Heavy Gear - Assault Gear HACS-04HG-AST Razorback

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Heavy Gear - Assault Gear HACS-04HG-AST Razorback
The beautiful "Bonnie"
"Bonnie," (N4747D) is a restored 1944 P-47D-23 Razorback, which is the only flying Republic-built razorback P-47D in the world. The plane is housed at the Dakota Territory Air Museum in Minot, North Dakota. "Bonnie" is named after Bonnie Dunham, the wife of Brigadier General William "Bill" Dunham, a World War II fighter pilot. She is seen here during EAA Airventure 2024 at Wittman Regional Airport.
horror sub-genres: animal
Razorback 1984
American Republic P-47 Thunderbolt fighter in flight. P-47D-23-RA, 311th Fighter Squadron, 58th Fighter Group.
@Destroye83 via X
The Expanse 5x06
Ungumani
"Possessed Wild Boar" © Antonio J Manzanedo, accessed at his ArtStation here
[The ungumani is a legend from the Piedmont region of Italy, said to be created by the shed evils of pilgrims traveling to a shrine in Lerma. This plays in nicely to some of the stuff I've written before about alignments acting like bioaccumulation. But it wasn't until a recent screening of Razorback by my friend @bowelfly that the gears on this entry started turning. One of the most stylish monster movies of the 80s, and the titular Razorback in the movie does seem to be as much an incarnation of violence as much as it is an actual animal. The stats themselves are intended to be easy to use in encounter building with boars (CR 2), dire boars (CR 4) and my own feral hog troop (CR 8).]
Ungumani CR 8 CE Outsider (native) This bestial humanoid has the bristly hide and head of a giant boar. Its shoulders are stooped, but it still stands taller than a man. Its tusks are curved and it has blade-like teeth in its too-long jaws, and its beady red eyes gleam with malevolence.
Ungumani are horrible creatures that combine aspects of humanoid and boar, and are the culmination of a complex life cycle born of sin. When a powerful evil soul atones for its sins before death, the sin itself is expelled but still seeks quintessence to bind to and drag towards the ravenous Abyss. Possibly because of their omnivorous scavenging, and possibly because of their association with uncleanliness, pigs are some of the best receptacles for this loose sin. A pig exposed to such sins mutates into an enormous, carnivorous boar (use statistics for a dire boar with the man eating template), and after consuming enough sapient, and thus sinful, life, metamorphoses again. The back of the boar splits open like the skin of a dragonfly nymph, and an ungumani emerges.
All ungumani are the epitome of wickedness, and all of them seek to indulge their sins and prey on sapient creatures. Each ungumani is tied to one of the seven deadly sins, and each ungumani has a variety of magical gifts it can use to protect itself, hurt its victims, or go undetected. These spell-like abilities are tied to the schools of sin magic practiced by Thassilonian wizards, and some sages speculate that the ungumani’s origins date back to that wicked empire. As such, different ungumani may have radically different tactics depending on their spells. Slothful ungumani are the only ones likely to withdraw from even a losing battle; the other sins typically fight until slain.
Ungumani still feel affinity for their porcine origins, and so often keep boars and dire boars as livestock and hunting companions. When seeking the company of others of their kind, some are drawn to members of their own sinful lineage, whereas others (especially envious or greedy ungumani) seek out those of other sins to broaden the skills of the band. Ungumani cannot breed among themselves but are disgustingly cross fertile with boars. The children of such unions are born as man eating dire boars, each one an ungumani “larva”.
Statistics for adult and larval ungumani are below the cut.
Craig Hamilton - Razorback (2023) Source