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Bugbear

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Bugbear
Bruthazmus, a bugbear.
(Creature)

Bugbears are monstrous nocturnal goblinoid hunters whose prey is anything that can experience the full height of fear and terror, though they prefer weak and easily terrified humans.12

Appearance

A bugbear is a bipedal goblinoid. Short, dark fur spreads all across their powerful, hulking frame. Their large ears hang loosely from their skull, and their eyes are unnaturally large—almost alien.3 Bugbears often reach nearly 7 feet in height,[citation needed] though they prefer to hunt and stalk with a stoop that makes them look considerably shorter and more bestial.3 They weigh more than most humans, with some even reaching 400 pounds.[citation needed]

Habitat

Bugbears lurk near humans, from darkened forests at the edge of villages to shadowy abandoned houses nestled in busy city districts.4 Most bugbears prowl in cooperative gangs and lair in remote hills and forests.2

Bugbears are particularly common in the barely settled wilderness of Varisia, where they prey on lonely homesteads or poorly protected caravans. They have inhabited the Isle of Kortos since before the ancient forests were razed, and now haunt Absalom's streets as monstrous serial killers.5

Bugbears also once stalked the Mierani Forest before the elves abandoned it prior to Earthfall, and left either to pursue other prey or after being driven out by something more threatening.5

Ecology

Bugbears battle a band of elves.

Bugbears devote their every waking moment to the hunt. Rather than hunting creatures, bugbears hunt fear, going to excruciating lengths to wring every drop of fear from their victims. For them, terror is an intoxicant more addictive than any drug.6

Bugbears are incredibly stealthy for their size and use this advantage to play mind games, causing bumps and noises in the night and opening doors and windows in settlements.32 They normally escalate these games by abducting a target's loved ones out from under their noses, then leaving bloody hints of their fate, like knocked-out teeth or a bloody finger. The bugbear then watches the ensuing terror before leaving the victim's mangled body someplace where it will soon be found.4

After a particularly vicious and successful hunt, bugbears take trophies. Sometimes the only trappings of civilisation they have are their weapons, armour, and bloodied trophy collection.23 Another common bugbear memento is a grisly necklace fashioned from the severed ears of their favourite victims.3

Bugbear life is merciless, short, and violent. Most bugbears only live 20 or so years, though the deadliest among them can kill hundreds in this short span.3 Obsessed with the hunt, bugbears rarely mate, judging their partner's worthiness by the scars they mark themselves with, each telling the unique tale of their most impressive hunt.4

When a bugbear gives birth, it is usually to twins or triplets, and sometimes more, although the births grow more dangerous with each additional child. Mothers frequently die during childbirth, but this proves little hindrance as their children's bloodthirsty instincts are strong from birth, and most happily hunt humans within two years and reach their full size in five. Even if their mother survives childbirth, young bugbears are soon abandoned, and only the most fearless and brutal survive to adulthood.3

Society

A bugbear warrior.

Bugbears tend to be too devoted to the hunt to have time for much else.7 According to one myth, this may be because of their origins: the first bugbear was supposedly born to goblin parents. Soon after birth, the bugbear proved too dangerous even for goblins, torturing fellow children and murdering many members of the tribe, and so it was banished. Some claim these mysterious births still happen, with adventurers finding entire goblin villages completely deserted but showing hints of atrocious violence.4

Bugbears, most of whom natively speak the goblin language,8 seem to loathe the company of all other creatures and are not particularly keen on other bugbears. While they form groups,7 these strained communities rarely last. Still, these small groups have given way to some odd social practices.4

Scarification is almost universal amongst bugbears, and after particularly impressive kills a bugbear gives itself a unique scar, which other bugbears can "read" to learn of the bugbear's achievements.4

Bugbears also produce a unique alcohol called Bramble-Sick Brandy made from a bramble called Tomb Herald. The concoction, which is nauseating to humans, enhances a bugbear's ability to hunt.3 As the largest of goblin-kind, bugbears sometimes force their smaller relatives into servitude, especially the easily cowed goblins. The bugbear's violent nature tends to make these groups short-lived. Some smarter hobgoblin commanders try to utilise the bugbear's savagery as front-line fighters, or failing that as a terrifying diversion to release against an enemy.4

Bugbears worship various demon lords, particularly Lamashtu, Shax,9 and Andirifkhu.10

On Golarion

See also: Category:Bugbear/Inhabitants
A bugbear antipaladin.

