales up) is an animated armor on a warhorse. everyone focuses on the armor, then get pretty beat up when they get trampled by the horse. being knocked prone can be pretty rough with multiple enemies. plus, it feels more fair than dying instantly.

  • @Vanity3_
    @Vanity3_ 5 лет назад +5

    The only deaths ever occurring in my PCs party was when i sent some kobolds after them. Once, a kobold inventor threw a rot grub swarm at them while, in the back, another kobold summoned a shadow.

  • @Vespiria67
    @Vespiria67 3 года назад +1

    One of my first characters I played was a high elf arcane trickster who almost died at level 3 from rot grubs. He survived because he used sleep centered on self. As a high elf he was immune to effects that put him to sleep so while the grubs were asleep he got another player to perform surgery on him to get them out.

  • @Taronas
    @Taronas 5 лет назад +33

    As a DM I dislike how Intellect devourer is written... In general I dislike anything with a SoD before res becomes available. I spend the majority of my DM prep time on weaving my PCs backstories into the main plot (my games are generally focused on PCs personal stories) so a death of a PC is huge loss of content for a single bad dice roll. Gelatinus cube is interesting but I have found most melee characters will just attack it from inside since restrained doesn't prevent attacks and disadvantage doesn't matter since it's AC 6.

    • @SiberianPhoenix
      @SiberianPhoenix 5 лет назад +12

      George R.R. martin had a saying when he was asked why a characters death wasn't heroic and seemed needless. "Death is needless. Sometimes people just die and their story IS left unfulfilled. That's Life." (something to that effect anyways)

    • @SiberianPhoenix
      @SiberianPhoenix 5 лет назад +2

      It's best summed up here: www.theguardian.com/books/2016/may/17/george-rr-martin-game-of-thrones-characters-die-it-has-to-be-done-song-of-ice-and-fire

    • @j2dragon109
      @j2dragon109 5 лет назад +10

      You must gather your party Before venturing forth
      Nothing about what the OP said is inherently boring. They just weave the PC’s backgrounds into the main plot and focus on their characters.
      The no-death thing you could make a case for being boring.

    • @Taronas
      @Taronas 5 лет назад +20

      @You must gather your party Before venturing forth I didn't say no death. I said I don't like SoD. The loss of a character and the work put into them on a single bad dice roll is neither fun nor interesting. The general response I have gotten to a character death by SoD or even instant massive damage is an annoyed sigh and something along the lines of "well that happened. So what should I make next guys?". There is nothing interesting about walking into a room and the barbarian getting their brain telefragged because they had a bad roll at level 3. Now the party fighting tooth and nail to save the fighter who can't quite make it out of a room that's going to be overrun with demons over the course of 5 rounds only to be denied as they slam the door shut and bolt it to save everyone else... That is far and away more interesting. Or even to have to shut the door themselves as they realize saving that character is a lost cause...
      Like I said SoD is the problem. I would just replace the SoD with something farm more interesting. For example the way I would run a Intellect devourer would be that if you failed it's save it then enters your mind and a mental battle insues as you drop into a coma Requiring the party to finish the fight then go out and find a way to enter your mind and have a big RP session of them trying to help you find your sense of self as the devourer slowlyt eats away your thoughts and memories.

    • @williamjenkins4913
      @williamjenkins4913 5 лет назад +9

      @@SiberianPhoenix Death should be a spice. Before GRRM books were bland because you knew no one would die. But you can also over spice your food to the point it's hard to eat. I'll let my players die but I'm not going to add Fuck You mechanics

  • @ScepticLlama
    @ScepticLlama 5 лет назад +2

    velociraptors are usually a quite deadly encounter.
    Not because a velociraptor is anything scary on its own, but they often come in packs.

  • @Konpekikaminari
    @Konpekikaminari 4 года назад +4

    2 creatures I find scary for their relatively low CR are:
    1) the banshee, CR 4 and has a built in save-or-suck attack with her wail
    2) also CR 4, the Helmed Horror- immune to conditions, resistant to magic (with immunity to 3 DM chosen spells) resistant to nonmagical, non-adamantite weapon, the _only_ resistance to the beloved force damage in the MM (which is a full blown immunity BTW); oh, and an intelligence score of 10, higher than the average lv 4 fighter. these things are the terror of every spellcaster

    • @paranoidrodent
      @paranoidrodent 4 года назад

      The banshee never stops being brutal.

    • @Konpekikaminari
      @Konpekikaminari 4 года назад

      @@paranoidrodent no, the bloody thing most certainly does not
      Pretty sure it was designed to be a clear message from the DM

  • @nyrdexperience
    @nyrdexperience 5 лет назад +1

    I have used Mongrelfolk in our recent campaign and it was such a nice breath of fresh air when it comes to encounters and player experience.

