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Mi-Go

Mi-Go CR 6

XP 2,400
NE Medium plant
Init +3; Senses blindsight (vibration) 30 ft., low-light vision; Perception +13

DEFENSE HP 80

EAC 18; KAC 19
Fort +11; Ref +5; Will +5
Defensive Abilities void adaptation; DR 5/slashing; Immunities cold, plant immunities; Resistances electricity 10, fire 10

OFFENSE

Speed 30 ft., fly 50 ft. (Su, average)
Melee claw +14 (1d6+7 S plus grab)
Ranged mi-go frostbite-class zero rifle +14 (1d8+5 C; critical staggered [DC 16])
Offensive Abilities evisceration

STATISTICS

Str +1; Dex +3; Con +2; Int +5; Wis +2; Cha +0
Skills Acrobatics +13, Bluff +18, Engineering +13, Life Science +18, Medicine +13, Mysticism +18
Languages Aklo, Common, Mi-Go
Other Abilities mi-go technology, spaceflight (Mysticism)
Gear mi-go frostbite-class zero rifle with 2 mi-go high-capacity batteries (40 charges each)

SPECIAL ABILITIES

Evisceration (Ex)

A mi-go is capable of performing swift surgical operations upon targets that are helpless or that the mi-go currently has grappled. Against such a target, any hit with the mi-go’s claw counts as a critical hit that has the severe wound critical hit effect with a save DC of 16. If the mi-go actually scores a critical hit against such a target, the mi-go rolls the damage three times instead of twice, and the save DC increases to 18.

Mi-Go Technology (Ex)

Mi-go use Life Science in place of Engineering to craft technological and hybrid items. These are technological or hybrid biotech items that work like their typical counterparts, except that Life Science is also used to repair them. Species other than mi-go can use Engineering or Life Science to identify this gear, which is alien tech.

ECOLOGY

Environment any
Organization solitary, pair, or scouting party (3–9)

Mi-go are scientists, explorers, inventors, and colonists, as well as eerie servitors of the Outer Gods and Great Old Ones.

These creatures come from deep space and view the universe as a canvas to be controlled and mastered. Their population on any one planet varies, but when counted across the entire galaxy, their numbers are mind-numbing in scale.

Although a mi-go resembles an arthropod, the creature is actually a highly evolved form of fungus. Mi-go can speak in a buzzing voice, but their own language consists of the complex shifting of color patterns upon their bulbous heads. This communication allows for the dissemination of astounding amounts of information quickly, but for those other than mi-go, speaking the language requires special equipment.

Mi-go meld faith and science, magic and technology, and other themes together into an unsettling whole.

Most mi-go serve Nyarlathotep or other entities of the Elder Mythos, and their minds work in a fashion alien to typical humanoid thinking. To migo, their devotion to their gods isn’t admiration, slavery, or worship—it’s akin to the relationship between a student and a professor.

Other minions of the Elder Mythos might be allies, but mi-go consider themselves to be superior to most living things. Gifted with supernatural skill in surgery and biotechnology, mi-go can rework the flesh of those they capture with precision, remaking their victims into forms more appropriate for servitude or for truly alien aesthetics. These alien fungi can also keep creatures alive through the most invasive surgical procedures, so those who fall prey to mi-go don’t retain their sanity for long. Using their technology and ability to squeeze into a tighter shape, mi-go construct cunning disguises, replacing those whose brains they’ve harvested in order to invade societies from within. Only the mi-go know the extent to which they’ve infiltrated societies throughout the galaxy.

A mi-go is the size of a human but weighs only 90 pounds.

Section 15: Copyright Notice

Starfinder Alien Archive 2 © 2018, Paizo Inc.; Authors: Alexander Augunas, Kate Baker, John Compton, Adam Daigle, Brian Duckwitz, Eleanor Ferron, Amanda Hamon Kunz, James Jacobs, Mikko Kallio, Jason Keeley, Lyz Liddell, Ron Lundeen, Robert G. McCreary, Mark Moreland, Matt Morris, Adrian Ng, Joe Pasini, Lacy Pellazar, David N. Ross, Stephen Rowe, Chris Sims, Owen K.C. Stephens, James L. Sutter, and Russ Taylor.