1. Lilitu
2. Alu
3. Gallu
Other creatures/beings:
Adze:
The adze is a vampiric being in Ewe folklore. No one knows what the adze look like in their real form, the legends do suggest however that if the adze is captured it will revert back to its true form. When in human form, the adze has the power to possess humans. The adze's influence would negatively affect the people who lived around their host. A person is suspected of being possessed in a variety of situations, including: women with brothers (especially if their brother's children fared better than their own), old people (if the young suddenly started dying and the old stayed alive) and the poor (if they envied the rich). The adze's effects are generally felt by the possessed victim's family or those the victim is jealous of.
The Analan:
The Analan are deformed spirits from the folklore of the Philippines. They have wings, and their fingers and toes point backwards. The Analan are said to take drops of menstrual blood, miscarried fetuses, afterbirth, or other reproductive waste and transform them into grotesque copies of human children and raise them as their own. According to legend the Analan live near springs in extremely fine houses, made of gold and other valuables.
Anti-April Fool:
April 2nd is Anti-April Fools Day and with it comes the evil mischief of the April Anti-Fool aka the nemesis of the April Fool who blesses us with humorous harmless pranks on April Fools Day (April 1st). Although the two are enemies they are separated temporally and confined to their respective days which for them lasts one whole year. Unlike the April Fool, the Anti-Fool can be very dangerous in nature and their so called pranks can be extremely dangerous and diabolical. The Anti-Fool has equivalent magical powers, including mind control, and enhanced superhuman abilities.
The Anti-Fool is also said to be able to mimic the faces of humans. Unlike the Fool whose powers are truly imbued within him, the Anti-Fool derives his powers from his scepter so taking it away will turn him into a normal evil human. If he is unable to recover the scepter within one minute then his face will permanently be molded into the image of his skull mask, rendering him ineffectual and unable to disgiuse himself by changing faces.
Leap Day Demon Goddess:
Chuang-Mu, the Chinese Goddess of Bedchambers, divorced her God husband Chuang-Kong some centuries ago, and decided to spice up her life by joining the demonic masses of the underworld. Generally Gods, and Demons steer clear of each other but every so often they come to an understanding. Chuang-Mu is now a rare Demon Goddess whose been on quite a destructive rampage for a great many centuries. Some of her most sinister handy works take place on the Leap Days of Leap Years.
On that fateful day she materializes as a beautiful young Asian woman who finds the most innocent guys possible. By the end of the day she seduces them with the ultimate intent on getting them to marry her in an unholy ceremony. Once joined with the Goddess in unholy matrimony they disappear just before the stroke of Midnight on March 1st. They are never seen again until the next leap day. Her victims speak of the hellish years spent with the sadistic demon in a plane of reality not of our own. She feeds of their souls to fuel her power, and gain favor with the Archdemonic hierarchy. During that day they have a chance to escape her evil clutches while she?s distracted searching for a new soul to corrupt.
Future Leap Years:
2012
2016
2020
2024
2028
2032
2036
2040
Cambion:
In medieval legend, a cambion is a half-human offspring of a demon and a human. Caliban, in The Tempest by William Shakespeare, is a cambion; Merlin from the Arthurian legend is also a cambion. Most often depicted as the offspring of an incubus and a human woman. At birth, the infant has no pulse and no breath. This continues until the child is about seven years old, where it becomes increasingly difficult to differentiate one from a human. A cambion is usually devilishly cunning and angelically beautiful, able to persuade even the most strong-hearted individual to do his or her bidding. The method of the creation of a cambion is protracted. A succubus will have sex with a human male and so acquire a sample of his sperm. This she will then pass on to an incubus. The incubus will, in his turn, transfer the sperm to a human female and thus impregnate her.
Churel:
A churel is a female ghost (witch like) out of Hindu folklore. The spirit is said to be of a low-caste woman who died either in childbirth. They are most often reported near graveyards or squalid places. Legend says that they hold young men captive until they are elderly, or else make love to them until they become so weak that they die to join the spirit. She appears either as a hideous creature with long sagging breasts and unkempt hair, or as a beautiful young woman who can charm any man. Often, her feet are backward, and she has an unnaturally long and thick black tongue; though sometimes she is reported as having no mouth at all.
Cuco:
The Cuco (or Coca; Cuca; Cucuy) is a mythical ghost-monster; equivalent to the bogeyman, found in many Hispanic countries (originally from Portugal). The name of the Cuco is widely used by parents in Spain and Latin America when children disobey their parents, do not want to go to sleep, do not want to eat, or go to prohibited places and like to wander. It is not the way the cuco looks but what he does that scares most. The cuco is a child eater and a kidnapper, it immediately devours the child and leaves no trace of her or it takes the child away to a place of no return, but it only does this to disobedient children.
