Grung
Harvesting Table
Instructions: Because this creature is an
Humanoid, the player should roll a
Medicine Check using the DCs in the table below. On a success, the player is able to harvest the item. On a failure, the item cannot be harvested (either because the character is not skilled enough, or because the item is ruined). The DM should note that many of the items have an expiration, and can not be sold or used after the expiration has passed.
Type: Humanoid (grung)
Skill: Medicine
DC
Item
Description
Value
Weight
Exp.
Crafting
DC:
10
ITEM:
Grung Poison Gland
DC:
10
All grungs secrete a substance that is harmless to them but poisonous to other creatures. This oily, clear liquid is produced in a gland near its heart, that is pumped into its bloodstream.
Proficiency with the poisoner kit can be used for harvesting this gland. On a successful check, the character harvests the gland. On a failed check, the character is unable to extract the gland. If the character fails the check by 5 or more, the character is subjected to the creature's poison.
Refining the Poison: Once the gland is extracted, an alchemist (or someone proficient in the poisoner's kit) can spend 6 hours and 75gp worth of material to create Grung Poison (DC 13 Poisoner Kit or Alchemist Supplies check).
Grung Poison (Contact): Grung poison is a contact poison, and has a similar (but lesser) effect as Drow Poison (DMG p258). A creature can spend an action to coat 1 melee weapon, or 3 pieces of ammunition with this poison. The poison lasts for 1 minute, or until it successfully affects a target. A creature touched with this poison must succeed on a DC 12 Constitution saving throw or be poisoned for 1 minute (a poisoned creature has disadvantage on attack rolls and ability checks). This poison usually sells for 150gp, but the poison is often considered an illicit good (and may not be sold to normal vendors).
VALUE:
2 gp
WEIGHT:
1lb.
EXPIRE:
2 days
Most crafting items have an acronym associated with it, such as "DMG". These acronyms refer to specific guide books. For example, "DMG" refers to the "Dungeon Master's Guide". The acronyms for HHH and HHH2 refer to Hamund's Harvesting Handbook, a homebrew harvesting guide that offers a variety of homebrew (not official) magic items. To view and purchase Hamund's Harvesting Handbook,
click here.
Grung
Individual Treasure
5 gp
Random Roll: d100 = 82
d100 |
cp |
sp |
ep |
gp |
pp |
01-30 |
cp:
5d6 (17) |
sp:
— |
ep:
— |
gp:
— |
pp:
— |
31-60 |
cp:
— |
sp:
4d6 (14) |
ep:
— |
gp:
— |
pp:
— |
61-70 |
cp:
— |
sp:
— |
ep:
3d6 (10) |
gp:
— |
pp:
— |
71-95 |
cp:
— |
sp:
— |
ep:
— |
gp:
3d6 (10) |
pp:
— |
96-100 |
cp:
— |
sp:
— |
ep:
— |
gp:
— |
pp:
1d6 (3) |
Grung
Treasure Hoard
|
cp |
sp |
ep |
gp |
pp |
Coins |
cp:
6d6 x 100 (2100) |
sp:
3d6 x 100 (1050) |
ep:
— |
gp:
2d6 x 10 (70) |
pp:
— |
d100 |
cp:
Gems or Art Objects |
sp:
— |
ep:
Magic Items |
|
|
01-06 |
cp:
— |
|
ep:
— |
|
|
07-16 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 10 gp gems |
|
ep:
— |
|
|
17-26 |
cp:
2d4 (5) 25 gp art objects |
|
ep:
— |
|
|
27-36 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 50 gp gems |
|
ep:
— |
|
|
37-44 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 10 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table A |
|
|
45-52 |
cp:
2d4 (5) 25 gp art objects |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table A |
|
|
53-60 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 50 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table A |
|
|
61-65 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 10 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table B |
|
|
66-70 |
cp:
2d4 (5) 25 gp art objects |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table B |
|
|
71-75 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 50 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table B |
|
|
76-78 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 10 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table C |
|
|
79-80 |
cp:
2d4 (5) 25 gp art objects |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table C |
|
|
81-85 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 50 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table C |
|
|
86-92 |
cp:
2d4 (5) 25 gp art objects |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table F |
|
|
93-97 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 50 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table F |
|
|
98-99 |
cp:
2d4 (5) 25 gp art objects |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table G |
|
|
100 |
cp:
2d6 (7) 50 gp gems |
|
ep:
Roll 1d6 times on Magic Item Table G |
|
|
Grung
Equipment & Other Goods
Typically found on (or even "in" the creature)
This character usually carries: 1 Dagger
1 Dagger
[2 sp (quality: .1×, size: 1×, normally 2 gp)][1 lb.]
terrible quality, falling apart with a gilded steel blade and a rustic wood hilt
The tables below show how we determine an item's value and weight modifiers. The first table determines the item's value modifier based on its quality. The second table determines the item's value and weight modifiers based on the creature's size. Note: this particular creature will never carry quality weapons, or they may be easily destroyed in combat. As such, this creature will not use the RED rows in the table below.
d100 |
% Chance |
Quality |
Value |
1-2 |
% Chance:
2% |
Quality:
Superb |
Value:
1.5× |
3-5 |
% Chance:
3% |
Quality:
Almost New |
Value:
1× |
6-55 |
% Chance:
50% |
Quality:
Low Quality (poorly made, high use) |
Value:
0.5× |
56-65 |
% Chance:
10% |
Quality:
Terrible Quality (cracked, warped) |
Value:
0.1× |
66-100 |
% Chance:
35% |
Quality:
Destroyed |
Value:
0× |
Creature's size and its value and weight modifiers.
