Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Unreviewed Thalassûr Kraken



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  • Intent: To create a legendary Sithspawn kraken species for the Kainate, representing the apex achievement of Darth Prazutis’ aquatic Sith alchemy in the aftermath of Tof’s conquest.
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  • Canon: N/A
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  • Name: Thalassûr Kraken
  • Designation:
    • Semi-Sentient
  • Origins:
    • Tof Exclusionary Zone - Kainate Abyssal Leviathan Forges overseen by Darth Prazutis
    • Secondary containment sites in the deepest trench-zones of Dromund Kaas and select Kainate-controlled ocean worlds
  • Average Lifespan:
    • 300-500 Galactic Standard Years
    • Elder specimens may survive longer through prolonged hibernation, life-scourge feeding, and alchemical stasis.
  • Estimated Population: Semi-Unique - Only a handful of stable specimens are known to exist, each bound to specific abyssal territories, ritual containment zones, or Kainate-controlled oceanic kill-regions.
  • Description: The Thalassûr Kraken are the crowning achievement of the Kainate’s aquatic Sithspawn programs: colossal, semi-sentient kraken-beasts engineered by Darth Prazutis after the conquest of Tof. Born from the genetic foundations of Tof’s abyssal megafauna, ancient cephalopod horrors, deep-space predator theory, and dark side Leviathan alchemy, each Thalassûr is less an animal than a living disaster beneath the sea. Their black hides drink in light, their many tentacles rise like siege towers from storm waters, and their burning red eyes are often the last things seen by ships dragged into the deep. Where Blackwake Leviathans serve as oceanic dreadnoughts, the Thalassûr are abyssal sovereigns: Legendary monsters capable of breaking fleets, collapsing rig-cities, and turning entire stretches of ocean into forbidden graveyards.
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  • Breathes: Water and Type I Atmosphere through an enormous adapted gill-lung mantle system. Optimized for deep-ocean environments; capable of limited surface and coastal emergence.
  • Average Height of Adults: 60-90 meters when fully rising above the waterline; partially surfaced specimens may appear far smaller until their full mantle and tentacle spread emerge.
  • Average Length of Adults: 250-400 meters from mantle crown to longest tentacle extension. Exceptional elder specimens may exceed this in myth and unverified Kainate records.
  • Skin Color: Abyssal black, storm-dark blue, obsidian gray, oil-slick green-black. Eyes glow red, crimson, or molten amber. Older specimens may develop bone-white scar tissue, black coral growths, or pale pressure-scars across the mantle and tentacles.
  • Hair Color: N/A
  • Distinctions:
    • Colossal cephalopod-like bodies dominated by a heavily armored mantle, crown-like cranial ridges, and a ring of massive tentacles capable of independent action.
    • Eight to twelve primary tentacles, with older specimens sometimes growing additional lesser tendrils around the mouth, throat, and lower mantle. Each primary tentacle is lined with hooked suckers, serrated gripping rings, and retractable chitinous barbs for anchoring into hulls, cliffs, and seabed structures.
    • A central maw surrounded by crushing beak-plates and inward-facing teeth, capable of shearing through organic prey, armored vehicles, submersibles, and portions of sea-facing infrastructure.
    • Layered alchemized cartilage and osteo-plates under the skin protect the mantle and skull, giving the creature surprising durability despite its flexible body structure.
    • Large, red, forward-facing eyes adapted for deep darkness, murky waters, and storm-obscured surface conditions. When enraged or actively hunting, these eyes glow through fog and black water like submerged furnace-lights.
    • Powerful chromatophore-like skin fields allow the Thalassûr to darken, pattern, and distort its outline in water, helping it blend into abyssal darkness, oil-slick seas, or storm shadows.
    • Specialized pressure organs and sonic sacs within the mantle allow it to generate low-frequency pulses, false echoes, and crushing pressure-waves through water.
    • A massive ink-gland produces alchemically tainted black discharge known as Abyssal Ink, which clouds water, fouls sensors, induces panic in organics, and carries faint dark side contamination.
    • Elder Thalassûr develop coral-like black growths, scarred plating, and barnacle-thickened ridges across their mantle, making them appear like living reefs or drowned mountain peaks when resting in the deep.
    • Mature specimens possess crude but dangerous semi-sentience. They remember hunting grounds, recognize recurring ship signatures, associate specific Sith presences with command, and display predatory resentment toward rival apex creatures.
  • Races: None. The Thalassûr are too few in number to possess recognized races. Minor individual variations include mantle shape, tentacle count, coloration, horn-ridge development, and preferred hunting depth.
  • Force Sensitivity: Low
    • Thalassûr are saturated in the dark side through Sith alchemy, but they are not trained Force-users. Their sensitivity manifests through instinctive predatory awareness, life-scourge feeding, dark side intimidation, and limited resonance with Kainate handlers rather than conscious spellcasting.
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  • Abyssal Fleetbreaker: The Thalassûr is designed to destroy ships, rigs, submersibles, and coastal installations from below. Its tentacles can seize multiple targets at once, anchor into hulls or pylons, and drag vessels beneath the surface while its beak and pressure-waves tear apart compromised structures. Against fleets operating low in atmosphere, on water, or within submerged environments, a Thalassûr is a catastrophic threat.
  • Many-Limbed Siege Predator: Unlike single-body Leviathans that rely primarily on ramming or biting, the Thalassûr attacks in all directions. Its tentacles can wrap towers, crush gantries, overturn platforms, tear open pressure doors, pull down cliffside fortifications, and snatch infantry or vehicles from multiple angles. In a harbor or rig-city, it does not merely attack a target; it makes the entire environment hostile.
  • Abyssal Ink & Sensor Fouling: When wounded, hunting, or retreating, the Thalassûr can release vast clouds of alchemical black ink. In water, this cloud blocks sight, scatters sonar, carries false bioelectric traces, and fouls filtration systems. Organics caught within it experience dread, nausea, hallucination-like impressions, and intense disorientation. In surface breaches, the ink may spread across the waves as a black slick, masking the creature’s withdrawal or repositioning.