Cyhyraeth:
A ghostly spirit in Welsh mythology, a disembodied moaning voice that sounds before a person's death. The noise is said to be "doleful and disagreeable", like the groans and sighs of someone deathly ill, and to sound three times (growing weaker and fainter each time) as a threefold warning before the person expires. The cyhyraeth is said to be heard before a shipwreck, accompanied by a corpse-light. Described as having a harpy-like appearance: unkempt hair and withered arms with leathery wings, long black teeth and pale corpse-like features. She approaches the window of the person about to die by night and calls their name, or travels invisibly beside them and utters her cry when they approach a stream or crossroads.
Dhampir:
A Dhampir in Balkan folklore is the child of a vampire and a human. The term is sometimes spelled dhampyre, dhamphir, or dhampyr. Dhampir powers are similar to those of vampires, but without the usual weaknesses. Dhampirs are supposed to be adept at detecting and killing vampires. Some traditions specify signs by which the children of a vampire can be recognized. Serbian legends state they have untamed dark or black hair and lack a shadow. In Bulgarian folklore, possible indications include being "very dirty," having a soft body, no nails and bones, and "a deep mark on the back, like a tail." A pronounced nose was often a sign, as were larger than normal ears, teeth or eyes.
Draugr:
An undead creature from Norse mythology, a subset of Germanic mythology. Draugr were believed to live in the graves of the dead. As the graves of important men often contained a good amount of wealth, the draugr jealously guards his treasures, even after death. Draugr possess superhuman strength, can increase their size at will, and carry the unmistakable stench of decay. They are undead Vikings that retain some semblance of intelligence, and who delight in the suffering that they cause. The draugr's ability to increase its size also increased its weight, and the body of the draugr was described as being extremely heavy.
Langsuyar:
In Malaysian folklore a Langsuyar is the malevolent ghost of a woman who died in childbirth. She resents having her life and her child taken from her and wants others to share her fate. She appears as a woman with very long hair and extremely long nails that she uses to disembowel her victims, especially pregnant women. In the form of a woman she uses a hole in the back of her neck to suck the blood of children. She is able to become pregnant and may give birth to an "elfin child," she is also known to drain men of their vigor or castrate them. When they are not feeding on blood they enjoy eating fish.
Lake Zombies:
The natural bad luck that materializes on Friday The 13th usually results in a high level of ghost, and poltergeist activity. However on this particular 13th day of September 2013 (2019) legend indicates that there will be an unprecedented amount of lake zombie activity. Lake zombies are a rare form of zombie that are the result of the unrecovered bodies of drowning victims. For reasons unknown these victims rotting corpses will reanimate, and surface. The greatest number are will be seen in the Great Lakes, specifically Mackinac Island (an island and resort area covering 3.8 square miles in land area, part of the U.S. state of Michigan), due to the ease of a body not being found in their vast murky waters. The risk of rising from rivers is minimal since the bodies are usually washed into lakes, or seas.
Sea-Vamp:
An elementary spirit of the water, particularly those that live in polluted bodies of water. We can see them but they cannot see us, we are like fairies to them. However, under the right conditions they can develop a kind of spiritual sight, where they can see and interact with humans. They are very anxious to enter the human realm in order to obtain a human soul. If they die before they receive a soul they will disappear forever rather than existing forever as the human soul does.
A child produced by its coupling with a mortal man will be inhuman monster with a human soul, the father should always be careful not to offend the mother near a body of water or their child (or children) will revert to their mothers true form and disappear into their element. Every form of water has its own tribe of Sea-Vamps. They exist within the oceans, the seas and ponds, lakes, rivers, wells, waterfalls, even tears. They can therefor come into being through any of these source, as long as these have a polluted equivalent. For instance; tears, would have to be the result of sadness or great loss, and not tears of joy etc.
Baalberith: (characters call on him for information)
Chief secretary of Hell, head of its public archives, and the demon who tempted men to blasphemy and murder. When seated among the princes of Hell, he was usually seen as a pontiff. He tells things of the past, present and future with true answers; he can also turn all metals into gold, give dignities to men and confirm them. He was also quite a voluble sort: Baalberith once possessed a nun and in the process of the exorcism, Baalberith volunteered not only his own name and the names of all the other demons possessing her, but the names of the saints who would be most effective in opposing them.
To speak with him the conjurer must wear a silver ring and put it before his face in the same form as it is needed in Beleth's case. He is depicted as a red-skinned soldier wearing red clothes, a golden crown, and riding a horse. His power is strongest in June.
Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/RolePlayGateway
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