Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Work In Progress Pollen Wyrms

Kai'el Brat "Guardian of the Light"



Pollenwyrms
Tiny floral drakes of bloom, warmth, mimicry, and glittering little lives





At a Glance

Pollenwyrms are minute, whimsical drakes found among flowers, groves, warm ruins, orchards, canopies, and sheltered little wild places. They are sentient, can speak, and often give the impression of clever little spirits rather than grand beasts; bright-eyed, impulsive, distractible, and endlessly alive with motion. Most are no larger than a palm, though the smallest may be scarcely bigger than a hummingbird, and the largest long-tailed morphs may approach the scale of a bantam hen.

Long and slender of body, they resemble tiny fae-dragons more than birds or insects. Their frames may be fine-scaled and sleek, with delicate limbs, expressive tails, narrow muzzles, tiny claws, and translucent butterfly-like or moth-like wings dusted in fragile scales. Some bear long whiskers, soft antennae, trailing crests, or little pollen-catching tufts. They come in dazzling colors: blossom-bright, petal-soft, jewel-toned, or cunningly camouflaged to resemble flowers, leaves, seed clusters, bark, or moss depending on habitat and lineage.





General Information

Designation: Sentient
Origins: Scattered across warm, flower-rich worlds, including places such as Veridia and Centerra; their true first origin is uncertain
Estimated Population: Scattered
Average Lifespan: Potentially indefinite; they appear to show little true aging after maturity, though most perish far earlier due to weather, predators, hunger, transport hazards, and the ordinary dangers of being so very small
Force Sensitivity: Non-Sensitive



Physical Information

Breathes: Type I atmosphere; highly efficient little lungs let them tolerate thin, lightly oxygenated air better than many creatures of similar size
Average Height: Usually 8–14 cm (3–5.5 in), though the smallest adults may be as little as 5 cm (2 in), while the largest may reach 20 cm (8 in)
Average Length: Usually 15–25 cm (6–10 in) including the tail, though diminutive varieties may be only 10 cm (4 in), while ornate long-tailed morphs may reach 40 cm (16 in)
Body Type: Long, slender, reptilian miniature drakes with delicate limbs, expressive tails, and translucent insect-like wings
Coloration: Vastly varied; floral pinks, violets, golds, pale greens, sapphire blues, petal whites, bark-browns, moss-greens, and iridescent blends





Distinctions

Pollenwyrms vary wildly by lineage and habitat, though all remain one interbreeding species. Some are sleek and fine-scaled; some have scale-dusted wings like butterflies; some bear soft antennae, whiskers, cheek-frills, or pollen-catching tufts. Their feet may carry tiny hooked claws or cling-adapted pads suited for bark, petals, stone, glass, or fruit skins. Many possess astonishing camouflage, becoming nearly indistinguishable from blossoms, dead leaves, lichen, bark, seed pods, or sun-struck petals when at rest. Others are not subtle at all, instead wearing bright, showy colors that dazzle the eye in flight.

Offspring may inherit varied combinations of parental traits: wing form, color pattern, scale texture, antennae, whiskers, minor defenses, cling-feet, floral mimicry, display coloration, or other small survival-focused adaptations. These remain minor natural traits rather than overwhelming gifts; Pollenwyrms survive by speed, camouflage, mimicry, agility, and opportunism far more than by force.





Strengths

  • Exceptional agility in tight spaces; quick, darting, and difficult to track
  • Remarkable camouflage and mimicry among flowers, leaves, bark, and bloom-heavy environments
  • Highly expressive vocal range; capable of chirrs, trills, clicks, yips, snarls, birdsong, and learned spoken language
  • Minor tool use; may use thorns, twigs, spines, pebbles, petals, or seed shells to pry out prey, bait insects, or gather water and nectar
  • Efficient lungs suited to thin-air canopies, cliffs, elevated forests, and mountain gardens



Weaknesses

  • Extremely small and physically fragile; easy prey for larger animals and harsh environments
  • Strongly heat-seeking; cold, rain, storms, and long exposure can leave them sluggish or drive them into torpor
  • Easily distracted by glitter, moving light, shiny objects, reflections, and warmth
  • Poor raw strength; cannot carry much and are ill-suited to direct confrontation
  • Impulsive, playful, and not especially deep thinkers; clever in practical ways, but not built for grand strategy





Diet & Behavior

Pollenwyrms feed on nectar, blossoms, sweet sap, fruit, berries, insects, grubs, and other tiny prey. A large grasshopper may be a substantial meal. They burn energy quickly and are almost always looking for sweetness, warmth, or movement. If not feeding, they are often at play: chasing one another through flowers, bickering over trinkets, startling at reflections, mobbing some perceived nuisance, or darting after a point of light with all the dignity of a cat who has seen a laser for the first time.

