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[[File:Hag MM 2e.png|thumb|right|300px|Because who can resist adding a cannibalistic old [[witch]] to their setting, right?]] | |||
[[File:Hag 2e. | |||
Hags are a kind of monster from [[Dungeons & Dragons]]. At their root, they are based in the stereotypical Western beliefs about [[witch]]es - namely, that they are hideously ugly old women who use their dark magical skills to cause suffering amongst mortals for kicks -- mingled with assorted European mythology about ugly but powerful and magical female [[giant]]s and [[troll]]s, from the Nordic Jarnvidjar to British boogeywomen like the river-dwelling child-drowning Jenny Greenteeth and the iron-clawed man-flaying Black Annis. | '''Hags''' are a kind of monster from [[Dungeons & Dragons]]. At their root, they are based in the stereotypical Western beliefs about [[witch]]es - namely, that they are hideously ugly old women who use their dark magical skills to cause suffering amongst mortals for kicks -- mingled with assorted European mythology about ugly but powerful and magical female [[giant]]s and [[troll]]s, from the Nordic Jarnvidjar to British boogeywomen like the river-dwelling child-drowning Jenny Greenteeth and the iron-clawed man-flaying Black Annis. | ||
Because of this, they initially began as a kind of [[Giant]], only to be redesigned in | Because of this, they initially began as a kind of [[Giant]], or at least Monstrous Humanoid, only to be redesigned in fourth edition as being a kind of fae embodying nature's capacity for cruelty and ugliness. | ||
Hags come in many, ''many'' varieties, from water-dwelling sea hags to brutishly powerful annis hags to seductive green hags to the fiendish night hags and more besides. They all have a love for evil and specialize in using magic, most notably innate affinities for illusion spells and physically shapechanging, to interact with mortals undetected, when they don't just enslave armies of [[goblin]]s, [[ogre]]s, [[orc]]s and other evil humanoids and rule them openly. | Hags come in many, ''many'' varieties, from water-dwelling sea hags to brutishly powerful annis hags to seductive green hags to the fiendish night hags and more besides. They all have a love for evil and specialize in using magic, most notably innate affinities for illusion spells and physically shapechanging, to interact with mortals undetected, when they don't just enslave armies of [[goblin]]s, [[ogre]]s, [[orc]]s and other evil humanoids and rule them openly. | ||
As an all-female race, hags need to mate with humanoid men in order to propagate. In older editions, in fact, hags grow up believing themselves to be normal human women, only transforming into hags when they reach about their 40s or 50s. The | As an all-female race, hags need to mate with humanoid men in order to propagate. In older editions, in fact, hags grow up believing themselves to be normal human women, only transforming into hags when they reach about their 40s or 50s. The exception to these are Night Hags, at least according to [[Dragon Magazine]], whose children are normal (if often [[cambion]]s or [[Half-Fiend]]s, due to the night hag propensity for breeding with fiends), but must be deliberately transformed into new night hags before they hit puberty. In the [[Pathfinder]] setting, hags give birth to more human-like daughters called [[Changeling]]s, who they must "persuade" to be magically transformed into more of their own kind. In 5e Hags actually ''kidnap and eat babies'', giving birth to a daughter a week later. They then either raise the child or return it to its parents and watch her grow up. At her 13th birthday the girl transforms into a spitting image of her hag mother. | ||
It hasn't seemed to occur to WotC yet that an origin story explaining where hags came from, why they always look old no matter their age, and why they're all female would be warranted. | |||
==Publication History== | ==Publication History== | ||
