Wednesday, October 9, 2019

The Dream Eater




Eater of Ideas


Stats as bear.

"[Wizard], you wake from troubled, unremembered dreams. Your spells have not come back during the night."

Thus begins the feeding of a baku.

The baku is about the size of a small bear, with tawny fur, a short trunk, blunt hand-span tusks, and wide, soft paws. They are nocturnal, so much so that even their spirits go into hiding in the hours of the sun. They are not normally harmful, often invoked to grant children a good night's sleep free of nightmares. This they do admirably, but they are gluttonous creatures and when presented with an unprotected meal they will overindulge. Not from malice, mind, but preparation for the great hibernation to come, when there will be no thoughts to eat nor dreams to sup upon for an age and an age again atop that.

The baku will feast on ideas in this order.

  1. Bad dreams - Target notices nothing beyond a restful night's sleep.
  2. Stored spells - Target wakes up groggy, forgetful. All spells are gone.
  3. Sleep itself - Target regains no health from sleep, but are too fatigued to do anything productive with the nighttime hours. Exhaustion begins to take up inventory slots.
  4. Creative Ideas - Target finds themselves in a complete mental haze, unable to do anything beyond basic actions without intense mental effort.
  5. Drive to Action -  Target must expend great mental effort to even get up out of bed and eat, much less anything else.
  6. Human connections - Relationships shrivel up and collapse.
  7. Will to Live - If the baku is not found and defeated before sunset, the target will die.
Hunting down a baku can only be done after complete sundown, when it will manifest in a body. Using someone as bait is recommended, but the actual fight will require an exorcism to complete. A true exorcism will require either a scroll written by a skilled priest, or a sword forged at an auspicious time. If the exorcism is nor performed, the baku will reform come the next moonrise.

8 comments:

  1. Loss of writing mojo is a terrible thing, so have a monster that steals your mojo.

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    Replies
    1. It is a good monster. Easy to imagine all kinds of situations it can cause troubles.
      It is possible one is near me.

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    2. I think i have driven mine away for the time being.

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    3. This is very nice to know. I hope it will stay away.

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  2. Is it weird that despite the description, I pictured it like an anteater, using its long tongue like a hook to snag those pesky-to-reach spells in the wizard's brain?

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