  • @TH-tf9ke
    @TH-tf9ke 2 года назад +4

    As a player, I really worry about all these "kills you outright" abilities given to all these low level monsters.

    • @Zeppathy
      @Zeppathy Год назад +1

      I imagine these are meant to be thrown at a party of high-level adventurers in massive numbers.

  • @LunchBreakHeroes
    @LunchBreakHeroes 5 лет назад +2

    Great video, guys!
    The bounded accuracy of 5e is great in that it allows dungeon masters to have the entirety of the Monster Manual at their disposal, regardless of the level of their players. They may have to use more monsters with mixed unit tactics, but a party of level 15-20 can just as easily encounter a threatening host of skeletons and goblins as well as a dragon. This can keep things fresh and varied, rather than just limiting parties to the same handful of high level endgame monsters over and over again.

  • @cyrilmartin5613
    @cyrilmartin5613 5 лет назад +13

    Pixies are dangerous too for their CR. A group of creature with such powerfull spells is relly hard to fight

    • @Quandry1
      @Quandry1 5 лет назад +1

      T-Rexes are over rated considering the full suite of their abilities and the ability to combine with things like living armor.

    • @cyrilmartin5613
      @cyrilmartin5613 5 лет назад

      @@Quandry1 I talk about pixies, not t-rex. With a huge number of pixies due to their CR, you will not face one t-rex, and they are also able to change your caracter into rats with the same spell, or cast entangle, confusion or dispel magic... all this with a CR of 1/4

    • @Quandry1
      @Quandry1 5 лет назад

      @@cyrilmartin5613 I'm more than aware what cheese you mean. I'm saying it's not necessary. It's also potentially highly impractical. You do not fight pixies in a void. You can meet them in plenty of places where most dinosaur shapes and such are impractical.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 5 лет назад +1

      Pixies don't fight though, per their MM description.
      *Tiny Tricksters* While the arrival of visitors piques their curiosity, pixies are too shy to reveal themselves at first. They study the visitors from afar to gauge their temperament or play harmless tricks on them to measure their reactions... If the visitors respond with hostility, the pixies give them a wide berth.
      *Opposed to Violence.* Unlike their fey cousins, the sprites, pixies abhor weapons and would sooner flee than get into a physical altercation with any enemy.

    • @agilemind6241
      @agilemind6241 5 лет назад +3

      @Minnek They can't. Polymorph is limited to beast of the same or lower CR rating so Pixies can't transform themselves to T-rexes. The cheese is if the PCs summon the pixies and have the pixes turn the PCs into T-rexes.

  • @daveb6390
    @daveb6390 6 месяцев назад

    I had a great session with a gelatinous cube a couple weeks ago. I'm running a Strixhaven campaign. During an "after hours snoop," the PCs came across the secret behind how clean the stadium and locker rooms always are. A team of custodians were struggling to contain a gelatinous cube behind a panel of thick glass. It had engulfed one of the custodians and the PCs wound up having to make Athletics checks to keep the creature away from the other workers until the head custodian arrived and put the beast back in the Iron Flask they used to transport the creature. When asked, "What about Glory?", the head custodian shrugs and says, "don't worry about it..."

  • @Wineblood
    @Wineblood 5 лет назад +12

    Gelatinous cubes and intellect devourers? Looks like my eldritch knight is frontlining those fights.

  • @siriusblack9999
    @siriusblack9999 5 лет назад

    correction at 13:38, the intellect devourer's stun isn't "until the end of the PC's next turn", but rather it causes the PC's intelligence score to drop to 0, leaving them stunned "until it regains at least one point of Intelligence", combining that with body thief ensures a -5 penalty to that contested roll,

  • @Balcamion79
    @Balcamion79 5 лет назад +28

    Ghost was my party's first monster encounter. It was kinda scary for 4 level 1 characters!

    • @jammo7370
      @jammo7370 5 лет назад +6

      Balcamion I DM a party of 8. Because the Action Economy vastly favors them, I tend to throw higher CR monsters at them and they tend to enjoy these encounters. The first time I did this was when they, at second level, fought a Drow Elite Warrior, CR 5, and a modified version of Asha (a priest npc with the drow race features), CR 3. They barely came out of it and it took everything they had to beat them, and they said they really enjoyed this as a first boss fight

    • @Balcamion79
      @Balcamion79 5 лет назад +1

      @@jammo7370 yeah, the intensity and threat if character death of lower level play really does give a thrill unlike the super power feeling you get at later levels. We fought a Drow elite warrior, several giant spiders, and an ettercap in the cave once we defeated the ghost. I just started DMing for a party of 8 myself using the Spelljammer setting and 5e rules. It's been great so far!

