Umbral Displacer Beast* (CR 6)
Large Undead (Incorporeal and Augmented Magical Beast)
Alignment: Always chaotic evil
Initiative: +4; Senses: darkvision 60 ft., low-light vision, Listen +6, and Spot +6
AC: 10 (-1 size, +1 deflection), touch 10, flat-footed 10
Hit Dice: 6d12 (39 hp)
Fort +2, Ref +6, Will +7
Speed: Fly 40 ft. (perfect)
Space: 10 ft./5 ft. (10 ft. with incorporeal touch)
Base Attack +3; Grapple -
Attack: Incorporeal touch +7 melee
Full Attack: Incorporeal touch +7 melee
Damage: Incorporeal touch 1d8 Strength
Special Attacks/Actions: Strength damage
Abilities: Str -, Dex 19, Con -, Int 1, Wis 14, Cha 10
Special Qualities: Create spawn, displacement, incorporeal traits, resistance to ranged attacks, undead traits, +2 turn resistance
Feats: Alertness; Dodge; Stealthy
Skills: Hide +12, Listen +6, Move Silently +9, and Spot +6
Advancement: 7-9 HD (Large); 10-18 HD (Huge)
Climate/Terrain: Any land and underground
Organization: Solitary, pair, gang (3-4), or clutch (2-4 plus 2-7 shadows)
Treasure/Possessions: None
Source:
Libris Mortis
Create Spawn (Su): Any humanoid reduced to Strength 0 by an umbral displacer beast rises as a shadow under the control of its killer in 1d4 rounds.
Displacement (Su): A light-bending glamer continually surrounds an umbral displacer beast, making it difficult to surmise the creature's true location. Any melee or ranged attack directed at it has a 50% miss chance unless the attacker can locate the beast by some means other than sight. A true seeing effect allows the user to see the beast's position, but see invisibility has no effect.
Inescapable Craving: An umbral displacer beast has an inescapable craving for Strength, which it satisfies by using its Strength damage ability.
Resistance to Ranged Attacks (Su): An umbral displacer beast has a +2 resistance bonus on saves against any ranged magical attack that specifically targets it (except for ranged touch attacks).
Strength Damage (Su): The touch of an umbral displacer beast deals 1d8 points of Strength damage to a living foe. A creature reduced to Strength 0 by an umbral displacer beast dies.
Skills: An umbral displacer beast has a +8 racial bonus on Hide checks, thanks to its displacement ability.
Umbral displacer beasts rely on their incorporeal nature and their natural displacement to avoid most attacks. Due to their limited Intelligence, they don't typically take full advantage of their incorporeal nature (such as attacking from above).
An umbral creature looks like a shadowy version of a material creature, and it may easily be mistaken for a living creature from the Plane of Shadow. Umbral creatures are difficult to see in dark or gloomy areas, but they stand out starkly in brightly illuminated places.
Natural enemies of all that live, umbral creatures are aggressive and predatory. They are quick to strike and make short work of those unprepared to deal with them.
Incorporeal Subtype
Some creatures are incorporeal by nature, while others (such as those that become ghosts) can acquire the incorporeal subtype. An incorporeal creature has no physical body. It can be harmed only by other incorporeal creatures, magic weapons or creatures that strike as magic weapons, and spells, spell-like abilities, or supernatural abilities. It has immunity to all nonmagical attack forms. Even when hit by spells, including touch spells or magic weapons, it has a 50% chance to ignore any damage from a corporeal source (except for positive energy, negative energy, force effects such as magic missile, or attacks made with ghost touch weapons). Non-damaging spell attacks affect incorporeal creatures normally unless they require corporeal targets to function (such as the spell implosion) or they create a corporeal effect that incorporeal creatures would normally ignore (such as a web or wall of stone spell). Although it is not a magical attack, a hit with holy water has a 50% chance of affecting an incorporeal undead creature.
An incorporeal creature's natural weapons affect both in incorporeal and corporeal targets, and pass through (ignore) corporeal natural armor, armor, and shields, although deflection bonuses and force effects (such as mage armor) work normally against it. Attacks made by an incorporeal creature with a nonmagical melee weapon have no effect on corporeal targets, and any melee attack an incorporeal creature makes with a magic weapon against a corporeal target has a 50% miss chance except for attacks it makes with a ghost touch weapon, which are made normally (no miss chance).
Any equipment worn or carried by an incorporeal creature is also incorporeal as long as it remains in the creature's possession. An object that the creature relinquishes loses its incorporeal quality (and the creature loses the ability to manipulate the object). If an incorporeal creature uses a thrown weapon or a ranged weapon, the projectile becomes corporeal as soon as it is fired and can affect a corporeal target normally (no miss chance). Magic items possessed by an incorporeal creature work normally with respect to their effects on the creature or another target. Similarly, spells cast by an incorporeal creature affect corporeal creatures normally.
An incorporeal creature has no natural armor bonus but has a deflection bonus equal to its Charisma bonus (always at least +1, even if the creature's Charisma score does not normally provide a bonus).
An incorporeal creature can enter or pass through solid object but must remain adjacent to the object's exterior, and so cannot pass entirely through an object whose space is larger than its own. It can sense the presence of creatures or objects a square adjacent to its current location, but enemies have total concealment from an incorporeal creature that is inside an object. In order to see clearly and attack normally, a incorporeal creature must emerge. An incorporeal creature inside an object has total cover, but when it attacks a creature outside the object it only has cover, so a creature outside with a readied action could strike at it as it attacks. An incorporeal creature cannot pass through a force effect.
Incorporeal creatures pass through and operate in water as easily as they do in air. Incorporeal creatures cannot fall or take falling damage. Incorporeal creature cannot make trip or grapple attacks against corporeal creatures, nor can they be tripped or grappled by such creatures. In fact, they cannot take any physical action that would move or manipulate a corporeal being or its equipment, nor are they subject to such actions. Incorporeal creatures have no weight and do not set off traps that are triggered by weight.
An incorporeal creature moves silently and cannot be heard with Listen checks if it doesn't wish to be. It has no Strength score, so its Dexterity modifier applies to both its melee attacks and its ranged attacks. Non-visual senses, such as scent and blindsight, are either ineffective or only partly effective with regard to incorporeal creatures. Incorporeal creatures have an innate sense of direction and can move at full speed even when they cannot see.