They are generally kind-natured. Larger speaking beings often strike them as wondrous, grand, and nearly godlike, while non-speaking large animals more often register as predators to be avoided. They may squabble, hoard, nip at prey, or grow protective of a nest and its shiny treasures, but they are not a cruel species by nature.



Communication & Beliefs

Pollenwyrms possess their own language and can also learn spoken tongues. Their voices range from squeaks, clicks, chirrs, chittering, trills, yips, and little snarls to surprisingly clear words. Many delight in mimicry and will happily learn local bird calls, favorite phrases, or sounds associated with food, comfort, and affection.

Their spirituality is shallow, shifting, and deeply instinctive. They are easily impressed, and may fall into reverence for anything bright, powerful, warm, rhythmic, or difficult to understand. Sunlight, moonlight, seasons, glowing lamps, weather, blooming cycles, and beings capable of controlling light or warmth can all gather little superstitions and worshipful habits around them. They are fascinated by flame and glow, yet often terrified of thunderstorms, hard rain, and wildfire.



Habitats & Homes

They prefer warm, bloom-rich places: forests, orchards, gardens, sheltered ruins, cliffside groves, greenhouse-like enclaves, and old trees full of hollows. Most sleep in natural places first — flower cups, bark seams, root hollows, branch forks, warm stone niches, and abandoned little cavities. Where many gather, they may turn these into tiny communities of decorated nests and fussed-over roosts, lining them with moss, petals, fluff, shed feathers, bright seeds, shiny pebbles, bits of shell, glimmering scraps, and anything else that catches the light beautifully.

Their fondness for heat often draws them to warm vents, lamps, pipes, cargo bays, engines, and ship interiors. Because of this, Pollenwyrms can accidentally spread from world to world as tiny stowaways; if carried somewhere warm and flower-rich, their numbers may rise quickly unless local predators keep them in check.



Life Cycle

Pollenwyrms hatch from tiny eggs laid in sheltered nests, hollows, or hidden warm places. Newly hatched young emerge soft, damp, and unsteady, needing a little time to dry, unfurl, puff up, and clean themselves before scampering into motion. Once roused, they become lively, curious, playful little things almost at once.

They are not truly warm-blooded, relying heavily on external warmth to stay active. In cold weather, hunger, prolonged darkness, or exposure, they may become sluggish or enter brief torpor-like sleep until warmed again.



 
Kai'el Brat "Guardian of the Light"
stained_glass_texture__flowers_by_paladad_of_light_dlvugd5-414w-2x.jpg
 
Kai'el Brat "Guardian of the Light"



Pollenwyrms
Tiny floral drakes of bloom, warmth, mimicry, and glittering little lives











At a Glance

Pollenwyrms are minute, whimsical drakes found among flowers, groves, warm ruins, orchards, canopies, and sheltered little wild places. They are sentient, can speak, and often give the impression of clever little spirits rather than grand beasts; bright-eyed, impulsive, distractible, and endlessly alive with motion. Most are no larger than a palm, though the smallest may be scarcely bigger than a hummingbird, and the largest long-tailed morphs may approach the scale of a bantam hen.

Long and slender of body, they resemble tiny fae-dragons more than birds or insects. Their frames may be fine-scaled and sleek, with delicate limbs, expressive tails, narrow muzzles, tiny claws, and translucent butterfly-like or moth-like wings dusted in fragile scales. Some bear long whiskers, soft antennae, trailing crests, or little pollen-catching tufts. They come in dazzling colors: blossom-bright, petal-soft, jewel-toned, or cunningly camouflaged to resemble flowers, leaves, seed clusters, bark, or moss depending on habitat and lineage.