Size |
Weight(x) |
Value(x) |
Note |
Tiny |
Weight(x):
¼× |
Value(x):
¼× |
Note:
Tiny creatures often carry very small weapons & armor, too small for other creature. |
Small |
Weight(x):
1× |
Value(x):
1× |
Note:
Small creatures tend to use smaller standard weapons, like daggers and shortswords, but it is the DM's discretion if the items are usable or have a modified weight/value. |
Medium |
Weight(x):
1× |
Value(x):
1× |
|
Large |
Weight(x):
1× |
Value(x):
1× |
Note:
Large creatures tend to use larger standard weapons, like greatswords and greatclubs, but it is the DM's discretion if the items are usable or have a modified weight/value. |
Huge |
Weight(x):
8× |
Value(x):
2× |
Note:
The increase in value is for the raw materials (as the items are way too large to be useful). |
Gargantuan |
Weight(x):
15× |
Value(x):
4× |
Note:
The increase in value is for the raw materials (as the items are way too large to be useful). |
Grung
Trinkets
1 pouch of green swamp moss
Random Roll: 1d12 = 2
1
1 waterskin of fermented insect blood
5 lb.
1 gp
2
1 pouch of green swamp moss
1 lb.
5 sp
3
1 crude wood carving of a frog
1 lb.
8 sp
4
1 necklace of swamp rat skulls
1 lb.
5 cp
5
1 rope made of swamp vines (50 ft.)
10 lb.
1 gp
6
1 jar of large insects (alive)
3 lb.
6 sp
7
1 necklace with a large black insect shell, that has a rainbow sheen
--
1 sp
8
1 crocodile skull headpiece
9 lb.
9 cp
9
1 stone pendant of a giant toad (symbol of Wastri)
2 lb.
5 sp
10
1 bracelet made from a giant crocodile tongue
5 lb.
3 sp
11
1d4 insect meat ration(s)
2 lb.
3 sp
12
1d4 swamp critter carcass(es)
1 lb.
1 sp
Grung
Meat
There is a stigma to eating meat belonging to sentient creatures that have a humanoid form and features. Harvesting the meat may be frowned upon and even considered cannibalism. Some communities may refuse to buy the meat (and some evil communities may pay a premium). The meat may even be difficult to eat, or unedible. Of course, these are all up to the Dungeon Master to decide.
This creature produces 4 pieces of meat, weighing a total of 16 lbs.
Random Roll: 1d4 = 4
Small creatures produce 1d4 worth of meat.
The table below shows how much meat an
inexperienced butcher may be able to harvest from a creature, especially after a battle may have ruined some of the meat (i.e. burned, frozen, poisoned, etc.). If a
whole creature's carcass is brought to a butcher, the butcher may pay 4x the value rolled in the chart below for the carcass (if the butcher even WANTS this kind of creature - DM discretion). Of course, carrying a heavy carcass can be difficult, and the creature's bacteria that kept it alive will begin to ruin the meat, spoiling it within a day.
Beast Size |
DC |
Meat |
Weight (x4)† |
Expire ‡ |
Value (x2sp)⋆ |
Tiny |
DC:
5 |
Meat:
1 |
Weight (x4)†:
4 lb. |
Expire ‡:
1 day |
Value (x2sp)⋆:
2 sp |
Small |
DC:
5 |
Meat:
1d4 |
Weight (x4)†:
4-16 lb. |
Expire ‡:
1 day |
Value (x2sp)⋆:
2-8 sp |
Medium |
DC:
5 |
Meat:
2d6 |
Weight (x4)†:
8-48 lb. |
Expire ‡:
1 day |
Value (x2sp)⋆:
4-24 sp |
Large |
DC:
5 |
Meat:
6d6 |
Weight (x4)†:
24-144 lb. |
Expire ‡:
1 day |
Value (x2sp)⋆:
12-72 sp |
Huge |
DC:
5 |
Meat:
8d12 |
Weight (x4)†:
32-384 lb. |
Expire ‡:
1 day |
Value (x2sp)⋆:
16-192 sp |
Gargantuan |
DC:
5 |
Meat:
8d20 |
Weight (x4)†:
32-640 lb. |
Expire ‡:
1 day |
Value (x2sp)⋆:
16-320 sp |
† The weight of a raw piece of meat is 4 pounds. And one slab of meat (4 lbs.), can be used to make 1 dried ration (2 lbs.).
‡ Raw meat has a very short shelf-life, and will go bad within a day if it is not refridgerated or cured.
⋆ The table above uses a standard price of 5cp per pound for regular a piece of animal meat (such as cattle or deer). The value of meat can vary drastically, depending on the quality, rarity and the creature it is sourced from. For example, dragon meat could cost 10x more than standard livestock meat, while insect meat could cost only a copper or two per pound. A DM can decide if that is adequate, and if certain meat is worth more or less.