Mammal, Herd
| Camel
| Cattle
| Buffalo
| Antelope
| Sheep
|
CLIMATE/ TERRAIN:
| Any land
| Any land
| Tropical and
| Tropical and
| Any land
|
|
|
| temperate plains
| temperate plains
|
|
FREQUENCY:
| Common
| Common
| Uncommon
| Common
| Common
|
ORGANIZATION:
| Herd
| Herd
| Herd
| Herd
| Herd
|
ACTIVITY CYCLE:
| Day
| Day
| Day
| Day
| Day
|
DIET:
| Herbivore
| Herbivore
| Herbivore
| Herbivore
| Herbivore
|
INTELLIGENCE:
| Animal to
| Semi-
| Semi- (2-4)
| Animal (1)
| Animal (1)
|
| semi- (1-4)
| (2-4)
|
|
|
|
TREASURE:
| Nil
| Nil
| Nil
| Nil
| Nil
|
ALIGNMENT:
| Nil
| Neutral
| Nil
| Nil
| Nil
|
NO. APPEARING:
| 1-12
| 20-200
| 4-24 (4d6)
| 4-24 (4d6)
| 10-100
|
ARMOR CLASS:
| 7
| 7
| 7
| 7
| 7
|
MOVEMENT:
| 21
| 15
| 15
| 24
| 12
|
HIT DICE:
| 3
| 1-4
| 5
| 2
| 2
|
THAC0:
| 17
| 17
| 15
| 19
| 19
|
NO. OF ATTACKS:
| 1
| 1
| 2
| 1
| 1
|
DAMAGE/ATTACK:
| 1-4
| 1-4
| 1-8/1-8
| 1-4
| 1-4
|
SPECIAL ATTACKS:
| Spitting
| Stampede
| Charge
| Stampede
| Charge
|
SPECIAL DEFENSES:
| Nil
| Nil
| Head is AC 3
| Nil
| Nil
|
MAGIC RESISTANCE:
| Nil
| Nil
| Nil
| Nil
| Nil
|
SIZE:
| L (8' tall)
| L (8' long)
| L (5' at shoulder)
| M (5' tall)
| M (5' long)
|
MORALE:
| Unreliable
| Unreliable
| Average (10)
| Unreliable (3)
| Unreliable
|
| (3)
| (4)
|
|
| (3)
|
XP VALUE:
| 65
| 15-120
| 175
| 3535
|
|
Herd animals live in all climates and terrain, from freezing tundra (bactrian
camel) to temperate hills (wild cattle) to tropical plains (antelope). Though
normally passive, herd animals can be dangerous when angered or frightened.
Herd animals are four-legged hoofed mammals covered with hair -- thick fur for
buffalo, curly wool for sheep, and short, coarse hair for camels, antelope,
and sheep. Male cattle, buffalo, antelope, and sheep have sharp horns. A camel's
humps (one hum for dromedaries, two for bactrian) enable it to go without food
or water for up to two weeks.
Combat: Most herd animals attack by biting. Buffalo defend themselves with their
horns, usually attacking if approached too closely (6' or less); if charging from a
distance of at least 40', a buffalo does 3-18 hp of impaling damage plus 1-4 hp
of trampling damage. Nasty-tempered camels have a 50% chance of spitting at
persons attempting to ride them or use them for pack animals; the victim of a
spit attack has a 25% chance of being blinded for 1-3 rounds. Cattle, antelope,
and sheep generally flee from danger, but will attack if cornered or threatened.
A male antelope or sheep defending his herd will charge, inflicting 1-4 hp of
butting damage if charging from at least 40'. Male cattle are 75% likely to
attack if intruders approach before the herd has a chance to escape.
If frightened by intruders, there is a 25% that the entire herd will stampede.
If a herd stampedes, roll 2d4 for each creature in the path of the stampede
who does not take cover (such as by hiding in a tree or behind a rock pile or
wall). This is the number of herd animals trampling the exposed creature.
Trampling causes either 1-4 hp of damage (camel, cattle, antelope, and sheep) or 1-6 hp
of damage (buffalo) per herd animal trampling.
Habitat/Society: Herd animals graze on open terrain, migrating to a new territory when the food
supply of the old has been depleted. Herd size varies from a family of four
buffalo to a commercial flock of 1,000 sheep. The largest and oldest male usually
serves as the leader, directing the movement his herd and watching for
predators. Herd animals do not collect treasure.
Ecology: Herd animals eat grass, grains, and shrubbery. They are the favored prey of
carnivores, including lions, tigers, and dragons. Man often domesticates herd
animals for their meat, milk, fur (blankets and clothing), and skin (shoes and
tents). Dried droppings of herd animals can be burned for fuel.
Index