    • @mattrondeau2
      @mattrondeau2 5 лет назад +2

      yeah that band is great...
      oh the creature, yeah they're great too :P

    • @Grinnar
      @Grinnar 5 лет назад +4

      Specters are fun. Have a normal looking ghost wandering a room. Muttering to themselves, or wailing and crying. When the specter eventually notices the players, have it's normal features melt away and reveal your version of what's in the monster manual. Screaming, pointing, dimming the lights around it. Give the players a sense of dread and impending doom. I threw two at my last group, and they got freaked out both times. I absolutely loved it.

    • @Quandry1
      @Quandry1 5 лет назад +3

      @@Balcamion79 with a group of 8 remember that it's easier to send more realistic hordes at them as well. A hall of 8 or 10 living armor and living weapons can be a very challenging encounter and may be wary of future "display" setups in relatively safe places like nobles homes and castles. At a bit later levels golems that resemble statues decorating a ruin or the like thoroughly can do the same.
      Living armor is cr1 and a.c. 18. So even starting op or large parties may find the handful of them fairly tricky to deal with.

  • @Illianor123
    @Illianor123 3 года назад

    My favourite cube story involved the party triggering a trap that caused a trapdoor in the roof to loudly open in front of the party and drop a cube. The party then proceeded to run straight into the cube that was silently dropped around the corner behind them. They were reasonably high level and so survived the fight, but it was fun to double cube them.

  • @sorath1396
    @sorath1396 4 года назад +10

    One time my character died to a kobold. One. Single. Kobold.

    • @Hazel-xl8in
      @Hazel-xl8in 3 года назад +2

      and that kobold was promoted to dragonshield

  • @FioreFire
    @FioreFire 2 года назад

    I ran one encounter where a group of low leveled characters went to investigate something on a large rock just within jumping distance of a ledge on the shore, ten feet above freezing waters with no easy way to climb back up. There, a small group of ice mephits ambushed them with their Fog Cloud spell, which covered the whole rock. Suddenly, nobody can move more than a few steps without risk of falling off into the water and taking levels of exhaustion from the cold, while the mephits pestered them with little bits of damage from their AOE breath attacks from every direction.
    In the end, nobody ended up even remotely close to dying from this encounter, but like with the kobold example here it really showed me how much of a difference the terrain can make for any encounter with low-level monsters.

  • @lord6617
    @lord6617 5 лет назад +27

    I knew Tucker's Kobolds were coming :P Good Show!

  • @michaelduke9057
    @michaelduke9057 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you guys I've taken away a couple great ideas to use against in my campaign.
    I'm so happy you mentioned foreshadowing and warned DMs against using these creatures against new players. They are, however, fantastic encounters for experienced players at lower levels. Straightforward encounters balanced as per the guidelines in the DMG can be pretty boring for experienced players but show them a completely clean hallway, corpses with their brains sucked out shadows doing funny things immediately ramps up the excitement precisely because the players know what danger they are in. As a players being able to leverage your experience is a satisfying feeling.

  • @gomezy3k
    @gomezy3k 5 лет назад +3

    Back a few D&D Editions I almost had a TPK when I threw a Nilbog at a 2 & 3rd level party... The party beat the crap out of that "goblin" and freaked out when it wouldn't die..

  • @bobbyboling1867
    @bobbyboling1867 5 лет назад +1

    Combining threats is one of my favourites. Like zombies filled with rot grubs or an enemy with an intellect devourer already possessing that enemy so that whenever they have taken out the first enemy they now have a second one right on its heels

  • @kenw7098
    @kenw7098 5 лет назад +6

    Last session it was vegepigmys and we had little to nothing that we could start on fire....one torch between 6 pcs so it was dropping them to 0 and getting the one player to burn the bodies before they regenerate.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 5 лет назад +1

      Six PCs and nobody had _Fire Bolt?_ Interesting cantrip choices going on then...

  • @afilthycasualplays4007
    @afilthycasualplays4007 4 года назад

    Fun gelatinous cube moment: party turns corner in dungeon to find a couple of skeletons standing in the corridor. Cleric turns undead and is shocked when it doesn't work. Fighter then charges them with his flail because, "they're just skeletons," and runs right into the gelatinous cube they were engulfed in.