Bugbears plagues many regions of Golarion. Locations of notable bugbear activity include:

Variants

Bugbears easily adapt to new hunting grounds, and for almost every environment where there is human prey, there seems to be a type of bugbear adapted to hunt them.

  • Kardans are not adapted to any particular environment, but instead seem to be even stealthier than regular bugbears, even gaining supernatural abilities allowing them to hide in plain sight.17
  • In more wintry climes, wikkawaks stalk their prey across frozen wildernesses, leaving nary a footprint in the snow when passing.5
  • In the swamps and tropical waterways of Garund, strange murds utilise their ability to move like mud to by pass barriers and infiltrate homes.5
  • Human cities have given rise to a new variety of bugbear known as the slate-stalker, which is perfectly adapted to hunting in the populous regions that humankind considers safe.5
  • The rarest variety of bugbear is the koblak. Born dead and somehow returning to life, sometimes hours after their birth, koblaks posses an unnatural affinity for death. These bugbears are seemingly immortal, as death rarely claims them and they can survive for centuries. They are also by far the most powerful of all the varieties of bugbears.5
  • Bugbears sometimes rise as a particularly hateful kind of incorporeal undead known as frightful haunters who, like bugbears, prey on the fear of their victims.18

References

Paizo Inc. published a major section about bugbears in Monster Codex.

For additional as-yet unincorporated sources about this subject, see the Meta page.

  1. Logan Bonner, et al. “Monsters A-Z” in Bestiary, 47. Paizo Inc., 2019
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Logan Bonner, et al. Bugbear” in Monster Core, 47. Paizo Inc., 2024
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 Wolfgang Baur, et al. Classic Monsters Revisited, 5. Paizo Inc., 2008
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 Wolfgang Baur, et al. Classic Monsters Revisited, 6. Paizo Inc., 2008
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Wolfgang Baur, et al. Classic Monsters Revisited, 8. Paizo Inc., 2008
  6. Wolfgang Baur, et al. Classic Monsters Revisited, 4. Paizo Inc., 2008
  7. 7.0 7.1 Classic Monsters Revisited 6 depicted bugbears as being solitary for lack of time to dedicate beyond hunting. Monster Core 47 describes bugbears as living in small cooperative gangs that hunt together. The latter is the more recent source, though these details are not fully exclusive of each other.
  8. James Jacobs, et al. The Inner Sea World Guide, 251. Paizo Inc., 2011
  9. James Jacobs. (October 21, 2012). ">>Ask *James Jacobs* ALL your Questions Here!<<", Paizo Messageboards.
  10. James Jacobs. “Lords of the Abyss” in Lords of Chaos, Book of the Damned Volume 2, 10. Paizo Inc., 2010
  11. Judy Bauer, et al. “Hunting for Treasure” in Lost Treasures, 9. Paizo Inc., 2014
  12. Richard Baker, et al. Thornkeep, 25. Goblinworks, Inc., Paizo Inc., 2012
  13. Erik Mona, et al. Howl of the Carrion King, 43. Paizo Inc., 2009
  14. Brian Cortijo. Qadira” in Qadira, Gateway to the East, 11. Paizo Inc., 2009
  15. Jessica Price. “Adventuring in Qadira” in Qadira, Jewel of the East, 38. Paizo Inc., 2017
  16. James Jacobs. Sandpoint Hinterlands” in The Brinewall Legacy, 65. Paizo Inc., 2011
  17. Wolfgang Baur, et al. Classic Monsters Revisited, 7. Paizo Inc., 2008
  18. Dennis Baker, et al. Bugbears” in Monster Codex, 28. Paizo Inc., 2014