The official GemStone IV encyclopedia.
The greater vruul has tough, leathery hide, as black as midnight. Bat-like wings sprout from its back, but they do not look large or strong enough to support its weight in flight. The vruul's claws are long, sharp and appear to be stained with the blood of many victims. Its eyes are eerie, solid green orbs that seem to glow with an inner power.
Hunting strategies
Vruul are immune to heat. They absorb minor elemental spells.
Other information
The greater vruul appear rarely in the Sheruvian monastery. The summoning chamber is behind one of the locked doors.
Contrary to the implication of "summoning", vruul are not demonic. They are not extra-planar creatures.
Behind The Scenes
These larger versions of the vruul have the same appearance as the lesser vruul, including the eyes as "solid green orbs", which is related to the obsolete gods lore. In the I.C.E. Age and original post-I.C.E. documentation Marlu's appearance closely resembled the vruul: "A hideous demonlike creature, he is the master of the vruul. He has black skin, leathery wings, large luminous green eyes and large, red claws." In the more modern lore of Elanthia his relationship to the vruul is implicit in his crypt delving. There were also "decaying vruul" invasion creatures on Mount Aenatumgana when the Drake's Shrine was opened, which if consistent with the original lore, likely implies they were very ancient vruul long outside their urns.
The vruul were originally artificial constructs, called gogor, designed as the dark host of the Empress Kadaena. Andraax wrote a poem in "The Book of Dark Tales" from 1782 Second Era addressing her constructs: The Kaeden, Gogor, and Shards. They all slept through the Interregnum of the Shadow World timeline, awakened by dark powers in later ages. This poem ends with "And watch for the Winds of Fate" which fits with the poem in the crypt of The Graveyard. (There was also the "Visions of Andraax" which established early on an obscure premise of Lords of Essaence being able to witness the future which helps explain the inscription on the Dark Shrine, which refers to conditions and language forms that would not exist until long after it was written. The poem being a couplet of sleeping death and rebirth, with double meanings in impossibly distant cults, alludes also to "The Call of Cthulhu".) In the source material the "typical" gogor cannot carry off a grown human, but the "lead" gogor are able to do so with effort. They also had poisonous tails. Neither of the vruul have these properties. They had very sensitive smell, which is part of their messaging.
References
Near-level creatures - edit
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