In the original Dungeons & Dragons, the sea hag first appeared in the Blackmoor supplement by Dave Arneson (1975). The Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set included its own version of the hag. The sea hag and the black hag appeared in the Dungeons & Dragons Master Rules (1985), and the Dungeons & Dragons Rules Cyclopedia (1991). | In the original Dungeons & Dragons, the sea hag first appeared in the Blackmoor supplement by Dave Arneson (1975). The Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set included its own version of the hag. The sea hag and the black hag appeared in the Dungeons & Dragons Master Rules (1985), and the Dungeons & Dragons Rules Cyclopedia (1991). | ||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
In Dungeons & Dragons Third Edition, the annis, the green hag, and the sea hag appear in the Monster Manual for this edition (2000). The bog hag appears in Oriental Adventures (2001). Savage Species (2003) presented the annis hag, the green hag, and the sea hag as both races and playable classes. The bheur hag, the shrieking hag, and the hagspawn for the Forgotten Realms appear in Unapproachable East (2003). | In Dungeons & Dragons Third Edition, the annis, the green hag, and the sea hag appear in the Monster Manual for this edition (2000). The bog hag appears in Oriental Adventures (2001). Savage Species (2003) presented the annis hag, the green hag, and the sea hag as both races and playable classes. The bheur hag, the shrieking hag, and the hagspawn for the Forgotten Realms appear in Unapproachable East (2003). | ||
In Dungeons & Dragons 3.5 edition, the annis, the green hag, the sea hag and the night hag appear in the revised Monster Manual for this edition (2003). The dusk hag for the Eberron campaign setting appears in the Eberron Campaign Setting book (2004). The Xtabay, hag inspired by Mayan legend, appeared in Dragon issue 317. The dune hag appears in Sandstorm: Mastering the Perils of Fire and Sand (2005). The marzanna appears in Frostburn: Mastering the Perils of Ice and Snow (2005). The green hag is further detailed in Dragon #331 (May 2005), in "The Ecology of the Green Hag,", and the annis hag is further detailed in Dragon #345 (July 2006), in "The Ecology of the Annis." | In Dungeons & Dragons 3.5 edition, the annis, the green hag, the sea hag and the night hag appear in the revised Monster Manual for this edition (2003). The dusk hag for the Eberron campaign setting appears in the Eberron Campaign Setting book (2004). The Xtabay, a hag inspired by Mayan legend, appeared in Dragon issue 317. The dune hag appears in Sandstorm: Mastering the Perils of Fire and Sand (2005). The marzanna appears in Frostburn: Mastering the Perils of Ice and Snow (2005). The green hag is further detailed in Dragon #331 (May 2005), in "The Ecology of the Green Hag,", and the annis hag is further detailed in Dragon #345 (July 2006), in "The Ecology of the Annis." | ||
The hag appears in the 2008 Monster Manual for Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition, including the howling hag, the bog hag, the night hag and the death hag. The pact hag, the dream hag and the mist hag appeared in Monster Manual 3. | The hag appears in the 2008 Monster Manual for Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition, including the howling hag, the bog hag, the night hag and the death hag. The pact hag, the dream hag and the mist hag appeared in Monster Manual 3. The article "Realmslore: Auril's Hall" in Dragon #367 introduced the winter hag, an updated version of the Bheur. The [[Book of Vile Darkness]] introduced the filth hag and her "son". The Monster Vault featured expanded hag lore and revised stats for the bog hag, green hag and night hag. | ||
In 5th edition, the hag appears in the Monster Manual for Dungeons & Dragons 5th edition, consisting of the Night Hag, Green Hag and Sea Hag. The Annis Hag and Bheur Hag appeared in the subsequent Volo's Guide to Monsters | In 5th edition, the hag appears in the Monster Manual for Dungeons & Dragons 5th edition, consisting of the Night Hag, Green Hag and Sea Hag. The Annis Hag and Bheur Hag appeared in the subsequent Volo's Guide to Monsters | ||
==Subspecies== | ==Subspecies== | ||
