Kyuss

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Greyhawk Deity
Kyuss
Kyuss01.jpg
Kyuss, Herald of the Age of Worms, as depicted on the cover of Dungeon #135 (2006). Art by Wayne Reynolds.
Title: The Wormgod, the Bonemaster, the Herald of the Age of Worms
Alias(es): None
Home plane: Material Plane
Power level: Hero-deity
Gender: Male
Class: Cleric 8/sorcerer 8/true necromancer 14
Alignment: Neutral evil
Portfolio: Creation and Mastery of the Undead
Domains: Death, Destruction, Evil, Corruption
Superior: Nerull

Kyuss (pronounced kai-OOSS) is a demigod concerned with the Creation and Mastery of the Undead. Known as the Bonemaster, the Wormgod, and the Herald of the Age of Worms, his symbol is a skull erupting with writhing green worms.

Description[edit]

In his divine form, Kyuss appears as a towering humanoid shaped entirely of green Kyuss worms, with two blazing eyes peering from beneath the hood of his ragged cloak.

Relationships[edit]

Though Kyuss revered Nerull as a mortal, his current relationship with the Reaper is unknown.

Realm[edit]

For over 1,500 years, Kyuss has been imprisoned within an obelisk in the Wormcrawl Fissure, in a chamber known as the Writhing Sanctum. Very recently, this obelisk was moved to the city of Alhaster.

Dogma[edit]

Kyuss's faithful believe that life is an obscenity, albeit a temporary one, and that Death offers only nothingness. Undeath, then, is the only worthwhile goal, and followers of Kyuss are encouraged to spread this gift as far as they can. They are permitted to control them if necessary but encouraged to set them free to do as they will when their creators have no further use. Undead are sacred to Kyuss, and his followers are not permitted to destroy them except in self-defense.

Scriptures[edit]

The holiest text of Kyuss's faith is a set of metal plates foretelling a coming Age of Worms, which Kyuss unearthed from spell weaver ruins in the Amedio Jungle.

Worshipers[edit]

Kyuss is worshiped by humans, undead, avolakia, and ulgurstasta. The Ebon Triad is a false cult created by worshippers of Kyuss. Edwin Tolstoff and his grandchildren, Edgar Tolstoff and Katarin Tolstoff, are servants of Kyuss.

Clergy[edit]

Clerics of Kyuss raid graveyards to create undead, selling their creations or letting them run wild. The more powerful ones seek to create new kinds of undead and seek lichdom or some other form of undeath for themselves. They seek to free their master, and travel to various places holy to their faith such as the Wormcrawl Fissure, the Necropolis of Unaagh, or the ruins of Kuluth-Mar.

History[edit]

Kyuss02.jpg

Once a human priest of Nerull in the Flan kingdom of Sulm,[1][note 1] Kyuss was exiled from that realm over 2,000 years ago, fleeing to the Amedio Jungle with his followers. After founding the city of Kuluth-Mar and encountering the spell weaver lich Mak'ar, Kyuss constructed the Spire of Long Shadows, where he sacrificed all of his followers to achieve hero-deityhood. Prior to this, he had sacrificed artifacts of great power, as well as living souls to Nerull to gain his favor. When he finally did ascend, there was a problem with his transformation: he became trapped in the same obelisk with which he channeled his power. Somehow Kyuss was not able to properly channel the power he gained from the sacrificed lives and faith of his followers, and the altar of Nerull was consumed in a burst of necrotic energy. Perhaps Nerull (not wanting to be challenged even slightly) intentionally flawed the ritual, or perhaps the unintentional interference of Mellifleur was to blame.

Even during his imprisonment, he gained following from some immensely powerful followers. Dragotha, a wyrm red dragon, was allowed by Kyuss to attain the form of a dracolich. Following this, Dragotha was bound to serve Kyuss, and in the process became his herald. Another draconic follower of Kyuss is Lashonna, a vampiric silver dragon.

Kyuss is responsible for the creation of the spawn of Kyuss, originally known as sons of Kyuss, though these are said to be the least powerful of his creations. He is also responsible for the creation of the avolakia, eviscerator beetle, ulgurstasta, Kyuss knight, overworm, earthcancer centipede, hound of Kyuss, scion of Kyuss, sword of Kyuss, wormcaller, worm naga, wormswarm, and the worm that walks. Collectively, his creations are known as wormspawn.

Kyuss is the force behind the establishment of the Ebon Triad, as revealed in the Age of Worms adventure path.

Publishing history[edit]

The sons of Kyuss, now referred to as spawn of Kyuss, were an iconic monster in the Dungeons & Dragons roleplaying game before the story of Kyuss was fleshed out. Kyuss was described as "an evil high priest who created the first of these creatures, via a special curse, under instruction from an evil deity" within their creature description in the first edition Fiend Folio (1981).

Hints at Kyuss's origins were soon added in Rary the Traitor, when sons of Kyuss were said to be contained in the Necropolis of Unaagh, a cursed city of Sulm inhabited by undead. This was made more conspicuous since any of the contained undead that "move or are carried even a few yards from its buildings collapse into inanimate heaps of bone." This is suggested in the work to be the possible consequence of an ancient curse. That makes the creator of the undead ancient as well, painting Kyuss as once having been a high priest in Sulm.