General Information

Designation: Sentient
Origins: Scattered across warm, flower-rich worlds, including places such as Veridia and Centerra; their true first origin is uncertain
Estimated Population: Scattered
Average Lifespan: Potentially indefinite; they appear to show little true aging after maturity, though most perish far earlier due to weather, predators, hunger, transport hazards, and the ordinary dangers of being so very small
Force Sensitivity: Non-Sensitive



Physical Information

Breathes: Type I atmosphere; highly efficient little lungs let them tolerate thin, lightly oxygenated air better than many creatures of similar size
Average Height: Usually 8–14 cm (3–5.5 in), though the smallest adults may be as little as 5 cm (2 in), while the largest may reach 20 cm (8 in)
Average Length: Usually 15–25 cm (6–10 in) including the tail, though diminutive varieties may be only 10 cm (4 in), while ornate long-tailed morphs may reach 40 cm (16 in)
Body Type: Long, slender, reptilian miniature drakes with delicate limbs, expressive tails, and translucent insect-like wings
Coloration: Vastly varied; floral pinks, violets, golds, pale greens, sapphire blues, petal whites, bark-browns, moss-greens, and iridescent blends










Distinctions

Pollenwyrms vary wildly by lineage and habitat, though all remain one interbreeding species. Some are sleek and fine-scaled; some have scale-dusted wings like butterflies; some bear soft antennae, whiskers, cheek-frills, or pollen-catching tufts. Their feet may carry tiny hooked claws or cling-adapted pads suited for bark, petals, stone, glass, or fruit skins. Many possess astonishing camouflage, becoming nearly indistinguishable from blossoms, dead leaves, lichen, bark, seed pods, or sun-struck petals when at rest. Others are not subtle at all, instead wearing bright, showy colors that dazzle the eye in flight.

Offspring may inherit varied combinations of parental traits: wing form, color pattern, scale texture, antennae, whiskers, minor defenses, cling-feet, floral mimicry, display coloration, or other small survival-focused adaptations. These remain minor natural traits rather than overwhelming gifts; Pollenwyrms survive by speed, camouflage, mimicry, agility, and opportunism far more than by force.





Strengths

  • Exceptional agility in tight spaces; quick, darting, and difficult to track
  • Remarkable camouflage and mimicry among flowers, leaves, bark, and bloom-heavy environments
  • Highly expressive vocal range; capable of chirrs, trills, clicks, yips, snarls, birdsong, and learned spoken language
  • Minor tool use; may use thorns, twigs, spines, pebbles, petals, or seed shells to pry out prey, bait insects, or gather water and nectar
  • Efficient lungs suited to thin-air canopies, cliffs, elevated forests, and mountain gardens



Weaknesses

  • Extremely small and physically fragile; easy prey for larger animals and harsh environments
  • Strongly heat-seeking; cold, rain, storms, and long exposure can leave them sluggish or drive them into torpor
  • Easily distracted by glitter, moving light, shiny objects, reflections, and warmth
  • Poor raw strength; cannot carry much and are ill-suited to direct confrontation
  • Impulsive, playful, and not especially deep thinkers; clever in practical ways, but not built for grand strategy



















Diet & Behavior

Pollenwyrms feed on nectar, blossoms, sweet sap, fruit, berries, insects, grubs, and other tiny prey. A large grasshopper may be a substantial meal. They burn energy quickly and are almost always looking for sweetness, warmth, or movement. If not feeding, they are often at play: chasing one another through flowers, bickering over trinkets, startling at reflections, mobbing some perceived nuisance, or darting after a point of light with all the dignity of a cat who has seen a laser for the first time.

They are generally kind-natured. Larger speaking beings often strike them as wondrous, grand, and nearly godlike, while non-speaking large animals more often register as predators to be avoided. They may squabble, hoard, nip at prey, or grow protective of a nest and its shiny treasures, but they are not a cruel species by nature.



Communication & Beliefs

Pollenwyrms possess their own language and can also learn spoken tongues. Their voices range from squeaks, clicks, chirrs, chittering, trills, yips, and little snarls to surprisingly clear words. Many delight in mimicry and will happily learn local bird calls, favorite phrases, or sounds associated with food, comfort, and affection.

Their spirituality is shallow, shifting, and deeply instinctive. They are easily impressed, and may fall into reverence for anything bright, powerful, warm, rhythmic, or difficult to understand. Sunlight, moonlight, seasons, glowing lamps, weather, blooming cycles, and beings capable of controlling light or warmth can all gather little superstitions and worshipful habits around them. They are fascinated by flame and glow, yet often terrified of thunderstorms, hard rain, and wildfire.



