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Trainer: Turtlefolk, Man
Medium - Size
Turtlefolks
Trainers
120 lbs
Trainer
Neutral
35
313

Body
Mind
Soul
Vitality
90 / 90
Armor
10
15
Luck
Walking Speed
20
Jumping Speed
10
Swimming Speed
20
Unhindered Attacks
1
Reach
5
ST 1 | 1 SP | d4
ST 3 | 7 SP | d6
Language Spoken

  • Natural Armor Natural Armor:
  • Natural Armor +5
    80 0 gp


  • Natural Weapon Natural Weapon(s):
  • Slam (d4)
    56.92


  • Passive Ability Passive Abilities:
  • Hold Breath (1 hour)
    500 gp

  • Ability Abilities:
  • Shell Defense

  • Reaction Ability Reaction Abilities:
  • Shell Unfurling
    100 gp


  • Monster Bit Monster Bits:
  • 374 Humanoid Blood
    0.15 gp
  • 396 Animal Bone
    0.03 gp
  • 384 Animal Fat
    0.5 gp
  • 444 Animal Meat
    0.05 gp
  • 372 Soft Skin
    0.05 gp

Leathery green skin stretches taut over a broad, humanoid shell, etched with barnacle scars and river-mud streaks. Callused hands, webbed at the fingers, grip a gnarled staff carved from driftwood, while beady eyes peer from beneath a hooded brow, scanning the undergrowth for hidden threats. His voice rumbles low like grinding pebbles, steady and unhurried.

Turtlefolks
Creature Sub Type
Creature Sub Type
86.5

🐢 Turtlefolk

Turtlefolk are a long-lived humanoid people associated with endurance, balance, memory, and the meeting point between land and sea. Their traditions describe them as an ancient race formed in the early ages of the world through a union of clay, earth, and water after the fall of the Titans. Because of this origin, Turtlefolk are often viewed as one of the oldest mortal peoples still active in the world, with cultural practices centered on migration, ancestral memory, elemental discipline, and communal guidance.

They are best known for their durable bodies, their distinctive shells, their deliberate outlook, and their role as carriers of old knowledge across distant regions.

🧬 Origins in Ancient Wisdom

Turtlefolk trace their beginnings to the First Age, when the world was still stabilizing after the fall of the Titans. According to their oldest traditions, they emerged when clay, water, and elemental earth converged under lingering divine influence. In these accounts, the fallen gods or titan-born powers left behind a residue of wisdom and structure that shaped the first Turtlefolk into a people built for patience, survival, and continuity.

Many Turtlefolk believe this heritage places them unusually close to the world’s first powers. Whether taken literally or symbolically, this belief explains several of their defining traits: long lifespans, strong elemental affinities, and a worldview that emphasizes cycles, endurance, and the responsibility to preserve memory across generations.

Other peoples often regard these claims with respect even when they do not fully share Turtlefolk theology, because Turtlefolk oral records and migratory traditions frequently preserve information older civilizations have lost.

🛡️ Shimmering Shells: Symbols of Identity and Resilience

The most visible feature of the Turtlefolk is the shell carried on their back. These shells are made from a rare and unusual material traditionally called Aquarite, known for its strength, resilience, and subtle reflective qualities. A Turtlefolk shell is both physical protection and a cultural marker. No two shell patterns are exactly the same, and Turtlefolk often interpret the details of a shell’s coloration, texture, and markings as expressions of lineage, temperament, and life experience.

In many traditions, shells are said to shift slightly in tone or sheen with emotional states, stress, spiritual alignment, or elemental activity. Whether this is purely mystical or partly physical depends on the setting, but in Turtlefolk culture the shell is never treated as simple armor. It is part of the self, part of the family record, and often part of ritual life.

Damage to a shell is taken seriously, not only because of the physical danger involved, but because it can carry emotional and symbolic weight. Repairs, polishings, carvings, and ceremonial treatments are often acts of healing, remembrance, or status recognition.