In the From the Ashes boxed set (Atlas of the Flanaess, page 69), the entry for the Storm Lake of the Amedio mentioned that sons of Kyuss manifest in the vicinity after a phenomenon called the Storm of Unknowing.

Later, in Iuz the Evil the home of the "infamous evil priest Kyuss" was claimed to have been the Wormcrawl Fissure, a "mile-long ravine away from the main body of the Rift Canyon."

Still later, in The Scarlet Brotherhood by Sean K. Reynolds, the entry for Matreyus Lake said, "undead such as sons of Kyuss walk the nearby jungle - the evil demigod is said to have spent time here."

Kyuss in popular culture[edit]

Stoner Rock band Kyuss (originally Sons of Kyuss), who were one of the pioneers of their genre, took their name from the character.[1]

External links[edit]

Disclaimer:Any lore presented through the following links does not necessarily adhere to established officially published content, and the views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of the editors of this wiki.

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. In almost all sources, Kyuss is referred to as a priest or high priest. However, the deity he worshipped is less clear and is named variously. In some sources, it is an unnamed "forgotten deity"[2] while in others it is named as Orcus.[3][4] In regards to being a Greyhawk deity, the deity Kyuss worshipped is specifically identified as Nerull.[1]

Citations[edit]

  1. a b "Spire of Long Shadows". Dungeon #130 (Jan 2006), p.71
  2. "Ecology of the Spawn of Kyuss".  Dragon #336 (Oct 2005), p.61.
  3. Volo's Guide to Monsters (2016), p.192.
  4. Mordenkainen Presents: Monsters of the Multiverse (2021), p.225.

Bibliography[edit]

Kyuss's holy symbol.
———. "Worm Bound: The Secrets of Kyuss." Dragon #343. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
———. "Into the Wormcrawl Fissure." Dungeon #134. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
———. "Dawn of a New Age." Dungeon #135. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
———. "Backdrop: Diamond Lake." Dungeon #124. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2005.
———. "The Whispering Cairn." Dungeon #124. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2005.
———. Exemplars of Evil. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2007.
  • Turnbull, Don, ed. Fiend Folio. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1981.

Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index

The Index is based on previous work of Jason Zavoda through '08, and his work as continued and updated by Eric Johnson, Richard DiIoia, Jason "PupickDad" Jacobson, a French fan group, and numerous other fans over the years. The wiki page for the EGI has a list of sources, full product names, abbreviations, and a link to the full, downloadable index.

Topic Type Description Product Page/Card/Image

Hound of Kyuss Monster Dragon magazine #270 75
Kyuss Deity Bastion of Faith 42, 87
Kyuss Deity Dragon magazine #270 72, 75
Kyuss Deity Dragon magazine #276 84, 85, 88, 89
Kyuss Deity Dragon magazine #290 103
Kyuss Deity Dragon magazine #344 85
Kyuss Deity Dragon magazine #356 21
Kyuss Deity Dragon magazine #359 97
Kyuss Deity Living Greyhawk Gazetteer 31
Kyuss Deity Living Greyhawk Journal #1 23, 24
Kyuss Deity Living Greyhawk Journal #2 31
Kyuss Deity Living Greyhawk Journal #3 13, 19
Kyuss Deity Living Greyhawk Journal #5 22
Kyuss Deity Oerth Journal #08 16
Kyuss Deity Oerth Journal #11 42,47,48
Kyuss Deity Oerth Journal #16 5
Kyuss Deity Oerth Journal #25 24
Kyuss Deity Oerth Journal #27 19
Kyuss Deity Oerth Journal #31 4
Kyuss Deity Oerth Journal #32 41
Kyuss Deity Player's Guide to Greyhawk 20
Kyuss Deity The Scarlet Brotherhood 67
Kyuss Deity WGR5 Iuz the Evil 54
Kyuss, Sons of Monster LT2 Crypt of Lyzandred the Mad 34
Kyuss, Sons of Monster Fiend Folio, AD&D 1e 83
Kyuss, Sons of Monster From the Ashes: Atlas of the Flanaess 69
Kyuss, Sons of Monster From the Ashes: References Card #11
Kyuss, Sons of Monster I7 Baltron's Beacon 29
Kyuss, Sons of Monster Living Greyhawk Journal #1 23-24
Kyuss, Sons of Monster Living Greyhawk Journal #5 22
Kyuss, Sons of Monster Monstrous Compendium - 1996 Annual, Volume 3 69
Kyuss, Sons of Monster MC5 Monstrous Compendium Greyhawk Adventures Appendix Insert (Kyuss, Son of), Encounter Tables
Kyuss, Sons of Monster Return of the Eight 17
Kyuss, Sons of Monster 1993 TSR Trading Cards - Gold Set 116
Kyuss, Sons of Monster The Scarlet Brotherhood 67, 70, 71
Kyuss, Sons of Monster WGR3 Rary the Traitor 27
Kyuss, Sons of Monster WGR5 Iuz the Evil 78
Kyuss, Temple of (Brotton) Building Temple, Living Greyhawk Journal #2 31