Habitats & Homes

They prefer warm, bloom-rich places: forests, orchards, gardens, sheltered ruins, cliffside groves, greenhouse-like enclaves, and old trees full of hollows. Most sleep in natural places first — flower cups, bark seams, root hollows, branch forks, warm stone niches, and abandoned little cavities. Where many gather, they may turn these into tiny communities of decorated nests and fussed-over roosts, lining them with moss, petals, fluff, shed feathers, bright seeds, shiny pebbles, bits of shell, glimmering scraps, and anything else that catches the light beautifully.

Their fondness for heat often draws them to warm vents, lamps, pipes, cargo bays, engines, and ship interiors. Because of this, Pollenwyrms can accidentally spread from world to world as tiny stowaways; if carried somewhere warm and flower-rich, their numbers may rise quickly unless local predators keep them in check.



Life Cycle

Pollenwyrms hatch from tiny eggs laid in sheltered nests, hollows, or hidden warm places. Newly hatched young emerge soft, damp, and unsteady, needing a little time to dry, unfurl, puff up, and clean themselves before scampering into motion. Once roused, they become lively, curious, playful little things almost at once.

They are not truly warm-blooded, relying heavily on external warmth to stay active. In cold weather, hunger, prolonged darkness, or exposure, they may become sluggish or enter brief torpor-like sleep until warmed again.



 
Last edited:
Kai'el Brat "Guardian of the Light"



Pollenwyrms
Tiny floral drakes of bloom, warmth, mimicry, and glittering little lives









At a Glance

Pollenwyrms are minute, whimsical drakes found among flowers, groves, warm ruins, orchards, canopies, and sheltered little wild places. They are sentient, can speak, and often give the impression of clever little spirits rather than grand beasts; bright-eyed, impulsive, distractible, and endlessly alive with motion. Most are no larger than a palm, though the smallest may be scarcely bigger than a hummingbird, and the largest long-tailed morphs may approach the scale of a bantam hen.

Long and slender of body, they resemble tiny fae-dragons more than birds or insects. Their frames may be fine-scaled and sleek, with delicate limbs, expressive tails, narrow muzzles, tiny claws, and translucent butterfly-like or moth-like wings dusted in fragile scales. Some bear long whiskers, soft antennae, trailing crests, or little pollen-catching tufts. They come in dazzling colors: blossom-bright, petal-soft, jewel-toned, or cunningly camouflaged to resemble flowers, leaves, seed clusters, bark, or moss depending on habitat and lineage.





General Information

Designation: Sentient
Origins: Scattered across warm, flower-rich worlds, including places such as Veridia and Centerra; their true first origin is uncertain
Estimated Population: Scattered
Average Lifespan: Potentially indefinite; they appear to show little true aging after maturity, though most perish far earlier due to weather, predators, hunger, transport hazards, and the ordinary dangers of being so very small
Force Sensitivity: Non-Sensitive



Physical Information

Breathes: Type I atmosphere; highly efficient little lungs let them tolerate thin, lightly oxygenated air better than many creatures of similar size
Average Height: Usually 8–14 cm (3–5.5 in), though the smallest adults may be as little as 5 cm (2 in), while the largest may reach 20 cm (8 in)
Average Length: Usually 15–25 cm (6–10 in) including the tail, though diminutive varieties may be only 10 cm (4 in), while ornate long-tailed morphs may reach 40 cm (16 in)
Body Type: Long, slender, reptilian miniature drakes with delicate limbs, expressive tails, and translucent insect-like wings
Coloration: Vastly varied; floral pinks, violets, golds, pale greens, sapphire blues, petal whites, bark-browns, moss-greens, and iridescent blends








Distinctions

Pollenwyrms vary wildly by lineage and habitat, though all remain one interbreeding species. Some are sleek and fine-scaled; some have scale-dusted wings like butterflies; some bear soft antennae, whiskers, cheek-frills, or pollen-catching tufts. Their feet may carry tiny hooked claws or cling-adapted pads suited for bark, petals, stone, glass, or fruit skins. Many possess astonishing camouflage, becoming nearly indistinguishable from blossoms, dead leaves, lichen, bark, seed pods, or sun-struck petals when at rest. Others are not subtle at all, instead wearing bright, showy colors that dazzle the eye in flight.

