Planescape

Fundamental, All Elements

2635



Fundamental, All Elements
Climate/Terrain:Inner Planes
Frequency:Common
Organization:Flock
Activity Cycle:Any
Diet:Varies
Intelligence:Semi- (3)
Treasure:Nil
Alignment:Neutral
No. Appearing:2d10
Armor Class:3-6 (see below)
Movement:9-24 (see below)
Hit Dice:1+1
THAC0:19
No. of Attacks:1
Damage/Attack:1d6
Special Attacks:Nil
Special Defenses:Struck only by +1 or better weapons, surprise, partial invisibility, immune to own element and sleep and charm
Magic Resistance:Nil
Size:T (1-2’ “wingspan”)
Morale:Average to steady (10-12)
XP Value:175

Fundamentals are the weakest of the true elemental creatures (as opposed to other creatures native to the Elemental Planes). Still, no one knows the real dark of their nature, purpose, or how they fit into the mysterious scheme of the Inner Planes.

One of the most difficult-to-dispel myths regarding the fundamentals is the idea that they all appear as a pair of bodiless, headless bat-wings made of the appropriate element, flying eternally through the air. Although it’s easy to see how a body might confuse their appearance, fundamentals are much more accurately described as narrow, nearly two-dimensional beings of elemental matter or energy. These little strips flutter and flap in the manner of a bat or certain birds. Fundamentals “fly” only in the sense that they pass through their own element unhindered and unhampered by forces like gravity. Sometimes fundamentals briefly “leap” from their element into another; earth or water fundamentals leaping into a nearby area of air might look as though they were flying low to the ground. Fundamentals that accidentally “leap” into their antithetical elements — say, fire fundamentals into a water pocket — don’t immediately die, but they can’t stay there long. They can resist the opposite element for 1d4 rounds before fizzling out, dissolving, or otherwise dissipating.

The bat-wing idea probably originated when some fire fundamentals were confused with fire bats, who do indeed have batlike wings.

Combat: All fundamentals defend themselves by simply ramming their bodies into an opponent, causing 1d6 points of damage. This is a relatively ineffective way to fight, but since they don’t really “fly”, such an attack doesn’t actually hinder or throw off their movement. The fundamentals aren’t harmed by this ramming attack in any way.

The stats above give a range of Armor Classes and movement rates. These depend on the relative composition (energy or solid), weight, and speed of the fundamentals.

Fundamental ElementACMV
Air, Ash, Dust, Smoke, Steam, Vacuum246
Fire, Lightning, Radiance185
Magma, Ooze, Water124
Earth, Ice, Mineral, Salt93

Within their own element, fundamentals are hard to detect. In fact, they are 90% invisible when not moving. (Contrary to some reports, fundamentals do sometimes stop flying and simply drift.) When fundamentals attack creatures within their own elements, opponents suffer a -2 penalty to surprise rolls due to the creatures’ natural coloration. These advantages lead wizards on the Prime or other terrestrial settings to summon air fundamentals to attack their enemies more often than say, ooze fundamentals (which’d be spotted easily).

Fundamentals are entirely immune to the element that they represent. They are unaffected by spells involving sleep or cham. In addition, a body needs a +1 or better weapon to strike them.

Habitat/Society: Fundamentals don’t fit into the standard “society” of the Inner Planes very well. They’re not intelligent enough to work with (or against, for that matter) any of the organized forces there, and they’re not powerful enough for anyone to really take notice of them. For example, the archomentals — the Elemental Princes of Good and Evil — don’t make any attempts to win over the fundamentals for their respective elements. The fundamentals just simply are.

Ecology: Fundamentals consume very little. They produce next to nothing and don’t seem to product at all. They may not actually be living creatures at all, but rather some mysterious animate (but not sentient) extension of the element that they represent. A few cutters have suggested that fundamentals are to the Elemental, Paraelemental, and Quasielemental Planes what plant life is to more terrestrial settings. Such an idea is just strange enough to be true, but it’s certainly difficult to prove.

Others still believe the theories of the explorer Revorus that fundamentals are just that — the fundamental expression of their element. Sure, they’re not as powerful as actual elementals, but they’re still more basic, intrinsic, and … well, fundamental to the element and to the plane. Again, though, that’s just conjecture.

At one time some graybeards thought that fundamentals might be young elementals, perhaps in a larval stage. This theory has definitely been discounted, simply because few (if any) of the elementals on any of the Inner Planes reproduce in that way.


Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd Edition


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