Hags in D&D come in many different species, as touched upon in their Publication History section above. But, as far as D&D is concerned, there are four species that are | Hags in D&D come in many different species, as touched upon in their Publication History section above. But, as far as D&D is concerned, there are four species that are particularly iconic; the Annis Hag, the Green Hag, the Sea Hag, and the Night Hag. | ||
Annis hags are the largest and strongest of their species. They tend to associate the most with [[giant]]-kin, such as [[ogre]]s and [[troll]]s. They may not be particularly magically adept, but they're hard to kill and well-suited for rending victims limb from limb. | ====Annis Hags==== | ||
Annis hags are the largest and strongest of their species. They tend to associate the most with [[giant]]-kin, such as [[ogre]]s and [[troll]]s. They may not be particularly magically adept, but they're hard to kill and well-suited for rending victims limb from limb. They especially love to corrupt children; they do this by given them tokens formed from bits of the Annis Hag's own body, which they then use to whisper things to the kid, slowly manipulating them into becoming [[That guy|utter sociopaths]]. | |||
<gallery> | |||
Annis hag 1e.jpg | |||
Annis hag dragon 345.png | |||
Annis Hag 5e.jpg|5e saw the Annis take a whole new level in Jesus-Christ-What-the-fuck!? | |||
PF Annis Hag.jpg|Pathfinder's Annis. | |||
</gallery> | |||
Green hags are the most "stereotypical" of the hags, with the general focus on spellcasting and shapeshifting. Their abilities often tend towards either the obvious [[enchanter]] route, or towards evil [[druid]]ism, and they have a particular focus on shapechanging and illusions to make lives miserable. | ====Green Hags==== | ||
Green hags are the most "stereotypical" of the hags, with the general focus on spellcasting and shapeshifting. Their abilities often tend towards either the obvious [[enchanter]] route, or towards evil [[druid]]ism, and they have a particular focus on using their powers of shapechanging and illusions to make lives miserable. | |||
<gallery> | |||
Green hag 1e.jpg|1e | |||
Green hag 3e.jpg|3e | |||
Green Hag 5e.png|5e went back to its roots for the Green Hag. | |||
green hag B1.png|Pathfinder | |||
</gallery> | |||
====Sea Hags==== | |||
Sea hags are the weakest of their ilk, antisocial fishy loners who live along coastlines. They're generally considered to be the most hideously ugly of their ilk, to the point of being able to scare people to death with their faces in AD&D. | Sea hags are the weakest of their ilk, antisocial fishy loners who live along coastlines. They're generally considered to be the most hideously ugly of their ilk, to the point of being able to scare people to death with their faces in AD&D. | ||
<gallery> | |||
Seahag 1e.jpg|1e | |||
Sea hag 2e.gif|2e | |||
Sea hag A Hero's Tale.png | |||
sea hag Adam's Wrath.jpg | |||
Sea hag 3e.jpg|3e | |||
Sea Hag 5e.jpeg|The Sea Hag from 5e is... weirdly less a crone and more a fish-woman. | |||
Sea hag DotMM.png | |||
sea hag B1.png|Pathfinder | |||
</gallery> | |||
The [[fiend]]ish Night Hags are an extraplanar branch of the family tree, who specialize in harvesting the souls of evil humanoids and trading them in infernal markets. | ====Night Hags==== | ||
The [[fiend]]ish Night Hags are an extraplanar branch of the family tree, who specialize in harvesting [[larva]]e, the souls of evil humanoids, and trading them in infernal markets. | |||
<gallery> | |||
Night hag 1e.png|1e | |||
Night hag MC8.jpg|2e | |||
Night hag 2e.gif|Planescape | |||
Night hag MCR2.jpg|Ravenloft | |||
Night Hag 3e.jpg|3e gave them horns | |||
Night Hag 5e.png|5e | |||
night hag B1.png|Pathfinder | |||
</gallery> | |||
====Hannya==== | |||
The Hannya are a species of hag introduced in [[Oriental Adventures]], and are basically the hideously ugly bastard daughters of a hag and a [[lamia]]. | The Hannya are a species of hag introduced in [[Oriental Adventures]], and are basically the hideously ugly bastard daughters of a hag and a [[lamia]]. | ||
<gallery> | |||
Hannya MC6.png|2e | |||
Hannya 3e.jpg|3e | |||
</gallery> | |||
====Bheur Hags==== | |||
Bheur Hags are native to the [[Forgotten Realms]] region of Rasheman, and not quite as evil as most hags. They are [[elementalist]]s with an affinity for ice, and considered by the natives to be spirits of winter. At the very least, they often worship [[Auril]]. A similar icy hag, the Marzanna, appears in the Frostburn sourcebook. They appeared in 4e under the name of "Winter Hags". | |||