  • @dylanfooler
    @dylanfooler 5 лет назад +9

    What I'm getting from this is always have a paladin or cleric D:

  • @sk8rdman
    @sk8rdman 5 лет назад +1

    Funny Story...
    So I was planning a dungeon for my players which included a tribe of kobolds, and so I was coming up with a bunch of interesting places that the kobolds might try to put traps. Around the corner of a staircase leading down into the level where the kobolds resided I put a simple trip-wire trap that tipped over a basket overhead containing a swarm on the character who triggered it. I was looking for an interesting swarm to put in the basket when I came upon the rot grubs in Volo's guide. It didn't take me long after reading it through to realize "nope nope nope, I can't do that to my players". Those rot-grubs are so nasty, and I knew I'd have characters dying from a very cheap and dirty trick that they weren't prepared for. I ended up just putting a centipede swarm in the basket, which was fun enough, even if they did get swiftly destroyed by a couple spells.
    And speaking of kobolds, I also planned a really cool encounter for my players in that dungeon. Among the kobold tribe was a pair of twin kobold sorcerers (also from Volo's guide). The kobolds were named Dagg (with two gs) and Dag (with one g), but the tribe just referred to them collectively as "Dagg Dag". I gave one of them (Dagg) wings and modified their spell lists to make things more interesting. When they were alerted to the characters' presence, then Dagg would cast minor illusion of a dragon's roar from the room they were in, and then get on Dag's shoulders while he cast Silent Image over themselves to make it look like they were just one really tall kobold/dragon thing. Then they'd march out of the room like that while Dagg used the Dragon Breath spell (from Xanathar's) and started breathing fire on the players and Dag would sling other spells on the players from beneath the illusion.
    It coulda been a really great encounter, but alas my players never went to that area of the dungeon. Hopefully I'll be able to work it in again at some other point in the campaign, because I'm really proud of it.

  • @godofthunder4242
    @godofthunder4242 5 лет назад +18

    There's always room for 10 x 10 jello!

  • @skynyrdjesus
    @skynyrdjesus 5 лет назад +1

    As a point of clarification, if the Intellect Devourer rolls above its victim's intelligence score, its intelligence is reduced to 0 and it is stunned until it regains its intelligence. This makes the Intellect Devourer stealing the body trivial, unless of course you're a really lucky vegetable.

  • @shadenox8164
    @shadenox8164 5 лет назад +5

    Sounds like the perfect counter for rot grubs is the flames of phelagos feat.
    Need to burn them off? I'm on fire!

  • @BobtheDonut
    @BobtheDonut 4 года назад

    One of the quest rewards I gave a party in an old hexcrawl was team of kobold sappers for use in defeating a Death Knight's castle defenses.

  • @krystal2423
    @krystal2423 5 лет назад +3

    My favorite trap: 30' pitfall right into a Gelatinous Cube
    .

  • @neog8029
    @neog8029 5 лет назад +17

    Ooh, the Gelatinous Cube. I'll never forget my party's first encounter with one. How could I?
    We were trying to find someone who could remove our paladin's cursed mask that made him blind, deaf, and (potentially) a were-wolf using a high elf were-rat who attacked us thaat we captured as our guide. We reach the camp of our captive's master. Our rouge sneaks in. Hears other were-creatures in the distance and drops into a storehouse. Finds himself suspended in mid-air.
    Suddenly takes 6d6 damage.
    Dragomborn fighter that's a fierce friend to the rouge hauls ass to the store house.
    Pulls rouge out and they take turns carrying each other away.
    Gelatinous Cube emerges.
    Paladin, guided by the Rat-man, (that's what we ended up calling the high elf) starts shooting Ray of Frost.
    Raurgh, our half-or barbarian attacks the Cube.
    Fighter and Rouge find our guide's master to try and get help.
    Master is a Beholder.
    Shit hits fan.
    Rouge and Fighter run being chased by the Beholder. Baarbarian gets sucked by Cube, and the Rat man is panicking.
    Cube sucks up Rat man.
    Barbarian frees himself.
    Fighter and Rouge are trying to bail.
    Paladin is drawn towards the one thing he can see--the Beholder.
    Barbarian gets suck by Cube again.
    Sees nothing but Rat man's skeleton.
    "It was as this moment he knew...he fucked up."
    Barbarian dies. Fighter and Rouge jump in a river and bail. Paladin swears service to the Beholder.
    After fruitlessly trying to heal the party and help beat back the Cube, I cast Command on the Beholder telling it to halt.
    Rolls 18.
    The Beholder looks at me and in my head, and deep and cruel voice says, "Flee."
    I jump in the river, too.
    And that's the story of how our first encounter with a Gelatinous Cube ended in disaster. (Rip Raurgh and the Rat Man.)

