In the clouds above us live all sorts of strange life forms. Hard to see, masters of disguise, and endangered due to the rise of jet aircraft, the Aerofauna is a wonderous group of organisms that form a simple ecosystem of balloonlike animals.
These creatures (and the images of them) were mostly adapted from the online RPG Forgotten Futures (which covers a lot of Victorian literature). I suggest you give it a look at it.
They feature in the Arthur Conan Doyle story The Horror of the Heights.
Aeroplankton is the basis of the entire Aero-food chain. These tiny plants have no stats but are included pictorially for reference.
Name: Aeromesozoa
Motivation: Eat Aeroplankton
Critter Type: Animal?
Attributes: Str 4, Dex 4, Con 4, Int 0, Per 1, Will 2
Ability Scores: Muscle 14, Combat 12, Brains 9,
Life Points: 42
Drama Points: 0-3
Special Abilities: Weakness (Fire x 2 Damage), Reduced Damage (1/10 Slash/Stab, Bullet), Flight (Advanced), Blind, Nanjin Adept
Name - Score - Damage - Notes
Dodge - 14 - None - Full Defense Action
Aeromesozoa are Salp-like creatures that float in the earth's atmosphere feeding on Aeroplankton. These creatures, like other Aerofauna, float via hydrogen sacks and are partly ethereal beings. As such, most physical strikes pass through them. A sword may cut one, but it will simply split it in two, creating 2 Aeromesozoa that float away. Being filter feeders (as Aeroplankton are microscopic), they do not attack. They can grow up to 50ft long but weigh no more than 20 pounds. If ignited, the entire animal begins to burn, damaging anyone touching it with flames (3 fire damage).
Name: Aeromedusae
Motivation: Eat Aeroplankton and other small things in the air
Critter Type: Animal?
Attributes: Str 20, Dex 5, Con 5, Int 0, Per 1, Will 2
Ability Scores: Muscle 26, Combat 14, Brains 9,
Life Points: 710
Drama Points: 0-3
Special Abilities: Weakness (Fire x 2 Damage), Reduced Damage (1/10 Slash/Stab, Bullet), Flight (Advanced), Tentacles, Poison 2 (corrosive), Blind, Nanjin Adept, Increased Size 8, Increased Life Points +600
Name - Score - Damage - Notes
Grapple - 18 - None - Poison
Tentacle Slap - 14 - 18 - Bash, Poison
Hide as Cloud - 16 - None - Hides in Plain Sight
Aeromedusae are giant, jellyfish-like Aerplanktonic feeders that float through the atmosphere, snatching Aeroplankton in their tentacles, of which they can have dozens, even hundreds. They also can catch insects and birds with these things, so getting close isn't advised. These creatures can also grow in size to 100 or even 150ft in diameter, but only weigh that many pounds.
Name: Occulonimbus edoequus a.k.a. Jean Jacket
Motivation: Eat Meat
Critter Type: Animal?
Attributes: Str 23, Dex 3, Con 5, Int 1, Per 5, Will 4
Ability Scores: Muscle 52, Combat 16, Brains 12,
Life Points: 722
Drama Points: 0-3
Special Abilities: Weakness (Fire x 2 Damage), Reduced Damage (1/10 Slash/Stab, Bullet), Flight (basic), Increased Size 8, Increased Life Points +600, EM Field, Hover, Speed Burst (Supersonic)
Name - Score - Damage - Notes
Vacuum - 16 - None - Draws targets into its mouth. Test Strength/Muscle Score vs 38 to resist vacuum when it hits.
Digest - 52 - 7 - Bash, heal as Fire damage (digestive enzymes)
Excreta - 16 - 7 - Slash/Stab, drops things it was unable to digest.
Ram - 52 - 39 - Bash
Disguise - 16 - None - Changes shape to that of a cloud
This predator primarily eats young Aeromedusae and Aeromesozoa but will come down into the lower atmospheric levels to feed on meatier subjects. It uses its powerful vacuum to suck up prey, able to lift up to 6000lbs in a single push, though no one object lifted can more than 1000lbs. This means it can scoop up to 50 people in one 'swallow'.
Though able to digest most things, plastic and metal are beyond their ability to digest (they are immune to its enzymes). This means those swallowed by this take quite a while to die - and they likely will as there is little escape from this horror once it sucks them up.
After eating, the screams of those it has swallowed can be heard for some time afterwards, echoing through the clouds.