<gallery> | |||
Bheur Spellbound 2e.png|The original artwork for the Bheur in AD&D's ''Spellbound'' boxed set. | |||
Bheur MCAV3.jpg|... yeah, apparently, this is the face of voracious winter incarnate. | |||
Winter Hag.jpg|The Winter Hag, a renamed Bheur, appeared in [[Dragon Magazine]] #367 for 4e. | |||
Bhuer Hag 5e.jpg|5e made the Bheur a lot more monstrous-looking. | |||
</gallery> | |||
====Bog Hags==== | |||
Bog Hags are similar in many ways to Green Hags, but can't shapeshift; instead, they murder beautiful women and flay off their skins, which allows them to assume the form of their victims by wearing the hide. These hags are associated with the [[Oriental Adventures]] 3e sourcebook, and arguably are an immigrant from the [[Legend of the Five Rings]] game and its setting of [[Rokugan]]. | |||
<gallery> | |||
Bog_Hag.png|This art originates from the 3e [[Oriental Adventures]] sourcebook, and was later reused for its reappearance in 4e. | |||
</gallery> | |||
====Pact Hags==== | |||
Pact Hags are amongst the most diplomatic of the [[Feywild]] hags, specializing in using bargains and manipulation to corrupt and enslave others. They are often tutors for [[Warlock]]s. | |||
====Dream Hags==== | |||
Dream Hags have the power to manipulate and control the dreams of mortals, which they use to goad them into fulfilling schemes and plans of their own without ever being aware of the hag pulling their strings. | |||
==== Dusk Hag ==== | |||
From [[Eberron]], Like the Dream hag but also see the future and prophecies. You know Macbeth, then never listen to a hag's prophecy. Unfortunately, most powerful royalty and wizards haven't seen the play or even a greek play, becoming indebted to a hag for the "privilege" of setting a tragedy in motion. | |||
<gallery> | |||
Dusk Hag.png|5e | |||
</gallery> | |||
====Mist Hags==== | |||
Mist Hags are amongst the most powerful of the [[Feywild]] hags; at a whopping level 27, a Mist Hag is mightier than some [[dragon]]s! They are renowned collectors and hoarders of powerful magical items, with a somewhat tenuous relationship with the [[Archdevil]]s; whilst the dukes and princes of the [[Nine Hells]] often recruit Mist Hags to watch over their more powerful magical items, the hags have a bad tendency to get sticky fingers and steal whatever they were supposed to be guarding. | |||
====Filth Hags==== | |||
Filth Hags are amongst the most depraved and vile of all hags. They are always attended to by one or more "sons"; [[golem]]-like abominations made of muck, filth and the hag's excrement, animated by the tormented souls of men seduced by the hag's illusory guise and then devoured. The Filth Hag can drain the life-force from her "Sons" to heal herself in combat. | |||
====Dune Hag/Death Hag==== | |||
{{dnd-stub}} | |||
====Shrieking Hag==== | |||
{{dnd-stub}} | |||
==Related Species== | ==Related Species== | ||
Line 46: | Line 125: | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
<center> | <center> | ||
Hag MCV2.jpg | |||
Dune Hag.jpg|This creature was called the Dune Hag in 3e and the Death Hag in 4e. | |||
Realms Hags.jpg|3e artwork for the Bheur and Shrieking Hag, with a [[Hagspawn]] in the center. | |||
Hag4e.png | |||
Coven.png|Hag Coven | |||
Hag Coven.png | |||
Hageye.png|Hageye | |||
Disguised-Hag5e.png | |||
Hag Rides.png|Hag pimp Ride | |||
</center> | </center> | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
{{D&D-Outsiders}} | |||
[[Category:Ravenloft]] |
Latest revision as of 09:43, 21 June 2023
Hags are a kind of monster from Dungeons & Dragons. At their root, they are based in the stereotypical Western beliefs about witches - namely, that they are hideously ugly old women who use their dark magical skills to cause suffering amongst mortals for kicks -- mingled with assorted European mythology about ugly but powerful and magical female giants and trolls, from the Nordic Jarnvidjar to British boogeywomen like the river-dwelling child-drowning Jenny Greenteeth and the iron-clawed man-flaying Black Annis.
