Golem

Golems are constructed creatures, built to carry out a certain purpose intended by their creators. They are often used as guards.

Description
To make a golem, the creature must sculpt them from a given material - typically clay, flesh, iron, or stone though other metals are at times used. They then must infuse it with an elemental "spark of life" to animate it. Once animated, the golem will follow the commands of the creator. Alternately, during creation, the creator can make an item tied to the golem that permits the bearer to give commands, rather than the creator.

All golems share the following traits: no need for food or sleep; immunity to charm, exhaustion, fear, paralysis, petrification, and poison; immunity to attacks nonmagical weapons not created out of adamantine; immunity to poison damage and to any effects that would change its form; and resistance to magical effects. All but flesh golems are additionally immune to psychic damage. Attacks from a golem, typically made without weapons with the exception of iron golems, are themselves considered magical.

Clay golem
Clay golems are large and have a misproportioned humanoid shape. They are immune to acid damage, and indeed are bolstered by acid attacks. When seriously injured, they are liable to attack indiscriminately until destroyed or healed.

Flesh golem
Flesh golems are about the size of a human, but are made from pieced-together body parts. It is slightly more intelligent than other golems, capable of responding to simple reasoning from its creator. They are immune to lightning damage and heal when struck by lightning instead, but they are afraid of fire. Like clay golems, they can become indiscriminately violent when they are quite injured.

Iron golem
Iron golems are large and heavily armored, and as beings of the forge are immune to any damage from fire, healing instead when hit with it. They can wield a simple weapon, such as a sword, and their breath is poisonous.

Stone golem
Stone golems are nearly immune to the ravages of time, and can indeed slow down those around it. They are often used as guards.

Cobalt golem
Cobalt golems are mighty armored servitors made by arcanists. Meteorites are the primary sources of raw cobalt ore, smelted by way of ferromagnetic alchemy into finished silver-gray cobalt. The final step is to mold and twist it into armored skin, surrounding the central lodestone that fuels the life of a cobalt golem. Most notably, cobalt golems are utilized by Cobalt Soul library to guard their restricted archives.

Forge guardian
Forge guardians are the most gargantuam of their type. They were moulded by the All-Hammer to guard the divine furnaces and hearths that designed the first dwarves. Forge guardians are shaped from marble fused with adamantine and filled lava, floating through their veins. These rare and massive constructs exemplify one of the highest forms of artistry known to Exandria. Together with fearsome fighting skills, the golem is also able to assist a blacksmith creating new golems.

Platinum golem
In birth, platinum golems are fused with the spirits of indomitable warriors, fueling them with the need to execute its master's orders to perfection. Temples of the Platinum Dragon craft these golems using divine rituals and imbue them with the unflinching devotion to justice epitomized by their god.

Mage hunter golem
Mage hunter golems were created by gods to manage the arcane ambitions of mortals. They are able to temporarily disrupt magic in certain radius, absorb medium level spells, or collar a mage with its claw, forfeiting their magic abilities.

History
During the Age of Arcanum, mortal races, empowered with gods' arcane gifts, began to experiment with manufacturing "life". The dwarves succeeded first, animating autonomous wardens to protect their domain. However, their knowledge was quickly stolen and scattered throughout Exandria.

Campaign One: Vox Machina

 * An iron golem who guarded the Shadebarrow until Vox Machina needed to retrieve its arcane cortex for Drez Vina.
 * A platinum golem who would guard the Horn of Orcus in Vasselheim.
 * Fassbender, a stone golem Vox Machina retrieved and controlled while in Westruun.
 * A cobalt golem controlled by J'mon Sa Ord and fought by Vox Machina as a test of worth.
 * A chain golem in the prisons of the Nine Hells, fought by Vox Machina as they attempted to permanently kill Hotis.
 * Metal golems, possibly iron, guarding the entrance to the Core Anvil.
 * A giant, metal-armored stone golem at the Core Anvil itself.
 * An adamantine golem in Pandemonium.

Campaign Two: The Mighty Nein

 * Willi, an adamantine golem the Mighty Nein, helmed by Caleb, created while in the Folding Halls of Halas.
 * The Centurion Automaton, an Aeorian guard mechanically similar to a stone golem.
 * Mage Hunter Golem by Sami Jen.jpg relied heavily on golems as servants in his demiplane, having an entire workshop available to create and maintain them. There were several within the folding halls:
 * The mage hunter golem, a mostly metal, and partially stone golem, guarding the tower machine, who attacked the Mighty Nein. Halas later told the Mighty Nein that the mage hunter golems take intruders to the Prison of Soot.
 * An adamantine golem in the golem workshop.
 * A flesh golem created from failed clones of Halas, with regenerative abilities similar to trolls.
 * A clay golem who attacks Beau, Yasha, and Fjord when they begin looking at the remaining books.

Campaign Three: Bells Hells
In Twilight Mirror Museum of Heartmoor Hamlet, two clay golems guarded the earring of Harudan.

Other
The Black King, an unusually intelligent mounted stone golem who will defend Westruun when the city is threatened.