As it flies overhead, its movement of electromagnetic fields to move at high-speed shuts down electronic devices. This has a radius of 300ft around the organism and up to 1000ft below and above it. Mechanical/electrical characters must test their Constitution (Doubled) against 1/2 Jean Jacket's Muscle Score, reduced by 1 for every 10ft they are away from it.
Name: Aeromollusk
Motivation: Eat!
Critter Type: Animal?
Attributes: Str 24, Dex 6, Con 6, Int 1, Per 5, Will 2
Ability Scores: Muscle 54, Combat 16, Brains 12
Life Points: 730
Drama Points: 1-3
Special Abilities: Weakness (Fire x 2 Damage), Reduced Damage (1/10 Slash/Stab, Bullet), Flight 2, Tentacles (long reach), Armor Value 2, Increased Size 8, Increased Life Points +600
Name - Score - Damage - Notes
Tentacle - 18 - 53 - Bash, Grapples
Beak - 18 - 72 - Slash/Stab, must grapple first
Air Blast - 50 - 15 - Bash, vs Strength (Doubled) to resist being knocked away 1 yard per SL (15)
Aeromollusks are the top predators (known) in the Aerofauna. These strange, 3 eyes, tentacled creatures resemble snails and cephalopods. They are one of the few Aerofauna to possess eyes (or rather, three large, bulbous lobes attached to their sack-like body). Aeromousks are aggressive predators, but like all Aerofauna, are considered endangered species. Aeromollusks can have body sacks up to 90ft in length, with tentacles that can reach twice that distance (180ft). Some report that hungry Aeromollusks will attack small planes even today. They are the main predator of both Aeromedusae and Jean Jacket.
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I had this odd notion. A (brief) analysis of the origin of various supernatural creatures, as I wondered what ânewâ monsters/supernatural beings had been created in the 20th century (roughly).  Iâve completed some of the research, and Iâd like to share it with you all. Iâm also gonna tag @tyrantisterror because he is one of the more knowledgable people about monsters I know about on tumblr and Iâm sure he can correct me a bunch in this!
1. Frankenstein - 1817 - The oldest literary monster and outgrowth of the concept of the Homunculus and Golem as an artificial being. So pervasive is its reach, western ideas of Tulpa are tainted by it (every time you read about a tulpa âgoing out of controlâ, that is the influence of Frankenstein).Â
2. Dinosaurs - The Dragons of the age of science entered pop culture in 1854 at the latest with the opening of the Crystal Palace Park. Other prehistoric animals had captured peopleâs imagination before, and they didnât start to enter fiction until 1864 (âJourney to the Center of the Earthâ) and a short story by C. J. Cutliffe Hyne had an ancient crocodilian in his story âThe Lizardâ (1898). Ann early Lost World style adventure, âA Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinderâ by James De Mille in 1888 has the first true dinosaurs in them. There, Antarctica has a warm spot where prehistoric monsters and a death cult lurk. In 1901, Frank Mackenzie Savileâs âBeyond the Great South Wallâ had a Carnivorous Brontosaurs worshiped by Mayan remnants. âPanic in Parisâ by Jules Lermina had dinosaurs attack a city, but it was published first in France so few saw it. Finally, we have Conan Doyle in 1912 with âThe Lost Worldâ which solidified dinosaurs as a thing in fiction.Â
3. The Evolved Man/Mutants - After âThe Origin of Speciesâ is published, it wasnât long until Evolved Men or Mutants started showing up in fiction. âThe Coming Raceâ and (1871), âThe Great Romanceâ (1881). Â They are generally big-headed and often have ESP of some sort. Â In âMedia: A Tale of the Futureâ (1891), they can control electricity too. It wasnât until 1928 (âThe Metal Manâ by Jack Williamson) that Radiation was thrown in as a cause for Mutation. Â Cosmic Rays would follow in âThe Man Who Evolvedâ by Edmond Hamilton (1931). Â After that, we have âGladiatorâ by Philip Gordon Wylie (1930) where we have an engineered âEvolved Manâ, and âOdd Johnâ by Olaf Stapeldon which grants us the term âHomo superiorâ followed by âSlanâ by A.E. van Vogt which has Evolved Humans as a persecuted minority. Â And with that, everything that makes the X-Men what they are is collected.
3. Man-Eating Tree - First reported in 1874, the idea of man-eating plants grew since then to encompase many monsters, but started as Folklore about âDarkest Africaâ (Madagascar) in the New York World. Theyâd print anything back then.