Because of this, they initially began as a kind of Giant, or at least Monstrous Humanoid, only to be redesigned in fourth edition as being a kind of fae embodying nature's capacity for cruelty and ugliness.
Hags come in many, many varieties, from water-dwelling sea hags to brutishly powerful annis hags to seductive green hags to the fiendish night hags and more besides. They all have a love for evil and specialize in using magic, most notably innate affinities for illusion spells and physically shapechanging, to interact with mortals undetected, when they don't just enslave armies of goblins, ogres, orcs and other evil humanoids and rule them openly.
As an all-female race, hags need to mate with humanoid men in order to propagate. In older editions, in fact, hags grow up believing themselves to be normal human women, only transforming into hags when they reach about their 40s or 50s. The exception to these are Night Hags, at least according to Dragon Magazine, whose children are normal (if often cambions or Half-Fiends, due to the night hag propensity for breeding with fiends), but must be deliberately transformed into new night hags before they hit puberty. In the Pathfinder setting, hags give birth to more human-like daughters called Changelings, who they must "persuade" to be magically transformed into more of their own kind. In 5e Hags actually kidnap and eat babies, giving birth to a daughter a week later. They then either raise the child or return it to its parents and watch her grow up. At her 13th birthday the girl transforms into a spitting image of her hag mother.
It hasn't seemed to occur to WotC yet that an origin story explaining where hags came from, why they always look old no matter their age, and why they're all female would be warranted.
Publication History[edit]
In the original Dungeons & Dragons, the sea hag first appeared in the Blackmoor supplement by Dave Arneson (1975). The Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set included its own version of the hag. The sea hag and the black hag appeared in the Dungeons & Dragons Master Rules (1985), and the Dungeons & Dragons Rules Cyclopedia (1991).
In Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 1st edition, the sea hag appears in the 1977 Monster Manual, where it is described as inhabiting thickly vegetated shallows, and hates beauty and is so ghastly in appearance that it makes other creatures weak with fright. The night hag also appears in the Monster Manual, where it is described as the ruler of the convoluted planes of Hades. The book states that night hags form larvae (the most selfishly evil of all souls who sink to lower planes after death) from evil persons they slay, and sell them to demons and devils. The Monster Manual was reviewed by Don Turnbull in the British magazine White Dwarf #8 (August/September 1978). As part of his review, Turnbull comments on several new monsters introduced in the book, referring to the night hag as "splendid" and notes that the illustration of the night hag is the best drawing in the book. The annis, a type of hag, first appeared in the module The Forgotten Temple of Tharizdun (1982). The annis appeared in the Monster Manual II (1983) along with the greenhag, which was detailed in Dragon #125 (September 1987), in "The Ecology of the Greenhag." The fresh water sea hag appears in Dragon #68 (December 1982).
In Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd edition, the annis hag, the green hag, and the sea hag appear first in the Monstrous Compendium Volume Two (1989), while the night hag appears in the Monstrous Compendium Outer Planes Appendix (1991), and all are reprinted in the Monstrous Manual (1993),. The spectral annis, the spectral green hag, the spectral sea hag and the unique night hag Sytrix appeared in Ravenloft Monstrous Compendium Appendix III: Creatures of Darkness (1994). The night hag was further detailed in the first Planescape Monstrous Compendium Appendix (1994). The bheur hag for the Forgotten Realms setting first appears in Spellbound (1995), and then in Monstrous Compendium Annual Volume Three (1996). The article "Pox of the Planes" in Dragon Annual #2 (1997) described the night hags as the creators of the altraloths, powerful unique yugoloths.