  • Pressure-Scream: The creature’s mantle organs can emit low-frequency pressure pulses through water, creating localized shockwaves that rupture eardrums, stun divers, crack transparisteel viewports, disrupt sensors, and weaken damaged hulls. When partially surfaced, this ability becomes a terrifying atmospheric roar capable of staggering troops, shattering glass, and spreading panic through coastal fortifications.
  • Life-Scourge Feeding: Like other major Leviathan-derived Sithspawn, the Thalassûr can feed on the life essence of prey it kills in close proximity. This does not make it invincible, nor can it drain entire cities, but in confined underwater environments, flooded compartments, or densely packed shipwreck zones, it can weaken nearby living beings and use fresh death to accelerate healing, stamina, and aggression.
  • Territorial Intelligence: A Thalassûr is not a mere beast. It remembers routes, sounds, ship profiles, and blood-signatures. Older specimens can feign retreat, bait rescue craft, lie motionless beneath wreckage, or use ink clouds and false pressure echoes to split a target group before attacking the weakest section. Its intelligence is alien and predatory, but dangerously real.
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  • Deep-Water Dependent: The Thalassûr is an abyssal monster, not a land titan. It can breach, surface, crush coastal structures, and drag itself briefly across flooded docks or shallow terrain with its tentacles, but extended land operation is crippling. Its own weight strains its mantle, tentacles, and respiratory organs outside buoyant water. If trapped away from deep water, it weakens rapidly and becomes vulnerable to concentrated fire.
  • Exposed Sensory & Respiratory Organs: Its eyes, gill-lung vents, ink-gland outlets, and pressure-scream sacs are much less armored than the upper mantle. Divers, starfighters, precision artillery, or boarding teams that reach these areas can blind, disorient, poison, or cripple the beast. Damage to its mantle organs can also cause uncontrolled pressure discharges that injure the creature itself.
  • Vulnerable to Force Light & Purification: As a major dark side Sithspawn, the Thalassûr is acutely vulnerable to Force Light, consecrated waters, and sustained purifying rites. These effects burn its flesh, disrupt its life-scourge feeding, scatter its ink-cloud contamination, and can sever handler control long enough to drive the monster into retreat or uncontrolled frenzy.
  • Sonic and Pressure Countermeasures: Its hunting senses rely heavily on pressure changes, vibration, and low-frequency resonance. Dedicated anti-sonic countermeasures, decoy pingers, pressure mines, depth charges, and resonance-disruptors can confuse its senses, lure tentacles into traps, or prevent it from coordinating multi-limb attacks effectively.
  • Rare, Difficult, and Dangerous to Control: Thalassûr are too intelligent and too willful for casual deployment. They require specialized Kainate handlers, Zhaqiri priest-choirs, control frequencies, and ritual conditioning. A wounded, starving, or poorly guided Thalassûr may ignore orders, attack allied vessels, or attempt to claim a territory as its own. Their rarity also means each loss is costly and difficult to replace.
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  • Diet:
    • Obligate carnivore and opportunistic deep-ocean scavenger.
    • Consumes large marine fauna, Sithspawn, whales, leviathan young, ship crews, prisoners, and battlefield carrion.
    • Can grind and pass smaller amounts of metal, hull fragments, bone, duraplast, and industrial debris, though such matter provides little nourishment and is usually processed around organic intake.
    • Prefers warm, freshly killed prey and is strongly attracted to blood, panic, engine vibration, and distressed bio-signatures in water.
  • Communication:
    • Subsonic pulses, deep bell-like moans, pressure clicks, and mantle vibrations transmitted through water.
    • Surface communication includes foghorn-like roars, tentacle strikes, eye-flare displays, and posture changes.
    • Kainate handlers and Zhaqiri priest-choirs communicate with them through alchemical control tones, dark side impressions, sacrificial feeding rites, and conditioned sound-patterns.
    • They do not possess spoken language, but elder specimens can recognize repeated commands, ship signatures, handler presences, and territorial boundary signals.
  • Technology Level: None. The Thalassûr do not create or use tools, though Kainate handlers may attach locator brands, control spurs, ritual chains, or armored growth-grafts to select specimens.
  • Religion/Beliefs: None. The Thalassûr do not practice religion. However, the Zhaqiri Deepborn revere them as Abyssal Crown-Beasts, living omens of Darth Prazutis’ dominion over the sea. Some Zhaqiri cults believe each Thalassûr is a thought of the Dreadtide Sovereign given flesh, hunger, and tentacles.
  • General Behavior:
    • Territorial Sovereigns: Each Thalassûr claims a massive territory, usually centered around an abyssal trench, wreck-field, rig-city, or ritual containment zone. It marks its domain with ink residue, bone piles, drowned hulls, and pressure-call patterns that warn other apex predators away.
    • Hunting Patterns: The Thalassûr prefers ambush and isolation. It stalks targets from beneath storms or through abyssal darkness, uses false pressure echoes to confuse escorts, releases ink to split groups, then seizes ships, submersibles, or prey with several tentacles at once. It often destroys escape routes before revealing its full body.
    • Relationship with Other Sithspawn: Blackwake Leviathans, Riftmaw packs, and Surfskinner Marauds instinctively avoid mature Thalassûr unless directed by handlers. The creature views most other aquatic monsters as rivals, prey, or temporary distractions. Zhaqiri handlers may use priest-choirs to coordinate lesser beasts around a Thalassûr, but such operations are dangerous and require careful control.
    • Interaction with the Zhaqiri: The Zhaqiri do not truly tame the Thalassûr. They appease, direct, and survive them. Priest-choirs approach only during ritual windows, carrying blood-tithes and sounding abyssal horn-shells. A successful rite may wake the beast, direct its hunger, or guide it toward a target. A failed rite becomes a feeding.
    • Daily Rhythm: Most Thalassûr spend long periods in deep hibernation, wrapped around trench-spires, wrecked capital hulls, or black coral growths. They awaken for feeding cycles, territorial challenges, Kainate command rites, or when major disturbances enter their domain. Their emergence is usually preceded by blackening water, dead sonar, mass predator flight, and low bell-like groans from below.