Offspring may inherit varied combinations of parental traits: wing form, color pattern, scale texture, antennae, whiskers, minor defenses, cling-feet, floral mimicry, display coloration, or other small survival-focused adaptations. These remain minor natural traits rather than overwhelming gifts; Pollenwyrms survive by speed, camouflage, mimicry, agility, and opportunism far more than by force.





Strengths

  • Exceptional agility in tight spaces; quick, darting, and difficult to track
  • Remarkable camouflage and mimicry among flowers, leaves, bark, and bloom-heavy environments
  • Highly expressive vocal range; capable of chirrs, trills, clicks, yips, snarls, birdsong, and learned spoken language
  • Minor tool use; may use thorns, twigs, spines, pebbles, petals, or seed shells to pry out prey, bait insects, or gather water and nectar
  • Efficient lungs suited to thin-air canopies, cliffs, elevated forests, and mountain gardens



Weaknesses

  • Extremely small and physically fragile; easy prey for larger animals and harsh environments
  • Strongly heat-seeking; cold, rain, storms, and long exposure can leave them sluggish or drive them into torpor
  • Easily distracted by glitter, moving light, shiny objects, reflections, and warmth
  • Poor raw strength; cannot carry much and are ill-suited to direct confrontation
  • Impulsive, playful, and not especially deep thinkers; clever in practical ways, but not built for grand strategy















Diet & Behavior

Pollenwyrms feed on nectar, blossoms, sweet sap, fruit, berries, insects, grubs, and other tiny prey. A large grasshopper may be a substantial meal. They burn energy quickly and are almost always looking for sweetness, warmth, or movement. If not feeding, they are often at play: chasing one another through flowers, bickering over trinkets, startling at reflections, mobbing some perceived nuisance, or darting after a point of light with all the dignity of a cat who has seen a laser for the first time.

They are generally kind-natured. Larger speaking beings often strike them as wondrous, grand, and nearly godlike, while non-speaking large animals more often register as predators to be avoided. They may squabble, hoard, nip at prey, or grow protective of a nest and its shiny treasures, but they are not a cruel species by nature.



Communication & Beliefs

Pollenwyrms possess their own language and can also learn spoken tongues. Their voices range from squeaks, clicks, chirrs, chittering, trills, yips, and little snarls to surprisingly clear words. Many delight in mimicry and will happily learn local bird calls, favorite phrases, or sounds associated with food, comfort, and affection.

Their spirituality is shallow, shifting, and deeply instinctive. They are easily impressed, and may fall into reverence for anything bright, powerful, warm, rhythmic, or difficult to understand. Sunlight, moonlight, seasons, glowing lamps, weather, blooming cycles, and beings capable of controlling light or warmth can all gather little superstitions and worshipful habits around them. They are fascinated by flame and glow, yet often terrified of thunderstorms, hard rain, and wildfire.



Habitats & Homes

They prefer warm, bloom-rich places: forests, orchards, gardens, sheltered ruins, cliffside groves, greenhouse-like enclaves, and old trees full of hollows. Most sleep in natural places first — flower cups, bark seams, root hollows, branch forks, warm stone niches, and abandoned little cavities. Where many gather, they may turn these into tiny communities of decorated nests and fussed-over roosts, lining them with moss, petals, fluff, shed feathers, bright seeds, shiny pebbles, bits of shell, glimmering scraps, and anything else that catches the light beautifully.

Their fondness for heat often draws them to warm vents, lamps, pipes, cargo bays, engines, and ship interiors. Because of this, Pollenwyrms can accidentally spread from world to world as tiny stowaways; if carried somewhere warm and flower-rich, their numbers may rise quickly unless local predators keep them in check.



Life Cycle

Pollenwyrms hatch from tiny eggs laid in sheltered nests, hollows, or hidden warm places. Newly hatched young emerge soft, damp, and unsteady, needing a little time to dry, unfurl, puff up, and clean themselves before scampering into motion. Once roused, they become lively, curious, playful little things almost at once.

They are not truly warm-blooded, relying heavily on external warmth to stay active. In cold weather, hunger, prolonged darkness, or exposure, they may become sluggish or enter brief torpor-like sleep until warmed again.



 

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