Homebrew Xulls Species Details
Xulls are a sub species of Kobold with the above average Intelligence. They can grow to a max height of 3 ft. Xulls were once Kobolds that were considered to be defective, two Xulls survived and began to reproduce and creating a small community. They tend to live in Human cities working in the sewers keeping the rat and rodent population down. Seeming very skiddish Xulls are hardly seen during the daylight hours and tend to be more active at night. Xulls maybe smaller that average Kobolds, but they still use Pack Tactics, because they're smaller, the average Xull Cluster can accommodate almost twice the number of Kobolds in the same space. Xulls try to make themselves more useful by taking jobs smaller creatures deem beneath them, this in turn makes Xulls invaluable to cities, without them more rodents would over run most cities.
Xulls Traits
Cunning, patient and IntelligentComments
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Posted Nov 4, 2022Everyone talks about Kobolds being mistreated, try being a race that's mistreated by Kobolds.
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Posted Dec 13, 2025(The Argozian): Description and World-Lore
Physical Appearance
Argozians are small, agile reptilian beings measuring roughly 1 to 2 feet from snout to tail. Though diminutive, they possess a presence far larger than their small frames suggest. Their bodies are covered in finely scaled hide, typically appearing in hues of ember-red, rust-brown, or mossy green—colors that help them blend with rocky caverns or forest undergrowth.
Their heads resemble a softened kobold profile:
A thin, expressive tail makes up nearly a third of their length, curling and uncurling with each change of mood. Their limbs are lean but sturdy, ending in delicate, clawed digits that function as easily for climbing stone as for manipulating simple tools.
Behavior and Personality
Despite their size, Argozians are clever, opportunistic, and energetic. Their temperament resembles that of a kobold but with a more animalistic, instinct-driven edge.
Key behavioral traits include:
They communicate through a combination of chirrups, grunts, clicking sounds, and rapid tail movements. Observers often describe Argozians as “overcaffeinated kobolds distilled into lizard form.”
Habitat
Argozians thrive in environments that offer both cover and warm microclimates. Common habitats include:
Their nests are structured loosely from shed scales, moss, and scavenged cloth scraps, woven with surprising care.
Diet
They are omnivores with a preference toward:
They will follow adventuring parties at a distance if they scent cooking fires or rations.
Ecological Role
In ecosystems, Argozians act as both pest-control and scavengers. Their presence often indicates a healthy population of insects and small mammals. Though they are not inherently malicious, they can become nuisances by stealing food, hoarding small metallic trinkets, or attempting to claim abandoned gear.
Cultural Significance
In regions where kobolds are common, Argozians are sometimes viewed as distant kin or “scaled cousins.” Kobolds may keep them as semi-domesticated companions or use them as early-warning creatures due to their sharp senses.
Argozian Communication & Greetings
Argozians produce language through rhythmic tapping of their claw-tips—a complex percussive language whose cadence resembles a blend of Morse code, castanet rhythms, and insect stridulation. Each tap’s pressure, angle, speed, and location on the body or environment carries meaning. Foot-claws produce deeper, resonant tones, whereas hand-claws generate sharper; articulate clicks used for fine detail.
Greeting Rituals
Argozians greet one another through a layered combination of sound, posture, and controlled movement:
Every Argozian begins an exchange with a short three-beat personal pattern that identifies them socially—almost like signing one’s name.
Patterns differ sharply by region; trained elders can often identify someone’s birthplace just from this greeting.
Argozians briefly raise their primary hand-claw and rotate the wrist so the light catches the surface. This isn’t dominance—it’s transparency. They show that no weaponized claw-edges are primed.
In friendlier or communal contexts, both Argozians tap a micro-rhythm together—two or three beats in alternating cadence.
If the rhythms align smoothly, it’s taken as a sign of goodwill. If they fall out of sync, the conversation may become more formal or cautious.
Social Standing Among Argozians
Argozian society is acoustically hierarchical. Since clicking is their language, clarity, rhythm, and resonance shape how others perceive one’s status.
Individuals with naturally deeper or more resonant foot-clacks often become leaders, diplomats, or ritual orators. This is not due to physical strength—it is believed the deep tones “anchor” community bonds, making others more willing to follow.
Argozians who craft intricate rhythm-patterns, such as historians, strategists, and code-weavers, hold high esteem. Their role is like archivists, poets, and cryptographers all at once.