🌊 Nomads of the Tidal Trails

Turtlefolk are traditionally nomadic. Rather than building permanent cities in one place, they travel in organized kin-groups across coastlines, rivers, shallow seas, marshlands, islands, and overland routes tied to seasonal and spiritual patterns. These mobile communities are known as clowders, typically consisting of extended families, elders, attendants, apprentices, and protectors who move together over long periods of time.

A clowder is more than a caravan. It is a social, spiritual, and educational unit. Knowledge, law, craft, ritual, and family life all move with it. Because of this, Turtlefolk mobility does not imply rootlessness. Their identity is carried communally rather than anchored to a single settlement.

Travel routes are often determined by a combination of practical and sacred factors: tides, seasonal weather, access to trade, ancestral obligations, and celestial or elemental signs interpreted by elders. Some clowders follow well-known migratory circuits. Others adapt routes based on visions, omens, or changes in the land and sea.

💧 Elemental Affinity: Water, Earth, and Tidal Magic

Turtlefolk are strongly associated with water and earth. Their magical traditions often combine tidal motion, weather sense, stone-shaping, and ritual geomancy into a discipline commonly described as Tidal Magic. This is less a single spell tradition and more a broad cultural approach to interacting with elemental forces.

Common Turtlefolk practices may include:

  1. calming or redirecting small bodies of water
  2. sensing shifts in tide, current, rainfall, or shoreline change
  3. shaping mud, clay, sand, or stone for shelter or defense
  4. reinforcing structures against erosion or storm damage
  5. performing communal rites to stabilize elemental imbalance

Because of their elemental affinity, Turtlefolk often serve as navigators, weather interpreters, ritual wardens, protectors of sacred coastal sites, and caretakers of places where land and water meet. Their magic is usually practical, defensive, and sustaining rather than flamboyant.

📚 Guardians of Ancestral Lore

Ancestry and memory are central to Turtlefolk identity. Most Turtlefolk cultures place high value on oral transmission, with long recitations used to preserve genealogy, migration records, alliances, disasters, sacred law, and the deeds of prior generations. These stories are not treated as entertainment alone. They are part archive, part ritual, and part social contract.

Elders are especially important because they hold accumulated memory across unusually long lives. A single elder may remember agreements, betrayals, landscapes, and patterns that for shorter-lived peoples would have disappeared into legend. This gives Turtlefolk communities a strong sense of continuity and makes them valuable record-keepers in mixed-cultural regions.

In many groups, preserving lore is considered a form of service equal to fighting, crafting, or spellwork. To forget one’s line, one’s route, or one’s obligations is not merely careless. It is a disruption of balance.

🌌 Cosmic Pilgrimage: The Great Migration

Once in a generation, many Turtlefolk take part in a major sacred journey called the Great Migration. This is not the same as ordinary seasonal travel. It is a large-scale pilgrimage to places considered spiritually thin, cosmically significant, or historically foundational to Turtlefolk identity.

These sites may include ancient coastlines, ruined titan shrines, sacred deltas, submerged temples, meteor-marked islands, or places where celestial and elemental forces are believed to intersect. During the Great Migration, Turtlefolk renew ancestral ties, perform large communal rites, exchange memory records between clowders, and seek visions concerning the future of their people.

The event also serves practical purposes. It reaffirms bonds between otherwise far-traveled groups, redistributes knowledge, settles disputes, and allows younger Turtlefolk to be formally introduced into the wider structure of their people. Prophecies, duties, and long-term decisions may emerge from this gathering, which is why many Turtlefolk adventurers begin their journeys shortly after participating in it.

⚖️ Diplomats of Balance

Turtlefolk are often regarded as natural diplomats. Their longevity, patience, and habit of thinking in long cycles rather than immediate reactions make them well suited to mediation. They tend to look for structural causes behind conflict instead of responding only to surface disputes. This gives them a reputation for fairness, though also sometimes for slowness.

Their role as travelers between regions further strengthens this function. A Turtlefolk elder may have negotiated with the grandparents of the same people now in conflict. A clowder may have seen how similar disputes ended in other lands and use that perspective to advise restraint or compromise.

