Mystic Tomato effect When this card is destroyed by battle and sent to the GY: You can Special Summon 1 DARK monster with 1500 or less ATK from your Deck, in face-up Attack Position. yup it summons doki alright
False Appearance: If the blight is motionless at the start of combat, it has advantage on its initiative roll. Moreover, if a creature has not observed the blight move or act, that creature must succeed on a DC 15 INT (Investigation) check to discern that the blight is not an ordinary tomato.
Free Birds: Beasts that have a flying speed that start their turns within 60' of the blight gain the benefit of a Freedom of Movement spell. At the DM's discretion, this effect can also benefit other creatures that are birdlike in appearance, including Humanoids (eg. aarakocra, kenku), Monstrosities (eg. rocs, owlbears), or Fiends (eg. vrock demons).
Actions:
Bite: Melee weapon attack. +3 to hit, reach 5', one target. Hit: 1d4+1 piercing damage.
Contagious Laughter: The blight starts cackling comedically. This laughter is audible out to 300'. Each creature within 30' of the blight that can hear the laughter must succeed on a DC 13 WIS saving throw or fall into a fit of laughter for the next minute, becoming incapacitated if it has an INT score of 4 or higher. A laughing creature can repeat its saving throw whenever it takes damage, ending this effect on itself on a success.
Bonus Actions:
Ocean Law: The blight steals one object that is being worn or carried by a creature it has hit with its Bite attack. A creature can succeed on a DC 11 DEX saving throw to avoid this effect (automatically succeeding on the save if the object is a Legendary item or an Artifact). The blight cannot use this bonus action if it is already carrying an object.
Tomato blights are a more recent addition to the category of plant monsters known as blights, created when a tomato vine grew around a Gulthias tree and was fertilized with ground lunar dragon scales, likely by some mad rogue somewhere. Tomato blights are much more intelligent than their relatives, and would much rather play games with other sentient beings. Though, a tomato blight's idea of "fun" includes such games as "let's steal this high-level Wizard's component pouch and dump everything out to see what happens". They don't typically mean any harm, but chaos does still tend to follow these creatures.
TN: The shrine maiden's title in Japanese was 白蝶鳥 "Shirochouchou", which literally means "White Butterfly Bird". 白蝶 "Shirochou" is the Japanese name for the cabbage butterfly, while 白鳥 "Hakuchou" is the name for the swan. I mulled over what to translate it as for a long time since the literal translation is too unwieldy, but finally settled on an astrology reference. It loses a little nuance but isn't so mouthy to say, hopefully.
I think she got a transorbital lobotomy. they would not cause scars, but they do leave a black eye. they would take an ice-pick and push it into the eye socket and mush up the brain.
I think she got a transorbital lobotomy. they would not cause scars, but they do leave a black eye. they would take an ice-pick and push it into the eye socket and mush up the brain.
I think she got a transorbital lobotomy. they would not cause scars, but they do leave a black eye. they would take an ice-pick and push it into the eye socket and mush up the brain.
TN: The guild's name is "Nijioibito", but it's written out in katakana. Niji could be either "rainbow" or "secondary", while oibito means "old people". No I don't know what that means at all, I just picked a translation that made even a little sense.
TN update! Checking through the artist's account and "Nijioibito" was written as 虹追い旅, meaning "Trip to Pursue the Rainbow" (although that would be "Nijioitabi" usually, weird). Updated the guild's name accordingly.