Clans with long histories of producing recognized leaders or exceptional rhythmic innovators wield power. These families are guardians of ancestral rhythms—long, encoded sequences tapped during ceremonies to recount history or invoke collective memory.
Those with duller or irregular clicking patterns often take roles in:
They are not considered “lower” morally—Argozians don’t equate worth with status—but their voices lack ceremonial resonance, and therefore their influence tends to be practical rather than political.
Cultural Dynamics
An Argozian's “voiceprint”—their unique tapping style—is treated with reverence. Mimicking someone’s rhythm without permission is considered an insult, even a form of identity theft.
Argozian dialogue is physically expressive: subtle posture shifts, tail-taps, and claw movements accompany speech. Outsiders may interpret it as dance-like martial arts.
Children learn basic tapping patterns early, often through communal nursery circles. Instead of lullabies, caregivers tap slow, heartbeat-like rhythms that calm and bond.
Homes and public halls are built to amplify or soften resonance. Some structures are tuned like instruments—leaders give speeches in “resonant chambers” that amplify their natural tones.
Racial Dynamics: The Argozian Subspecies
Argozians are not monolithic. There are multiple subspecies, each adapted to different environmental niches. None is “superior,” but social attitudes vary.
Their rhythms are slow and powerful; others find them grounding.
They are valued for speed and precision, though some Stone-Claws consider them “too delicate.”
Their clicking includes water-slaps and bubble-tones, viewed by inland Argozians as exotic but difficult to interpret.
Shade-Claws sometimes face suspicion due to their quieter rhythmic signatures, though they are highly respected as scouts, natural philosophers, and forest wardens.
Interracial Relations & Cultural Tensions
Argozian society values harmony, but differences in rhythm and resonance can create friction:
Some high-ranking clans believe deep-toned Stone-Claws are the “true” descendants of the original Argozian rhythm-keepers. Cultural pride sometimes borders on condescension.
Different subspecies use different timing conventions.
What is a polite pause for one group might seem evasive to another.
In cities where multiple subspecies mingle, hybrid dialects of tapping evolve. Traditionalists criticize these as “noise-drift,” while younger Argozians see them as cultural fusion.
Code-Masters push the boundaries of rhythm-language with new forms and poetic structures. Elders worry that sacred rhythms may lose their meaning.
Argozian Lifespans
Baseline Lifespan
A typical Argozian lives 130–160 standard years, with roughly two-thirds of that time spent in full physical and cognitive vigor. Aging is gradual rather than steep; most Argozians remain active, articulate, and socially influential well into their second century.
Their long-life expectancy comes from:
Life Stages
Tiny, soft-shelled, with small, muted claws that produce only simple clicks. Their “voiceprints” are not stable yet. Hatchlings stay in shared nurseries where elders tap slow, heartbeat-like rhythms for bonding.
Their exoskeleton hardens; claws develop tonal clarity, and social learning becomes intense. They master clan rhythms and begin experimenting with personal signature patterns.
Considered their most productive phase in both physical strength and rhythmic complexity.
Their physical strength dips slightly, but rhythmic depth reaches its height. Elders become:
Deep, slow, resonant tones produced by aged claws are culturally revered—“the voice of the stone inside the soul,” as Argozian poets put it.
Not frail, but gradually quieter. Their claws dull, rhythms slow, and their exoskeleton becomes opaquer.
Argozians in this stage undertake the Long Quiet, a tradition in which they travel to a site of personal significance to record a final rhythm-legacy for their descendants or community.
A small number live to 180+ years, and these individuals are almost mythologized—their low-frequency rhythms can vibrate entire gathering halls.
Subspecies Variations
Stone-Claws
Glass-Claws
Tide-Claws
Shade-Claws
Cultural Attitudes Toward Aging
Rhythmic Maturity = Social Authority
As an Argozian ages, the depth of their resonance increases. This aligns with a belief that wisdom physically accumulates in the claws.
Young Argozians rarely challenge an elder in rhythmic debate—lower tones are culturally equated with emotional steadiness and truth.
The Long Quiet
Death is not feared but approached as a final composition. The departed leave behind:
Interracial Perceptions of Lifespan
Subspecies sometimes judge each other based on longevity:
They are seen as omens of hidden tunnels, buried treasure, or abandoned lairs, appearing wherever secrets lie beneath the earth.