This transparent blue formation of ice is as forbidding as the serpent it resembles.
Freezing Flow CR 4
XP 1,200
N Large ooze (cold, water)
Init â5; Senses blindsense 60 ft.; Perception â5
AC 16, touch 12, flat-footed 13 (+3 Dex, +4 natural, â1 size)
hp 47 (5d8+25)
Fort +6, Ref +3, Will â4
Immune cold, ooze traits
Weaknesses vulnerable to fire
Speed 20 ft., swim 20 ft.
Melee slam +6 (2d4+6/19â20 plus 1d6 cold and grab)
Space 10 ft.; Reach 5 ft.
Special Attacks constrict (2d4+6 plus 1d6 cold), jagged slam, numbing touch
Str 18, Dex 16, Con 20, Int â, Wis 1, Cha 1
Base Atk +3; CMB +8; CMD 13
Skills Swim +12
SQ crystalline
As a creature of living ice, a freezing flow is difficult to discern from its surroundings in icy and snowy land environments and when in icy water. A successful DC 15 Perception check is required to notice a freezing flow in these environments. Any creature that fails to notice a freezing flow and walks into it automatically takes damage as if struck by the ooze’s slam attack.
A freezing flow’s slam attack is a slashing tendril of crystalline ice. It deals slashing damage instead of bludgeoning damage and has a critical range of 19â20.
Each time a freezing flow deals cold damage with its slam attack or constrict ability, the target must succeed at a DC 17 Fortitude save or be staggered with numbing cold for 1 round. The save DC is Constitution-based.
Environment any cold
Organization solitary
Treasure none
It’s believed that these strange frozen oozes are created when a particularly cold arctic area has prolonged exposure to ice from the Elemental Planes. Rising seemingly spontaneously from such a supernatural deep freeze, freezing flows shamble forth in search of prey, hungry for the life energy of warm-blooded creatures, which they somehow metabolize.
Within their native habitat, these oozes are particularly difficult to spot. While they lack intelligence, they have an instinct to stay put within frozen ice flows, on the icy surface of frozen lakes and rivers, or within areas of permafrost, waiting for prey to stumble upon them. This instinct may be tied to the fact that they can stay relatively dormant for decades or even centuries, but eventually they need the life energy of warm-blooded creatures to fuel their strange locomotion. Since they dwell in unforgiving and underpopulated areas, it is easier for them to conserve energy and wait for prey rather than to try to track down warm-blooded creatures.
After feeding, or when fully fed, these creatures tend to ignore other creatures unless attacked. Though freezing flows’ crystalline construction can give the illusion that they are brittle, nothing is further from the truth. When a freezing flow slams into flesh, it does so with enough power to break bone, and it is cold enough to numb flesh, causing its prey to convulse in a fit of shivers.
When hungry, the only things freezing flows avoid are fire and high temperatures. Such things can still melt and damage a freezing flow, though it typically requires more heat to diminish a freezing flow into a puddle of water than it takes to melt a patch of normal ice 10 times the ooze’s size.
Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Bestiary 4 © 2013, Paizo Publishing, LLC; Authors: Dennis Baker, Jesse Benner, Savannah Broadway, Ross Byers, Adam Daigle, Tim Hitchcock, Tracy Hurley, James Jacobs, Matt James, Rob McCreary, Jason Nelson, Tom Phillips, Stephen Radney-MacFarland, Sean K Reynolds, F. Wesley Schneider, Tork Shaw, and Russ Taylor.