In Dungeons & Dragons Third Edition, the annis, the green hag, and the sea hag appear in the Monster Manual for this edition (2000). The bog hag appears in Oriental Adventures (2001). Savage Species (2003) presented the annis hag, the green hag, and the sea hag as both races and playable classes. The bheur hag, the shrieking hag, and the hagspawn for the Forgotten Realms appear in Unapproachable East (2003).
In Dungeons & Dragons 3.5 edition, the annis, the green hag, the sea hag and the night hag appear in the revised Monster Manual for this edition (2003). The dusk hag for the Eberron campaign setting appears in the Eberron Campaign Setting book (2004). The Xtabay, a hag inspired by Mayan legend, appeared in Dragon issue 317. The dune hag appears in Sandstorm: Mastering the Perils of Fire and Sand (2005). The marzanna appears in Frostburn: Mastering the Perils of Ice and Snow (2005). The green hag is further detailed in Dragon #331 (May 2005), in "The Ecology of the Green Hag,", and the annis hag is further detailed in Dragon #345 (July 2006), in "The Ecology of the Annis."
The hag appears in the 2008 Monster Manual for Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition, including the howling hag, the bog hag, the night hag and the death hag. The pact hag, the dream hag and the mist hag appeared in Monster Manual 3. The article "Realmslore: Auril's Hall" in Dragon #367 introduced the winter hag, an updated version of the Bheur. The Book of Vile Darkness introduced the filth hag and her "son". The Monster Vault featured expanded hag lore and revised stats for the bog hag, green hag and night hag.
In 5th edition, the hag appears in the Monster Manual for Dungeons & Dragons 5th edition, consisting of the Night Hag, Green Hag and Sea Hag. The Annis Hag and Bheur Hag appeared in the subsequent Volo's Guide to Monsters
Subspecies[edit]
Hags in D&D come in many different species, as touched upon in their Publication History section above. But, as far as D&D is concerned, there are four species that are particularly iconic; the Annis Hag, the Green Hag, the Sea Hag, and the Night Hag.
Annis Hags[edit]
Annis hags are the largest and strongest of their species. They tend to associate the most with giant-kin, such as ogres and trolls. They may not be particularly magically adept, but they're hard to kill and well-suited for rending victims limb from limb. They especially love to corrupt children; they do this by given them tokens formed from bits of the Annis Hag's own body, which they then use to whisper things to the kid, slowly manipulating them into becoming utter sociopaths.
-
-
-
5e saw the Annis take a whole new level in Jesus-Christ-What-the-fuck!?
-
Pathfinder's Annis.
Green Hags[edit]
Green hags are the most "stereotypical" of the hags, with the general focus on spellcasting and shapeshifting. Their abilities often tend towards either the obvious enchanter route, or towards evil druidism, and they have a particular focus on using their powers of shapechanging and illusions to make lives miserable.
-
1e
-
3e
-
5e went back to its roots for the Green Hag.
-
Pathfinder
Sea Hags[edit]
Sea hags are the weakest of their ilk, antisocial fishy loners who live along coastlines. They're generally considered to be the most hideously ugly of their ilk, to the point of being able to scare people to death with their faces in AD&D.
-
1e
-
2e
-
-
-
3e
-
The Sea Hag from 5e is... weirdly less a crone and more a fish-woman.
-
-
Pathfinder
Night Hags[edit]
The fiendish Night Hags are an extraplanar branch of the family tree, who specialize in harvesting larvae, the souls of evil humanoids, and trading them in infernal markets.
-
1e
-
2e
-
Planescape
-
Ravenloft
-
3e gave them horns
-
5e
-
Pathfinder
Hannya[edit]
The Hannya are a species of hag introduced in Oriental Adventures, and are basically the hideously ugly bastard daughters of a hag and a lamia.