  • @pelicanofpunishment6
    @pelicanofpunishment6 7 месяцев назад

    In one campaign I’m in, the first session had a fight against 2 rat swarms. We were level 3 and one guy almost died pretty rapidly. And in another, one guy was taken over by an Intellect Devourer in the first session and, while we knew it at the time, he then led the party towards its friends the following session.

  • @ryanhilliker375
    @ryanhilliker375 3 года назад +5

    Do the dark souls! Show the players the deadly enemy in an isolated situation which allows for experimentation, exploration, etc. Then, once they have an idea of how the monster works, throw a pack (only after they have had a chance to learn, and always leave an escape route if the players find they are unprepared)

  • @eriksemko698
    @eriksemko698 5 лет назад +1

    In Curse of Strahd our rogue ran into a room without checking and ran right inbetween 3 shadows. They rolled best initiative. All 3 hit and the DM rolled 3d4. He rolled 4 on all of them and the rogue's STR was 12.
    Our DM does not like killing players, but he does not deus ex machina to save us if it happens. He was so shocked, because he was not expecting that encounter to be a problem and after the rogue died we did kill them on the first turn. It was just the worst luck on the rogue's side.

  • @darksparder6369
    @darksparder6369 5 лет назад +7

    Something like timestamps would be really nice. I just want to have specific info in some vids.

  • @Castheknotted
    @Castheknotted 5 лет назад +2

    This video gave me so much inspiration for my next arc of our campaign. Thanks!

  • @Speedster2468
    @Speedster2468 5 лет назад +8

    Who's territory would you rather trespass upon:
    A colony of kobolds
    Kevin McAllister's home

    • @ImBigAl09
      @ImBigAl09 5 лет назад +3

      MW Finks Ka'Vin McUllister, God of Kobolds

    • @randomdude1361
      @randomdude1361 5 лет назад +2

      Both of those are a death sentence.

    • @strygian192
      @strygian192 5 лет назад +2

      Kobold McAllister

    • @laughingfurry
      @laughingfurry 5 лет назад +2

      Random thought for a possible rumor.
      "What do you mean there's a dwarf named Kevin who is working with kobolds? That's the most absurd thing I've heard." Next thing, rumor proves to be true.

    • @michaelangelomaimone3181
      @michaelangelomaimone3181 3 года назад +1

      @@laughingfurry make it a gnome for a little more absurdity and a little more tinkering proclivity

  • @sergiocon6131
    @sergiocon6131 5 лет назад +1

    My first time ever playing was a random encounter my friend and I did. I was a Goliath Barbarian and he was a Dragonborn Fighter. Both of us were level 1. We were ambushed and had to take on 4 Kobolds. I grabbed one, threw him onto another one, my friend(Dratin) uses firebreath to kill them both. Pact tactics left him nearly dead so we fled and out of fear they also fled. After a short rest we went back in, rolled for perception. I roll a 20, see them hiding behind a boulder in the dark, I without warning launch Dratin straight at them. One died by getting his skull crushed, and since Dratin readied his attack he slit the others throat. RIP Kobolds.

  • @joshmorgan3574
    @joshmorgan3574 5 лет назад +4

    Just ordered my skullsplitter dice. Thanks for the code and love the videos and twitch streams

  • @isscng
    @isscng 5 лет назад

    I had a villain organization in one of my games have their army based on the idea of shadows and shadow-like apparitions. It made for some interesting battles when they'd get ambushed or run into a trap: they'd find themselves surrounded by shadows, which proved a tense but fun challenge.

  • @Damini368
    @Damini368 5 лет назад +28

    “Tucker’s Kobolds”
    I see you are men of culture as well.

  • @whiteraven562
    @whiteraven562 3 года назад +1

    One of the scariest fights I've ever had in a DND game is the animated broom from the death house in Curse of Strahd. It can really do a number on a party of level 1 players, especially if all the players keep rolling like garbage.

  • @sora20521
    @sora20521 5 лет назад +3

    I feel like with the intellect devourer some key points for body snatch wasn't told, like how the target has to be unconscious or incapacitated before it can be used.

    • @revshad4226
      @revshad4226 5 лет назад +4

      The stunned condition includes incapacitated

    • @sora20521
      @sora20521 5 лет назад

      @@revshad4226 well yeah? That's part of incapacitated. Even then the person still has to have less Intel than what the creature rolls onb3d6

  • @MajorMareth
    @MajorMareth Год назад +1

    Never winter Nights forever scarred me when it comes to Intellect Devourers. Easily the hardest part of the early game main campaign

  • @nercopolis99
    @nercopolis99 5 лет назад +5

    ok, THIS is my last dnd video for the night.... wait what are the five cantrips I must have?....