4. Hyde - While it is tempting to link him to Freudian Psychology, Freud did not publish his work regarding things like the Id until much later (he didnât even coin âPsychoanalysisâ until 1896). What is springs from, I currently cannot say without more research.Â
4. Robot - Though there were automata since the days of the Greeks (Talos), the first Robot in modern fiction is from âThe Future Eveâ by Auguste Villiers de Iâlsle Adam (1886). THough the term Robot is not invented until 1920 with âRossumâs Universal Robots.â They definitely offshoot from Frankenstein, but with a more mechanical bent. Â
5. The Grey Alien - The modern idea of an Alien has itâs first antecedents in the 1800s. Specifically with the essay âMan of the Year 1,000,000âł by H. G. Wells (1892-1893). He speculates what humans will evolve into, and basically invites the Gray by accident. It wouldnât achieve itâs alien attachments until much later.
6. Morlocks - With the Evolved Man, there is also the âDevolved Manâ. That is what the Morlocks are. They are, as the name implies, tied to Wellâs âThe Time Machineâ (1895), and the word has become a catch-all for subterranean monster-men, be they Mole People, CHUDs, or straight up Demons (âGvsEâ).Â
7. The Martians & Their War Machines - The First Alien Invader, and the first Mecha can be traced to âWar of the Worldsâ by H.G. Wells, 1897. Not much more to say as far as Iâm aware.
8. The Mummy - The 1800s saw an Egyptian craze in England, leading to some really nasty habits (google âMummy Powderâ if you need ipecac). 1827 saw âThe Mummy!: Or, a Tale of the Twenty-Second Centuryâ which is more a bit of futurism with an ancient protagonist. Though âLost in the Pyramidâ (1868) by Louisa May Alcott predates it, it is overshadowed by Conan Doyleâs horror story âLot No. 249âł (1892) which has the classically animated mummy going out and killing people under control of another. The former is a âCurseâ story rather than a monster.
9. Cordyceps - Everyone these days knows the Cordyceps fungus as a great source for making zombies, and Iâm lumping that fungus in with these other monsters because, well, fungusâ that take over humans is a monster of the 20th century. Â Best known for Tohoâs film adaptation âMatangoâ (1963), it is inspired by a short story from 1907 by William Hope Hodgson called âThe Voice in the Nightâ. Â There, the poor victim doesnât realize theyâve completely become a fungus monster, acting as a warning for those near the island. Â Â
10. Aerofauna - Conan Doyle strikes again with âThe Horror of the Heightsâ (1912). A pretty tight little horror story of a whole ecosystem high above our heads in the clouds. Many a sky tentacle owes its existence to this one.
11. Lich - Possibly derived from Kosechi the Deathless of Russian folklore, the idea of undead sorcerers became a staple of the works of Robert E. Howard, H.P. Lovecraft, and Clark Ashton Smyth, dating back to 1929. Though Gary Gigax coined the idea together for D&D and based it on Gardner Foxâs âThe Sword of the Sorcerer (1969)
12. Bigfoot and The Loch Ness Monster - I lump these cryptids together, because (thanks to a ton of research by Daren Naish, Daniel Loxton, Donald R. Prothero, and others) we can trace them back to the same source: King Kong (1933). The idea of prehistoric animals being out in the world in hidden places goes back to Conan Doyleâs âLost Worldâ (1912), but Kong made it widely popular. And between the giant ape and the Brontosaurus attack (and the timing of sightings picking up), we can blame Kong for this.