They are not passive. Turtlefolk will defend themselves, their kin, and sacred sites when necessary. But in most settings they prefer to resolve instability before it becomes open violence. Their diplomacy is based less on idealism and more on an ingrained belief that land, sea, ancestry, and society all remain healthiest when kept in balance.

🏕️ Society and Daily Life

Turtlefolk society is usually organized around kinship, elder guidance, practical labor, and ritual continuity. Roles within a clowder are often clear but not rigid. Navigators, lore-keepers, shell-tenders, elemental practitioners, scouts, healers, and negotiators may all hold respected places depending on the group’s needs.

Daily life tends to emphasize:

  1. mutual support
  2. maintenance of gear, shell health, and travel structures
  3. ritual observance tied to tides and stars
  4. instruction of youth through apprenticeship and recitation
  5. careful stewardship of resources during travel

Because they spend long periods in motion, Turtlefolk communities often become highly skilled in portable architecture, weather-resistant craft, water management, and preserving food, texts, charms, or ritual tools across long journeys.

🧭 The Turtlefolk Adventurer

Turtlefolk adventurers often leave their clowders with a specific purpose. Some are following visions received during the Great Migration. Others are fulfilling ancestral obligations, investigating disruptions in elemental balance, carrying diplomatic messages, recovering lost lore, or answering a spiritual duty tied to land and sea.

They are well suited to roles such as:

  1. defenders
  2. sages
  3. navigators
  4. ritual specialists
  5. diplomats
  6. guardians of sacred routes
  7. historians and emissaries

Even when traveling alone, most Turtlefolk still think in communal terms. Their actions often reflect long-term responsibility rather than short-term gain.

  • Speed Types Speed:
  • Walking Speed Walking Speed: +20
  • Swimming Speed Swimming Speed: +20

  • Natural Armor Natural Armor:
  • Natural Armor +5
    80 0 gp

  • Natural Weapon Natural Weapon(s):
  • Slam (d4)
    56.92

  • Passive Ability Passive Abilities:
  • Hold Breath (1 hour)
    500 gp

  • Ability Abilities:
  • Shell Defense

  • Reaction Ability Reaction Abilities:
  • Shell Unfurling
    100 gp

  • ST 3 | 7 SP | d6 Skill Tier 3:
  • Natural Armor Skill Natural Armor Skill

  • Random Name Table Male Random Name Table Male
  • Names - Turtlefolk - Male - First

  • Random Name Table Female Random Name Table Female
  • Names - Turtlefolk - Female - First

  • Random Name Table Last Name Random Name Table Last Name
  • Names - Turtlefolk - Last

Trainers
Creature Template
Creature Template

Trainers are veteran experts and legendary mentors who dedicate their lives to forging stronger adventurers. 🏋️ For a price — whether heaps of gold, rare magical components, ancient relics, or personal favors — they train Player Characters to elevate their skills, master new techniques, and unlock hidden potential based on each individual’s existing abilities and class. Combat veterans drill warriors in advanced fighting styles, master mages teach complex spells and arcane theory, and cunning specialists coach rogues and bards in stealth, deception, and social mastery.

Most Trainers operate from established training halls, private academies, or exclusive guild dojos in cities, while others travel between adventuring hubs or set up temporary camps near dungeons and strongholds. Though they no longer risk their lives in the field, they take significant financial and reputational risks by investing their time in promising heroes. Many belong to respected orders or guilds that protect their reputation and ensure payment is delivered.

The best Trainers don’t just teach — they challenge. Their rigorous programs often include dangerous trials, personal quests, or tests of character that push students to their limits, turning training into its own form of adventure. Wise parties seek out these mentors between major expeditions to return stronger, faster, and better prepared for the dangers ahead. A good relationship with a Trainer can be one of the most valuable investments an adventurer ever makes

  • Trainer Trainer
  • Trainers are expert mentors who use their own skills to coach player characters—for gold, rare components, favors, or other payment—helping them raise skills and unlock potential tied to their abilities and class. Parties often visit them between expeditions to come back better prepared.

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