they have the sex parts.
If you read the lore
Illithids, they have the parts
THEY HAVE A L L THE PARTS, IN FACT!
Do with this information as you will.
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from Uzbekistan
seen from China
seen from Azerbaijan

seen from India

seen from Yemen
seen from Japan

seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands
seen from Yemen

seen from Morocco
seen from Yemen

seen from United States

seen from Uruguay
seen from Poland
they have the sex parts.
If you read the lore
Illithids, they have the parts
THEY HAVE A L L THE PARTS, IN FACT!
Do with this information as you will.
The third and final batch of books in to the Monstrous Arcana line focused on everyone’s favorite brain eaters. They’re one of my favorites — deeply alien and disgusting, they’re stranger than sahuagin and, I think, more usable than beholders (the power differential is partly the reason, but the flayers also don’t seem quite so unknowable as the beholders, perhaps on account of the legs). The Illithiad (1998) is a sourcebook dedicated entirely to answering all the questions about the flayers that are hanging in the air. I am a little exhausted by the Iliad pun, but other than that, this is a fantastic book.
There’s so much! Spelljamming lore, the delightful fusion of psionics and arcane magic, their bizarre mode of reproduction (involving tadpoles and humanoid brains and ewwww), their diet, their schemes and their origins. Much of this material would be imported to 3E in Lords of Madness, and continues to define D&D’s portrayal of mind flayers decades later.
I find the mind flayers to be such perfect villains because they are not mighty. Their era has passed, their slaves revolted. Those slaves, the githyanki and the githzerai, have since become skilled in hunting and exterminating mind flayers, which has forced them to skulk and survive in the shadows. They are awful, alien things that see themselves as rulers of all creation, but in their arrogance can not truly accept that they have been brought low. They aren’t so much a force to topple, but an anathema to stamp out and guard against. I feel like they’re almost, like, a metaphor for something from the real world…
Anyway, great art throughout. I like the fact that they didn’t attempt to streamline the styles of the various artists — we get all sorts of different illithid fits here. I also love Fred Fields’ cover. “Behold this magic brain!”
anyway.. how is ur new dinosaur :3
I AM SO GLAD YOU ASKED. luchasaurus is a sweet and effortlessly cool looking little man he is doing so good. i named him luchasaurus because you suggested dinosaur and someone else suggested a wrestler and so i came to: luchasaurus, a wrestler who is also dinosaur
i need to take a VIDEO of him eating sometime because he is so much fun to watch hunting down his dinner
Mind flayers by Fred Fields, from the cover of AD&D Monstrous Arcana: The Illithiad. . #mindflayer #fredfields #dungeonsanddragons #dungeonsanddragonsart #illithiad #monstrousarcana https://www.instagram.com/p/CADwvqjFy_0/?igshid=wnn5dy2jycz3
i think about this line at least twice a day
Mrenden, you're awesome
The Illithiad: thrall edition post
interesting dichotomy between personal vs. community owned... Though I suppose it's like having a farm vs having a beloved pet?
The Illithiad is my favorite D&D lore book hands down, but it also drives me crazy. Pretty much any time it provides a number, it's absolutely ridiculous. Illithid colonies are far, far too large to be sustainable, if its estimates are to be believed. Lords of Madness handles that aspect a lot better. Colonies rarely exceed the low hundreds in size in that particular version of lore.
Oh yeah. Especially when it come to food. Even if an illithid only eats once a month, a colony of 2000 would WIPE OUT A CITY IN ONE YEAR
I read the Illithiad
yall need to as well but here's some favourite bits of mine