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| D6 | These gryphons have the front half |
|---|
| 1 | of an albatross. |
| 2 | of a potoo. |
| 3 | of a shoebill. |
| 4 | of a pileated woodpecker. |
| 5 | of a rooster. |
| 6 | of a raven. |
| D6 | These gryphons has the back half |
|---|
| 1 | of a leopard. |
| 2 | of a manul. |
| 3 | of a cougar. |
| 4 | of a lynx. |
| 5 | of a serval. |
| 6 | of a liger. |
| D6 | These gryphons are |
|---|
| 1 | celestial beings that are bestowed by the gods as mounts to those who serve the will of the heavens. |
| 2 | a biomancer's living thesis, proof of their theory of animal-grafting. |
| 3 | a noble house's heraldric eidolon force-meated into fleshly form. |
| 4 | native creatures of the flying sky-islands. |
| 5 | living artifacts of the harmonious world which preceded our discordant one, wherein living things evolved by merging into hybrids rather than splitting and speciating. |
| 6 | spat out alongside other chimeras by a repopulation vault meant to restore surface life after some catastrophe - that same catastrophe damaged the vault's directing intelligence, causing it to make things like gryphons instead of pure forms. |
| D6 | These gryphons prefer to attack prey |
|---|
| 1 | by dive-pouncing from a great height. |
| 2 | that are healthy, abhoring sickly meat. |
| 3 | in pairs, one coming in low, the other coming in high. |
| 4 | that don't back down after a threat display - there's some beastly honour in it. |
| 5 | by picking off the weakest member of a group first, to use them as bait for an ambush for the rest. |
| 6 | from behind, like a tiger, and like tigers can be confused by wearing a mask on the back of your head. |
| D6 | These gryphons are known |
|---|
| 1 | to collect various spices - barks and resins and dried berries and so on and so forth - to blend them into incomparably delicious proprietary mixtures with which they attract mates. |
| 2 | to engage in surplus killing towards horses, and thus are assumed to hate them. |
| 3 | to be excellent appraisers of jewelry, able to tell in an instant if a piece is a counterfeit or if precious metal has been debased. |
| 4 | to sing only once in their lives - at the moment of their death - and this is known to be a surpassingly beautiful song. |
| 5 | to drop tortoises shell-first onto the heads of bald men and elephants, and screech uproariously afterwards as if they find it hilarious. |
| 6 | to mark their territory by scratching geoglyphs into the earth. |
| D6 | These gryphons nest |
|---|
| 1 | amid branches sharpened and entrenched like pallisades, bristling outwards and upwards. |
| 2 | out in the open, in mounds of cloth and shiny baubles they've pilfered. |
| 3 | opportunistically, in the lairs of other creatures which they chase out. |
| 4 | in coracle-like constructions of mud and twigs which they float in lakes and ponds. |
| 5 | in tubular structures made from their spittle mixed with the blood of their prey, which they build on the undersides of overhanging cliffs. |
| 6 | atop pillars of stone, tossing their chicks over the edge in a trial-by-fire method of teaching flight - man-made towers trigger the same instinct. |
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