Home >Game Mastering >Bestiary >Creatures by Type >Magical Beasts >

Kyokor

Kyokor CR 20

XP 307,200
CE Colossal magical beast (colossus)
Init +6; Senses blindsense (thought) 120 ft., sense the masses; Perception +34

DEFENSE

HP 485
EAC 35; KAC 37
Fort +23; Ref +19; Will +21; Resistances cold 30, fire 30

OFFENSE

Speed 100 ft., swim 100 ft.
Melee bite +35 (4d12+29 P) or claw +35 (4d12+29 S) or slam +35 (8d6+29 B)
Multiattack bite +32 (4d12+29 P), 2 claws +32 (4d12+29 S), slam +32 (8d6+29 B)
Space 60 ft.; Reach 60 ft.
Offensive Abilities demolish structures, enthrall victims

STATISTICS

Str +9; Dex +6; Con +12; Int +6; Wis +5; Cha +4
Skills Intimidate +39, Sense Motive +34, Survival +34
Languages One language, Common
Other Abilities massive, water breathing

SPECIAL ABILITIES

Demolish Structures (Ex)

A kyokor has an exoskeleton that is harder than most metals, and it can therefore use its body against urban structures with deadly effect. A kyokor’s natural weapons ignore the hardness of all structures not made of adamantine alloy or a harder material. Against structures made of such materials, a kyokor’s natural weapons ignore half of the structure’s hardness.

Enthrall Victims (Su)

The force with which a kyokor destroys structures is laced with strange, ancient psychic energy. When a kyokor attacks a structure, all creatures within 100 feet with an Intelligence modifier of –3 or higher must succeed at a DC 25 Will saving throw or be Stunned”>stunned for as long as the kyokor is attacking a structure or any other creature within 100 feet. Each time the kyokor attacks a creature that a Stunned”>stunned victim can see, that victim can attempt a new saving throw. If a kyokor attacks a Stunned”>stunned creature, the Stunned”>stunned effect immediately ends. This is a mind-affecting fear effect.

Sense the Masses (Su)

Large concentrations of sentient creatures are like beacons of light that call to kyokors.

A kyokor can sense groups of 2,000 or more intelligent creatures gathered together in a single settlement out to 5 miles. This ability does not allow a kyokor to know exactly how many creatures are in a given location, but it does allow it to pinpoint pockets of intelligent life and know which pockets are the most populous.

ECOLOGY

Environment any
Organization solitary

Kyokors are one of the most common types of colossi that rampage like a living apocalypse across a ruined planet. These mammoth, bipedal alien horrors are large enough to take out an entire city block with a few sweeps of their hulking claws, and in fact this seems to be exactly what they evolved—or were designed—to do.

Kyokors are enormous juggernauts covered in shell-like exoskeletons of armored plates, from between which they can extrude hundreds of wriggling tonguelike appendages.

They have occasionally been observed using these grotesque tendrils in those rare situations in which they need fine manipulation ability (though they may have others uses as well). Certainly the jagged crablike claws on their arms are useless for grabbing anything smaller than a boulder; these are used almost exclusively to spear and smash. A kyokor has an armored skull with a strangely elongated chin, tiny glowing eyes peeking out from a cavernous gash, and sharp growths like a crown of teeth rising from the top of its head. A single kyokor is typically about 150 feet tall and weighs more than 20,000 tons.

Although most Daimalkans who have ventured to the planet’s surface have seen at least one kyokor from afar, only a handful of the bravest explorers and heroes have ever seen one up close.

Most known information about these colossi comes from bloodstained, hastily scrawled records created during the Awakening (the planetwide cataclysm that released the kyokors and other colossi from their slumber deep within the oceans).

Kyokors target population centers, and they seem to equally revel in the fear they produce as they demolish buildings and snatch up tiny humanoid snacks to eat. The monsters are voraciously hungry, but whether it’s destruction or meat that sustains them is unknown. Kyokors exhibit surprising intelligence and are fiercely independent. They occasionally fight other colossi in grudge matches that blast entire landscapes.

Rumors swirl about elite bands of colossi hunters who have taken down kyokors and reaped impossible riches from their corpses. Given the creatures’ history, though, the veracity of such claims is question.

Kyokor Plating (Heavy Armor)

Scavengers on Daimalko dare to brave the wastes of their world to gather the enamel-like hulls that kyokors occasionally shed from their crowns. These toothy moltings are enormous, and once they’re retrieved, they require a great deal of effort to grind into plates that can be used to craft armor. Despite this and the dangers of gathering the requisite moltings, suits of kyokor plating are in demand throughout the universe, making collection of the raw materials and subsequent forging into lucrative careers.

Suits of kyokor plating are tough and surprisingly lightweight for their size, and the moltings’ porous nature makes this armor perfect for the installation of various upgrades and other methods of personalization. Lower-quality suits are fashioned from numerous pieced-together blasted fragments, sacrificing durability for lower cost. High-quality suits are fashioned entirely from sleek, fitted enamel plates, which offer practically unparalleled protection but can be restrictive when it comes to a wearer’s range of motion.

Armor Model Level Price EAC Bonus KAC Bonus Max Dex Bonus Armor Check Penalty Speed Adjustment Upgrade Slots Bulk
Kyokor plating I 2 800 +2 +4 +3 –1 –5 ft. 1 1
Kyokor plating II 6 4,820 +8 +10 +4 –1 –5 ft. 3 1
Kyokor plating III 10 17,100 +13 +16 +4 –2 –5 ft. 3 1
Kyokor plating IV 14 76,000 +17 +19 +5 –2 –5 ft. 4 1
Kyokor plating V 18 371,000 +23 +24 +5 –2 –5 ft. 6 1
Section 15: Copyright Notice

Starfinder Alien Archive © 2017, Paizo Inc.; Authors: John Compton, Adam Daigle, Crystal Frasier, Amanda Hamon Kunz, Jason Keeley, Jon Keith, Steve Kenson, Isabelle Lee, Lyz Liddell, Robert G. McCreary, Mark Moreland, Joe Pasini, F. Wesley Schneider, Owen K.C. Stephens, James L. Sutter, and Josh Vogt.