13. The Great Old Ones - Lovecraftâs primary contribution to fiction first appear in âThe Call of Cthulhuâ (1926) and expand upon from here. As near as I can tell, he made a LOT of monsters. These include âAncient Aliensâ & Shoggoths (1936 - âAt the Mountains of Madnessâ), Gillmen (1931 - âThe Shadow over Innsmouthâ), & The Colour Out of Space (1927).Â
14. The Thing - The Ultimate Shapeshifter. It first appears in 1938â˛s âWho Goes Thereâ by John W. Campbell, Jr. Though Campbell's square-jawed heroes literally tear the Thing to bits, it reached its zenith of horror in adaptation. I can think of no earlier shapeshifting humanoids of such variety at an earlier time, or of such fecundity.Â
15. The Amazons - The Amazons do indeed come from Ancient Greece, but it was a way for the Greeks to rag on Women. It wasnât until later that women co-opted the image of the Amazons as a source of empowerment, and that was codified in 1942 with one character: Wonder Woman. She helped spark the Amazons further into the culture, or at least, Amazon women who have superpowers (as they did in those early stories). From there, we get a more recent direct descendant that was part of the reason I started this list: Slayers from âBuffy the Vampire Slayer.â
16. The Hobbit - Though ideas of âWee Folkâ are part of worldwide Folklore, Tolkien took them out of the realm of Faerie, and made them... idyllic middle-class Englishmen with his 1937 book of the same name. With the Lord of the Rings following in 1954-1955. His works also gave us other monsters and supernatural beings: Orcs, Ents, & Balrogs.Â
17. Gremlins - An Evolution of the wee folk once again, this time adapted for the mechanical era and of a more malicious bent. It became slang in the 1920s, with the earliest print source being from 1929.  They were popularized by Roald Dahl inâThe Gremlinsâ (1942). Later they were used to vex Bugs Bunny (1943â˛s âFalling Hareâ), and then they got their own movies in the 1980s. The rest is history. Â
18. Triffids - There are a LOT of fictional plants out there, and a lot of carnivorous ones, but the Triffids were the first to be extremely active in their pursuit of prey. From 1952â˛s âDay of the Triffidsâ by John Wyndham, the story is a keen example of the âCozy Apocalypseâ common in British Fiction, sort of like the whole âschoolboys on a desert island make well of itâ thing that âLord of the Fliesâ railed against. This paved the way for everything from Audrey II to Biollante.
19. Kaiju - 1954. You know what this is. Between Primordial Gods and Modern Technology, the Kaiju are born. The difference between a Kaiju and a Giant Monster is a complex nuanced one, sort of like what makes film noir. But, in general, if the story has Anti-War, Anti-Nationalist, and/or Anti-Corporate Greed leanings, itâs probably a Kaiju movie. If not, then it probably isnât.
20. The Body Snatchers - Another horror of 1954 from the novel âThe Body Snatchersâ (1955), which includes aspects that the movie âInvasion of the Body Snatchersâ did not. Like that the Duplicates only last 5 years and basically exist to wipe out sentient beings with each planet they infest. Clearly drawing from the idea of the Doppelganger, these Pod People have evolved into a new form.
21. The Blob - That 1958 movie has one catchy theme song. Â The whole thing was inspired by an instance of âStar Jellyâ in Pennsylvania, circa 1950. Â It was tempting to shift this under the Shoggoth, but I think they are distinct enough.
22. Gargoyles - Longtime architectural embellishments, they did not become their own âBeingâ until 1971 with âThe Living Gargoyleâ published in Nightmare #6. Â The TV Movie âGargoylesâ came soon after in 1972, firmly establishing the monster. Â Though it was likely perfected in the TV Series âGargoylesâ (1994).Â
23. D&D - From 1973 Through 1977, D&D was formulated and many of its key monsters were invented. Partly as mechanics ways to screw with players and keep things lively. This brought us Rust Monsters (1973), Mindflayer (1974), Beholder (1975), and the Gelatinous Cube (1977).Â
24. The Xenomorph - Parasitoid breeding is applied to humans to wonderfully horrible effect in the 1979 film âAlienâ. It became iconic as soon as it appeared.Â
25. Slasher - The first slasher film is often considered to be âPsychoâ (though the Universal Mummy films beyond the first prototype the formula). The idea of an undead revenant coming back to kill rather randomly started in the film âThe Fogâ (1980), but was codified by Jason Voorhees in either 1984 or 1986.  I am no expert on this one, though, so I am not fully certain.
26. The Dream Killer - Freddy Krueger first appeared as a killer in dreams in 1981, but there were other dream killers before him. They could only kill with extreme fear, though. Freddy got physical! I think. Again, more research is needed.
27. Chupacabras - This is another cryptid inspired by a movie. In this case, âSpeciesâ (1995). No, really. This is what it comes from.  I know a lot of these are really short down the line, but the research for this one is thorough and concise!Â
28. Slender Man - The Boogieman for the Internet Age. An icon of Creepypastas and emblem of them.
Needs More Research: The Crow/Heroic Longer-Term Revenants, Immortals as a âGroupâ (might go to Gulliver's Travels, but Iâm trying to track Highlander here) are also on the list, but they are proving extremely difficult to research, so I thought Iâd post what I have at the moment. Shinigami might also be on the list since they are syncretic adoption of the Grim Reaper into something more.