I grew up in Illinois. At that time it was still possible for me to go to places like Dixon Mounds and see Indian/Native American burial sites and learn a lot about the people who lived here before I did.
I get that these were people and we were walking through their graves, but we were learning about them at the same time and that in my mind was much better. Whatever the case it left me with a life long fascination with the native people of this area.
The Algonquin (and Illiniwek) people had a great mythology and SOOO under utilized in games or novels. One creature that I always was fascinated with was the Wendigo. Yes. The Wendigo has been seen a lot in horror fiction, especially with the rise in popularity of werewolves and zombies. But they are still very interesting. The most famous one of course is The Wendigo by Algernon Blackwood, followed by August Derleth's Ithaqua.
This is a creature that possess humans under conditions of extreme cold and hunger and gets them to become cannibals. Also people that engaged in cannibalism were also at greater risk of possession.
The Wendigo is a spirit most times, unable to physically manifest in the world or interact with it. That is until someone in a cold part of the world begins to despair and go hungry. There are plenty of places in the world that are cold and these have hungry people, the Wendigo though chooses someone though that has or will resort to cannibalism to stay alive. Once this is done the Wendigo has access to the victim's heart.
With their heart frozen the victim becomes the physical Wendigo. They appear lean and gaunt, but taller; as if stretched out. Their hands become claws with vile blue talons. Their entire appearance becomes more feral. They appear to be something akin to a ghoul or even a starving were-wold mid transformation. Their are constantly hungry, eating all the flesh they can though they never eat their fill. Eventually the wendigo strains the host body too much and they die completely in a number of weeks. Though there are rumors of giant wendigo, whose head reach the clouds that are thousands of years old.
Wendigo
Armor Class: 3 [16]
Hit Dice: 8d8+4* (40 hp)
No. of Attacks: 2 claws / 1 bite / breath weapon
Damage: 1d6 / 1d6 / 1d6+3 / 1d8+5 (cold)
Special: breath weapon, fear, low-light vision (120’), scent, immunity to cold
Movement: 90’
No. Appearing: 1
Saves As: Fighter 9
Morale: 9
Treasure: None
Alignment: Evil (Chaos)
XP: 1,000
The wendigo is completely immune to all cold based attacks. It attacks with it's claws and bite and can emit a blast of freezing cold air up 4 times per day (save for half).
This demon shares a number of characteristics with were-creatures and undead. A cleric can turn one as a Special Undead. Once a person is infected with a wendigo they can not be cured.
Very nice.
ReplyDeleteI'm a big fan of Wendigo lore and have been wanting to stat one up for my OSR Colonial game.
I'll be swiping yours instead. :D
I've never heard of the Wendigo, but he sounds like a great character - very scary!
ReplyDeleteShort Story Ideas
You are simply amazing.
ReplyDeleteThank you for providing some blog post options - google plus allows us to read - but not to tell you how much we enjoy your work.
-g-
I've always liked that creature!
ReplyDeleteI've heard of the Wendigo, but I didn't know exactly what kind of creature it was. Interesting post!
ReplyDeleteHey, great job! I'm a fan of the Wendigo, too! May I translate this to my Italian gaming blog?
ReplyDeleteAlso, why don't you add this to http://campaignwiki.org/wiki/Monsters/HomePage
Be my guest!
ReplyDeleteWendigo is a part of an entire spectrum of cannibal spirits and secret societies across North America. In my area, around the Salish Sea, they are connected with a secret society called Hamatsa. In that context, the cannibal spirit is named Baxbaxwalanuksiwe and is accompanied by four man-eating birds. He is sometimes portrayed as having mouths all over his body. No one outside of the society knows for sure whether their rituals are literal or symbolic cannibalism (though obviously the modern society seems likely to be symbolic). I've also seen the spirits called Klail (Black) Tamanous (or Tamanawas, or Tamanewes, or several other spellings), but that phrase is more properly used to refer to the secret society among the Twana.
ReplyDelete