This eight-legged lizard has a round, lamprey-like mouth full of teeth, and its scales slowly change color to match its surroundings.
Water Wraith CR 2
XP 600
CN Large magical beast (aquatic)
Init +5; Senses darkvision 60 ft., low-light vision; Perception +5
AC 16, touch 11, flat-footed 14 (+1 Dex, +1 dodge, +5 natural, â1 size)
hp 19 (3d10+3)
Fort +4, Ref +4, Will +2
Speed 30 ft., swim 40 ft.
Melee bite +4 (1d8+2 plus attach), 4 claws +4 (1d6+2)
Special Attacks blood drain (1d2 Constitution), rend (2 claws, 1d3+3)
Str 14, Dex 13, Con 13, Int 3, Wis 12, Cha 6
Base Atk +3; CMB +6 (+10 when attached); CMD 18 (30 vs. trip)
Feats Dodge, Improved Initiative
Skills Perception +5, Stealth +1, Swim +14
SQ amphibious, expressive chameleon
Once per round as a free action, a water wraith can change its color to any of its own choosing. A water wraith using this ability to camouflage itself gains a +8 bonus on Stealth checks.
Environment warm rivers
Organization solitary, pair, or swarm (3â12)
Treasure none
Water wraiths are eight-legged amphibious lizards with the ability to change their color at will. This chameleon-like ability, combined with their superior intelligence, makes them coveted as exotic pets or guard animals. They are imported throughout their home continent for those virtues. Patient and cunning hunters, water wraiths prefer to lie still in ponds and rivers until their prey comes within range. When an unfortunate creature does, these fearless hunters strike, their webbed claws propelling them quickly forward either on land or in water. Once their toothy, eel-like mouths attach to victims, water wraiths quickly begin to bleed them dry.
Water wraiths depicted here represent the upper end of size limitations for captive specimens. In captivity, these creatures are deliberately kept underfed and rarely grow beyond 2 feet in length. Water wraiths encountered wild or kept on an unrestricted diet, grow to even more massive sizes. Strange superstitions are born out of water wraiths’ color-changing powers. This changeability is not just an automatic defensive response, but can be a matter of self-expression, or even strategy and tactics on the part of the creature. Water wraiths often express likes and dislikes with an outward display of color: bright red is frequently associated with hunger, and dull green represents dislike or lack of interest. Some small communities actually utilize water wraiths in a primitive system of jurisprudence. The authorities release the accused into a pen with the creatures, then interpret the reactions of the lizards as signs of guilt or innocence. All too frequently, the wraiths declare the accused innocent by virtue of being delicious. Water wraiths find full-blooded elves to be unpalatable, but show no aversion to their half-elven cousins. Water wraiths are not limited to changing color in response to base drives, however. Sneaky and cunning, they do not hesitate to blend into their surroundings despite their emotional state if it affords them an advantage in hunting.
Pathfinder Campaign Setting: Inner Sea Bestiary © 2012, Paizo Publishing, LLC; Authors: Jim Groves, James Jacobs, Rob McCreary, Erik Mona, Jason Nelson, Patrick Renie, F. Wesley Schneider, James L. Sutter, Russ Taylor, and Greg A. Vaughan.