-
2e
-
3e
Bheur Hags[edit]
Bheur Hags are native to the Forgotten Realms region of Rasheman, and not quite as evil as most hags. They are elementalists with an affinity for ice, and considered by the natives to be spirits of winter. At the very least, they often worship Auril. A similar icy hag, the Marzanna, appears in the Frostburn sourcebook. They appeared in 4e under the name of "Winter Hags".
-
The original artwork for the Bheur in AD&D's Spellbound boxed set.
-
... yeah, apparently, this is the face of voracious winter incarnate.
-
The Winter Hag, a renamed Bheur, appeared in Dragon Magazine #367 for 4e.
-
5e made the Bheur a lot more monstrous-looking.
Bog Hags[edit]
Bog Hags are similar in many ways to Green Hags, but can't shapeshift; instead, they murder beautiful women and flay off their skins, which allows them to assume the form of their victims by wearing the hide. These hags are associated with the Oriental Adventures 3e sourcebook, and arguably are an immigrant from the Legend of the Five Rings game and its setting of Rokugan.
-
This art originates from the 3e Oriental Adventures sourcebook, and was later reused for its reappearance in 4e.
Pact Hags[edit]
Pact Hags are amongst the most diplomatic of the Feywild hags, specializing in using bargains and manipulation to corrupt and enslave others. They are often tutors for Warlocks.
Dream Hags[edit]
Dream Hags have the power to manipulate and control the dreams of mortals, which they use to goad them into fulfilling schemes and plans of their own without ever being aware of the hag pulling their strings.
Dusk Hag[edit]
From Eberron, Like the Dream hag but also see the future and prophecies. You know Macbeth, then never listen to a hag's prophecy. Unfortunately, most powerful royalty and wizards haven't seen the play or even a greek play, becoming indebted to a hag for the "privilege" of setting a tragedy in motion.
-
5e
Mist Hags[edit]
Mist Hags are amongst the most powerful of the Feywild hags; at a whopping level 27, a Mist Hag is mightier than some dragons! They are renowned collectors and hoarders of powerful magical items, with a somewhat tenuous relationship with the Archdevils; whilst the dukes and princes of the Nine Hells often recruit Mist Hags to watch over their more powerful magical items, the hags have a bad tendency to get sticky fingers and steal whatever they were supposed to be guarding.
Filth Hags[edit]
Filth Hags are amongst the most depraved and vile of all hags. They are always attended to by one or more "sons"; golem-like abominations made of muck, filth and the hag's excrement, animated by the tormented souls of men seduced by the hag's illusory guise and then devoured. The Filth Hag can drain the life-force from her "Sons" to heal herself in combat.
Dune Hag/Death Hag[edit]
Shrieking Hag[edit]
Related Species[edit]
Gallery[edit]
-
-
This creature was called the Dune Hag in 3e and the Death Hag in 4e.
-
3e artwork for the Bheur and Shrieking Hag, with a Hagspawn in the center.
-
-
Hag Coven
-
-
Hageye
-
-
Hag pimp Ride
The inhabitants of the Planes of Planescape | |
---|---|
Upper Planes | Aasimon • Angel • Animal Lord • Archon • Asura • Eladrin • Guardinals • Lillend |
Middle Planes | Formians • Githzerai • Inevitable • Marut • Modron • Rilmani • Slaadi • Kamerel |
Lower Planes | Alu-Fiend • Baatezu • Bladeling • Cambion • Demodand • Erinyes • Hag • Hordling • Imp • Kyton • Loumara • Marilith • Obyrith • Succubus • Tanar'ri • Yugoloth |
Transitive Planes | Astral Dreadnought • Githyanki |
Inner Planes | Azer • Elemental • Genie • Grue • Mephit • Salamander • Sylph |
Sigil | Dabus • Cranium Rat |
High-ups | Archangel • Archdevil • Archfey • Archomental • Demon Prince |