Feymire crocodile

Feymire crocodiles are creatures from the 4th edition of Dungeons & Dragons that can be found in the Feywild.

Description
Feymire crocodiles are 15- to 20-foot-long and muscular, covered in green scales and hundreds of tiny roots that spread from the center of the midsection, reaching into the ground. As it moves, the crocodile roots and uproots itself. The crocodile's tail has a jagged stinger at its very tip.

A crocodile waits in hiding until prey comes close and then attacks, surprising its target.

Abilities
The feymire crocodiles have a Wisdom score of 10 or 11.


 * Regeneration: The feymire crocodile absorbs the moisture and the life force of the land it takes roots in. If it does not take fire damage during a round, the crocodile regenerates HP.
 * Bite attack: If the feymire crocodile makes a bite attack against a Medium or smaller target, it grapples it in its mouth, swallowing it on the next turn. While swallowed, the target is blinded and restrained. A crocodile can have only one creature swallowed at a time.
 * Tail attack: Reach of 10 ft. Deals piercing damage and the target must make a Constitution saving throw (DC >10). On a failed saving throw, the creature can't take reactions until the start of its next turn and rolls a d8 to determine what it does. On a 1 to 4, the creature does nothing. On a 5 or 6, the creature takes no action but uses all of its movement to move in a random direction. On a 7 or 8, the creature makes one melee attack against a random creature, or does nothing if no creature is within reach.

History
One feymire crocodile made the Gilded Run of the Feywild its home, nourishing itself on the plant life of the river banks. While Vox Machina was traversing its waters, the crocodile ambushed and swallowed Grog. Keyleth dealt significant damage to the plant-based creature, casting Blight twice and getting her How do you want to do this?. Its roots withered and dried out, the outside bark cracked and turned to ash and dust, and its once verdant green hide began to curl into a dull gray, lifeless husk.