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

Uplifted Bear Constellate

Uplifted Bear Constellate CR 7

XP 3,200
Uplifted bear solarian
N Large magical beast
Init +4; Senses low-light vision; Perception +14

DEFENSE HP 108 RP 4

EAC 20; KAC 22
Fort +11; Ref +11; Will +6
Resistances cold or fire 5

OFFENSE

Speed 40 ft., climb 20 ft.
Melee claw +18 (2d6+12 S) or static shock truncheon +18 (1d12+12 E; critical arc 1d4)
Ranged red star plasma pistol +15 (1d8+7 E & F; critical burn 1d8)
Space 10 ft.; Reach 5 ft.
Offensive Abilities ferocious charge, flashing strikes, stellar revelations (black hole [25-ft. radius, pull 15 ft., DC 15], dark matter [DR 2/—], reflection)

STATISTICS

Str +5; Dex +4; Con +1; Int +1; Wis +0; Cha +2
Skills Athletics +19 (+27 to climb), Intimidate +14, Mysticism +14
Languages Common; limited telepathy 30 ft.
Other Abilities solar manifestation (solar armor), stellar alignment (graviton)
Gear estex suit III, red star plasma pistol with 2 highcapacity batteries (40 charges each), static shock truncheon with 2 batteries (20 charges each)

ECOLOGY

Environment any
Organization solitary

Uplifted animals are nonsapient creatures modified to increase their cognitive ability to full self-awareness, and sometimes also to make their physical forms better able to manipulate tools. Uplifted bears are among the most common uplifted animals, although who uplifted them and how are unknown.

Uplifted bears have modified bodies that give them nimble hands with opposable thumbs. They retain a normal bear’s bulk and power, with claws that can rip through modern armor. Alongside their brute strength, uplifted bears have a keen intellect and the ability to communicate via telepathy, which most choose to do rather than vocalize gruffly from what is still a bear’s muzzle. An uplifted bear can be 5 feet tall at the shoulder when on all fours but tower up to 10 feet when moving bipedally. An adult bear weighs 1,200 pounds.

These modifications and traits are genetic and can be passed down by mating pairs of uplifted bears.

Many uplifted bears find success in scientific endeavors, but they are most comfortable when they can be outside regularly in a natural, vegetated environment. Though this characteristic is not universal, it has led to uplifted bears gaining a reputation as poor crew members in orbital stations and long-haul expeditions. Others also assume the bears are best suited for exploring habitable worlds and cataloging flora and fauna.

Uplifted bears are sometimes rumored to have violent temperaments, but their personalities are as varied as those of any sapient species. Some uplifted bears take great pleasure in playing to this stereotype when they meet other people, drawing out the biased assumptions of the ill-informed, and then mocking them. Conversely, giving truth to the generality, a number of organized crime kingpins are uplifted bears who find they can threaten with their bulk when they can’t convince with their wits.

Uplifted bears feel a kinship for animals and animal-like humanoids, often preferring their company. They relate well to shirrens, though uplifted bears are more reserved than the enthusiastic insectile species. Much as many shirrens fear reassimilation, some uplifted bears fear that whoever created them might return and put a dark spin on the gift of sapience the bears were given.

An uplifted bear exploration team recently discovered a planet full of skyscraper-sized trees and unpopulated by sentient creatures. Since this report, a small but vocal contingent of uplifted bears has begun calling for their kind to claim the planet as their home world.

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.