Canon:Ygorl

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Ygorl
Homeland: Unknown
Gender: Unknown
Race: Unknown
Age: Unknown
Class: Unknown
Alignment: Unknown
This article is based on material by: 

In the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, Ygorl is the Slaad Lord of Entropy.[1][2]

Publication history[edit]

Ygorl was created by Charles Stross, and first appeared in the first edition Fiend Folio (1981).[3]

Ygorl appeared in second edition in Dragon #221 (September 1995).[4] Ygorl had small parts in the anthologies Tales of the Outer Planes (1988),[5] and Tales From the Infinite Staircase (1998).[6]

In third edition, Ygorl appeared in Necromancer Games's Tome of Horrors (2002) and Tome of Horrors Revised (2005).

Ygorl, Lord of Entropy, appeared in The Plane Below (2009) along with Shkiv and Skirnex, Voice of Ygorl.[7]

Description[edit]

Ygorl appears as a blackened, bat-winged, skeletal hulk, wielding a large scythe. He rides a great wyrm brass dragon named Shkiv. As one of the exemplars of the chaotic neutral alignment, Ygorl is not truly evil, but still very dangerous, unpredictable, and self-serving. He believes in bringing death, decay, and disorganization to the multiverse, and thinks this is best done by the slaadi, the truest agents of Chaos.

Relationships[edit]

Ygorl considers the slaadi to be his living pawns. They do not serve him in any organized fashion, but most will obey his orders rather than allow him to devour them. Besides Shkiv, Ygorl is allied with Sorel, his lieutenant, who he is grooming to become the Lord of Anarchy. Skirnex is the Voice of Ygorl, a misshapen void slaad with a stunted third arm, and an almost palpable aura of wrongness; Skirnex serves both as Ygorl's intermediary and something like a priest.[7]

Ygorl ignores Ssendam and fears Rennbuu. He enjoys the company of Chourst, at least at times.

The "entropic reapers" from Libris Mortis are said to arise in Limbo to "enforce the twisted edicts of chaotic beings that decree the death of lawful creatures." They are not explicitly connected to Ygorl, but they are connected to the force of entropy and the plane of Limbo.[8]

Realm[edit]

Ygorl's fortress in Limbo constantly changes appearance; it can be a rough cavern, a shattered marbled temple, or (as the 1st edition Manual of the Planes describes it) a series of interlaced carved spheres that whirl through Limbo's layers.

History[edit]

Ygorl is the second oldest slaad lord, after Ssendam, and is considered the de-facto ruler of Outer Plane of Limbo. He is said to have created the Spawning Stone that is the focus of the slaad race, forcing them to take froglike forms rather than their original, purely chaotic shapes.

The Plane Below: Secrets of the Elemental Chaos suggests that Ygorl actually sprang into being the moment the multiverse finally died and has been perceiving time backwards ever since, so that the past is the future to him, and his "death" will be some time in the distant past. He is thus patient in his attempts to spread entropy, because he remembers the time when entropy claims everything, and regards it as inevitable.[7]

Ygorl in other media[edit]

Ygorl appeared as the final boss in the video game Demon Stone where he was voiced by Michael Clarke Duncan.[9][10] In the game he was depicted as humanoid in appearance but was covered in tough chitinous armor and had many claw-like mandibles extending from the back of his head.

Ygorl's brass dragon companion Shkiv is a recurring character in the comic strip Downer by Kyle Stanley Hunter, which originally appeared in the pages of Dungeon magazine.

References[edit]

  1. YGORL- Slaad Lord of Entropy
  2. Ygorl
  3. Don Turnbull (1981). Fiend Folio. (1e) TSR. ISBN 0-935696-21-0.
  4. Bonny, Edward. "The Dragon's Bestiary: Lords of Chaos." Dragon #221 (TSR, 1995)
  5. Christian, Deborah, et al. Tales of the Outer Planes. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1988
  6. Cook, Monte. Tales From the Infinite Staircase. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 1998
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Marmell, Ari, Bruce R. Cordell, and Luke Johnson. The Plane Below: Secrets of the Elemental Chaos (Wizards of the Coast, 2009)
  8. Andy Collins, Bruce R. Cordell (October 2004). Libris Mortis. (3.5e) Wizards of the Coast. ISBN 0-7869-3433-6.
  9. Forgotten Realms: Demon Stone
  10. Ryan Davis, "Review of Forgotten Realms: Demon Stone," GameSpot (Dec 13, 2004).

Additional reading[edit]

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