General Behavior of Followers
This section pertains to animal followers, as do the three sections which
follow--Training Animal Followers, Follower Loyalty, and Parting Company.
Information relevant to human and demihuman followers can be found in the last section
of this chapter.
What exactly does an animal follower do, anyway?
At first, animal followers do little more than that--they follow. While an
avian follower may perch on the ranger's shoulder for a few miles or a dog may
scout up ahead, for the most part, followers linger behind, keeping perhaps 10-20
feet between themselves and the ranger.
In general, an animal follower attempts to accompany the ranger wherever he
goes. If the ranger enters a cave, the follower goes in after him. If the ranger
paddles a canoe, the follower attempts to swim alongside. If the follower can't
swim, it waits on shore for the ranger to return. If the follower is too big
to squeeze through an underground passage, it may surface and wait for the
ranger outside.
Likewise, if a ranger moves at a pace faster than the follower can maintain,
the follower will attempt to pursue as best it can. When a ranger interrupts his
travels--for instance, if he stops to camp--he may give the lagging follower
enough time to catch up. If a follower is unable to rejoin the ranger because of
a lost trail (the animal hasn't seen the ranger in several days and can no
longer track him), physical barriers (the animal is incapable of following the
ranger across a vast river) or inhospitable terrain (a seafaring ranger has left
for the shore, abandoning a water-breathing follower), the follower is
considered to be released; see the Parting Company section below for details.
Routine Activities
For the most part, an animal follower can take care of itself. Assuming
there's an adequate supply of game or edible vegetation in the area, the animal will
hunt or graze as necessary to keep itself fed. It will find its own water,
keep itself groomed, and rest when tired. If the ranger marches by day and rests
by night, nocturnal animals will either reverse their normal sleeping patterns
and sleep when the ranger sleeps, or sleep by day and catch up with the ranger
in the evening.
In extreme circumstances, an animal follower may depend on the ranger for
routine care. If an animal follower accompanies a ranger into a city or other area
where it's unable to hunt, the ranger will probably have to supply food. In a
hot desert, a ranger may need to share his water. Wounded or ailing animals
sometimes require medical attention. If an animal fails to receive adequate care,
it may abandon the ranger (see the Parting Company section).
As an animal becomes more attached to a ranger, it may require extra attention
or reassurance. Usually, an animal lets the ranger know when it needs
attention by rubbing against him, frolicking in front of him, or whining incessantly.
Usually, a ranger can soothe an anxious animal follower by playing with it for a
few minutes, offering some comforting words, or stroking its fur. If the
ranger makes a habit of ignoring a follower, it may abandon him.
Procreation
Most healthy animals have a powerful instinct to procreate. On occasion, a
follower will disappear into the wilderness to seek a mate. Usually, the follower
returns in a few hours, or at most, a few days. However, so strong is the urge
that the follower may abandon the ranger altogether if it has to travel long
distances to find a suitable partner. Also, the quest for a mate is not without
risk; a male follower may die while fighting a rival for the attentions of a
desirable female (which may account for why some followers mysteriously disappear
and never come back). But more often than not, a follower will complete its
liaison without incident, rejoining its ranger unharmed and content.
Should a female animal follower give birth, the offspring don't automatically
become followers. Initially, offspring are considered "followers" of the
parent, as their relationship with their mother more or less parallels the mother's
relationship with the ranger. As the offspring mature, they may wander away to
start lives of their own, or they may stay and become followers, as decided by
the DM. Offspring who become followers count against the ranger's normal limit.
Combat
Animal followers will rarely defend their rangers against attack unless
trained to do so (see the Training Followers section below), especially if the opposition is supernatural or uses fire. In
general, a follower is mainly concerned with its own safety, fighting only
when necessary to protect itself. An exceptionally violent animal may relish any
opportunity to attack, and some will stand guard over or attempt to drag away
their incapacitated ranger, but most of the time, a follower is more likely to
take cover or retreat than engage in combat. The DM determines the combat
reactions of a follower just as he would for any animal in the game.
Communication
When a ranger acquires an animal follower, he gains no special way of
communicating with it. Unless the ranger trains the creature to respond to specific
vocal sounds or physical signals, the follower passively accompanies the ranger on
his travels, oblivious to his commands.
Reactions to Others
Animal followers feel loyal and friendly to their rangers. Most animal
followers would no more harm their rangers than they would their own mothers. A
follower would be unlikely to retaliate violently if the ranger mistreated it;
instead, the follower would simply leave.
The ranger's presence has a calming influence on wild animal followers which
tempers their reactions to the ranger's other companions. The animal followers
will generally leave other player characters alone, so long as the PCs keep
their distance and don't antagonize them. However, if a PC comes too close to a
lion, tiger, or other wild animal follower, the follower may respond with a
warning snarl or even a swipe of the paw. If the PC doesn't get the message, the
follower may attack. Such an attack continues until the PC withdraws or the ranger
intervenes. If the ranger has trained the follower to attack only when ordered,
fellow PCs won't have to worry about assaults. Otherwise, the ranger's
companions are advised to keep their distance. Even a ranger will not approach a
predatory follower just after it has made a kill.
Naturally docile animals, such as sheep and mice, pose no threat to the party.
Neither do domesticated creatures, such as farm animals and pets. Unless a
trained animal is responding to its ranger's commands, the DM will decide how
docile followers react, exactly as he does for followers that are wild animals.
Wild animal followers respond to non-player characters in much the same way as
they do the ranger's companions; that is, they ignore NPCs who keep their
distance and make no hostile actions, but may attack NPCs who get too close or
threaten them. Docile animals respond timidly to unfamiliar NPCs, possibly cowering
behind the ranger or seeking cover.
A ranger's calming influence also extends to followers who would normally
consider each other predator and prey. If a deer and a lion are both among a
ranger's followers, they co-exist harmoniously so long as they remain with the
ranger. Though it's unlikely the pair would cuddle up together to go to sleep,
neither would the lion eat the deer. At the same time, the lion follower would
consider all other deer fair game, hunting them as necessary to satisfy its hunger.
Should the ranger abandon or dismiss his lion and deer followers, the animals
would shortly revert to their natural states, and the deer might stand a good
chance of becoming the lion's next meal.
Disadvantages
Animal followers provide many benefits to rangers, but there can be drawbacks
as well. Here are a few typical complications, which the DM can use to add
color to a campaign, serve as story springboards, or enliven an otherwise routine
encounter.
· Some animals attract predators. A rat follower could attract a giant snake, or
a boar follower might lure a hungry dragon. The ranger and his companions
could be ambushed along with the followers.
· Certain followers may be sought by hunters and collectors. A weasel follower
with lustrous ivory fur might prove irresistible to unprincipled sportsmen. A
renegade wizard could target the party to get her hands on the feathers of a
black owl follower, which she needs for a spell component. Rustlers might assault a
party just to steal a ranger's horse follower.
· The presence of unusual followers may make NPCs less likely to deal with the
party. A traveler may hesitate to share information when a growling bear lurks
in the background. A giant eagle fluttering overhead could discourage a merchant
from trading with the PCs. The DM may modify an NPC's reaction by as much as
-4 when disconcerting, threatening, or obnoxious animal followers are present.
· Some animals have habits which can make life uncomfortable, if not downright
miserable, for the ranger and his companions. A filthy hyena follower might
smell so bad that it makes the PCs' eyes burn. A parrot follower may insist on
keeping the party up all night with its incessant chatter. A curious squirrel
follower could pick the pocket of a slumbering wizard, steal a crucial spell
component, then bury it in the forest.
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