Visual Quick Trait Guide.
All squiggle newts have traits that make them unique. This includes antennae, tongues, tails, noses, gills, pupils, shimmers, and color. All currently known traits have been recorded below, but it’s possible for new mutations to appear at random. Experts are unsure why there is such a wide range of traits within squiggle newt physiology, however, considering how adaptive they seem to be, it’s entirely possible that they’re just like that.
Antennae, tail, and nose traits have been occasionally known to form traits that are just combined versions of base traits. Though this would imply the traits are co-dominant, a squiggle newt will more commonly pass on only one of the base traits instead of the combined one. The genetics of it makes no sense.
Squiggle newts have an unusual number of legs. This is due to their ability to create “magical” legs that blend in with the rest of their body. These legs are built entirely from mystics, therefore they can be lost and it will simply regrow. Squiggle newts use the legs like pockets to store excess mystics in, creating reserves to dip into when in a dangerous situation, or when laying eggs. They gain legs at a rate of about a pair every decade, though this is not a hard rule due to losing a pair of legs when laying eggs.
These legs are very adaptable, and can bend to become front or back legs. Front legs are always bent near the connecting point as an “elbow”, while back legs bend near a center point as a “knee”. Back legs will bend either forward or backward, though they only bend back when running.
The feet have four long toes with small, circular pads on the bottom tip. These are extremely flexible, and will arrange depending on what the squiggle newt needs. A normal spread will arrange the toes in a half circle pointed forward, while a speed spread, used for running, will pull all toes pointing forward. A stability spread, used for climbing or balance, has all four toes pointed outward in an even cross formation.
Antennae can look like many things, from horns to ears to strange shapes. These features are filled with a sensitive organ that allows squiggle newts to sense mystics around them. When in a place like the Hidden City, this allows them to see very well. This does not help with their general clumsiness.
When placed in a low-mystics environment, they often have difficulty “seeing” and have to rely purely on their eyes, which are meant mostly for spotting details close up and not far away things.
Tongues are slightly sticky, not exactly like a chameleon’s or frog’s, but enough to hold a bug still long enough to get their mouth around them. Experts are currently unsure how sensitive to taste squiggle newts are, but they do seem to have favorites at the very least.
Tails were likely used to help squiggle newts ambulate before they learned the ability to create magical legs. Now they act as balance, and supposedly help with maneuverability, though experts have yet to see an example of this outside of underwater. Tails also can be used as a distraction if a squiggle newt is hunted. They will very rarely drop their tails in deadly situations, and the tail will squirm and distract a predator while they run.
It should be noted that running after a dropped tail is incredibly inefficient, as it takes the squiggle newt a few hours to get used to the shift in their center of gravity.
A squiggle newt’s sense of smell is miserable. They have a worse sense of smell than a human. Their nose is really only useful for breathing. The physical decorations that occupy nearby the nostrils are used as heat and vibration sensors that give them an even better sense of everything around them.
Gills are what squiggle newts use to breathe underwater. They are extended only when in the water, showing off, or threatening. They are hidden behind the jaw. Gills have different forms, thought to be due to a squiggle newt’s preference for stagnant waters that have little oxygen and the species attempting to evolutionarily cope with that poor choice.
Wibbling is when a squiggle newt extends their gills and shivers them. This is done usually as a way to show off, or as a threat display. Some newts can be seen doing it when yawning or stretching.
A squiggle newt’s eyesight is not excellent. On eyesight alone, their vision is quite poor unless very close (around 30cm or 12in for an average sized newt). Their antennae and noses help this to become more clear, but it’s thought that beneath the water, their eyes are entirely useless and they rely on antennae and nose.
Entirely unrelated to their survival, their pupils appear to have taken on strange shapes for cosmetic purposes, thought to be used for communicative purposes amongst their species instead. Their eyes are incredibly expressive; pupils will grow to show calm, happiness, or affection, while pupils will become thinner to show irritation, interest, alertness, or a threat.
Pupils are always black except for the rare mutation, while sclera can be any solid color.
Shimmers are small elemental mystics that squiggle newts perform. They are used primarily as defense, like a squid inking. They will expel a shimmer, often accompanied by some sort of shrill squeak.
Shimmers are either flames, ink, smoke, or “glitter” (gems the size of a grain of sand). These can be almost any color, though black only shows up in ink and smoke, and white only shows up in smoke.
Squiggle newts are a wide range of colors. Usually this includes anywhere from two to five colors. Their patterns vary just as widely, and seem to have a loose relationship with their parents’ genetics. Coloration and pattern seem to have no evolutionary advantage; it’s possible that these came about in an effort to confuse biologists.