Page 308 - Monster Manual [11th Print]
P. 308

YU N - T I
                 A
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             Yuan-ti are devious serpent folk devoid  f  compassion.
             From remote temples in jungles, swamps, and deserts,
             the yuan-ti plot to supplant and dominate all other races
             and to make themselves gods.
              Forsaken Humanity. The yuan-ti were once humans
             who thrived in the earliest days of civilization and
             worshiped serpents as totem animals. They lauded the
             serpent's sinuous flexibility, its calculated poise, and
             its deadly strike. Their advanced philosophy taught
             the virtue of detachment from emotion and of clear,
             focused thought.
              Yuan-ti culture was among the richest in the mortal
             world. Their warriors were legendary, their empires
             always expanding. Yuan-ti temples stood at the
             centers of ancient metropolises, reaching ever higher
             in prayer to the gods they longed to emulate. In time,
             the serpent gods heard those prayers, their sibilant
             voices responding from the darkness as they told the
             yuan-ti what they must do. The yuan-ti religion grew
             more fanatical in its devotion. Cults bound themselves
             to the worship of the serpent gods and imitated their
             ways, indulging in cannibalism and humanoid sacrifice.
             Through foul sorcery, the yuan-ti bred with snakes,
             utterly sacrificing their humanity to become like the
             serpent gods in form, as well as in thought and emotion.
              Serpent Kings of  a llen Empires. The yuan-ti view
                             F
             their physical transformation as a transcendent moment
             for their race, allowing them to shed their frail humanity
             like dead skin. Those that did not transform eventually
            became slaves or food for the blessed of the serpent
             gods. The yuan-ti empires withered or were defeated by
            those who fought against their cannibalism and slavery,
             and the serpent folk were left in the ruins of their great
            capitals, far removed from other races.
              Cold of Heart.  Humanoid emotions are foreign to
            most yuan-ti, which understand sentiment only as an
            exploitable weakness. A yuan-ti views the world and
            the events of its own life with such extreme pragmatism
            that it is nearly impossible to manipulate, influence, or
            control by nonmagical means, even as it seeks to control
            other creatures through terror, pleasure, and awe.
              Yuan-ti know that the world they hope to rule can't be
            bound for long by brute force, and that many creatures
            will refuse to serve. As a result, yuan-ti first influence
            other creatures with the promise of wealth and power.
            Time and again, humanoid cultures make the fatal
            mistake of trusting the yuan-ti. They forget that a yuan-ti
            that acts honorably or lends aid in a time of trouble does
            so only as part of a grander design.
              Yuan-ti leaders are cunning and ruthless tacticians
            who readily sacrifice lesser yuan-ti if potential victory
            justifies such losses. They have no sense of honorable
            combat and strike first in decisive ambush if they can.
              F a lse  W o rship. Yuan-ti life revolves around their
            temples, yet yuan-ti don't love the gods they worship.
            Instead, they see worship as a means to attain power. A
            yuan-ti believes an individual who attains enough power
            can devour and replace one of the yuan-ti gods. The
            yuan-ti strive for ascension and are willing to commit
            the darkest atrocities to achieve it.
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