Gar, Giant
Giant gars are aquatic animals.
An animal is a living,
nonhuman creature, usually a vertebrate with no magical abilities and no innate
capacity for language or culture.
Animals have low-light vision.
Animals breathe, eat, and sleep.
Aquatic creatures are always good swimmers. An aquatic
creature can breathe water. It cannot breathe air unless it is amphibious.
Although typical gars are frightening enough, tales of
enormous giant gars that lurk in the deepest rivers and lakes persist in many regions.
These creatures are true monsters, often growing to lengths of 30 feet or more
and capable of swallowing a horse and rider in a single gulp. Fortunately,
giant gars are much rarer than their smaller kin.
Giants gars are often kept
as pets and guard animals by aquatic creatures such as merrows, scrags (aquatic
trolls) and the rare seahags that dwell in freshwater dens.
If giant gars bite, they deal normal damage and attempt to
start a grapple without provoking an attack of opportunity. Grab can only be
used against targets of a size equal to or smaller than the giant gar. Giant
gars can conduct the grapple normally, or simply use their bite to hold the
opponent. If they choose to do the latter, it’s harder to make and maintain the
grapple, but do not gain the grappled condition themselves. Each successful
grapple check they make automatically deals bite damage.
If a giant gar has an opponent grappled in its mouth, it can
attempt to pin the opponent. If it succeeds, it swallows its prey, and the
opponent takes bite damage. The opponent can be up to one size category smaller
than the giant gar. Being swallowed causes a creature to take continuous
damage. A swallowed creature keeps the grappled condition, while the giant gar
does not. A swallowed creature can try to cut its way free with any light
slashing or piercing weapon, or it can just try to escape the grapple. If a
swallowed creature cuts its way out, the giant gar cannot use swallow whole
again until the damage is healed. If the swallowed creature escapes the
grapple, success puts it back in the attacker’s mouth, where it may be bitten
or swallowed again.
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