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The Thalassûr were born from Darth Prazutis’ refusal to leave even the mythology of Tof unconquered.

The conquest of Tof had already shattered its fleets, drowned its island kingdoms, and turned its oceans into the hunting ground of the Kainate. Blackwake Leviathans patrolled the deep-water routes. Riftmaw packs haunted escape channels and wreck-canyons. Surfskinner Marauds broke harbors from the surf. The Zhaqiri Deepborn took root in drowned cities and trench-temples, spreading their worship of the Dreadtide Sovereign through blood, fear, and salt. Yet Prazutis desired more than occupation. He desired a final lesson written into the ocean itself: a beast so terrible that even the conquered sea would seem to have grown a new god.

Within the deepest chambers of the Kainate’s Abyssal Forges, Sith alchemists began work on what became known as the Thalassûr Program. Its foundations were drawn from Tof’s abyssal megafauna, ancient cephalopod predators, failed Leviathan strains, and forbidden studies of massive interstellar monsters whose instincts seemed shaped by gravity, hunger, and darkness. The objective was simple in phrasing and almost impossible in execution: create a kraken large enough to break naval infrastructure, intelligent enough to hold territory, and spiritually contaminated enough to serve as a living symbol of Kainate dominion.

The first generations were failures.

Some grew too quickly, collapsing under their own mass before they could leave the vats. Others were all hunger and no control, devouring handlers, sister-spawn, and entire lab sections before sterilization charges reduced them to drifting meat. Several early specimens demonstrated unsettling intelligence, but that intelligence made them resistant to conditioning. One prototype learned to mimic handler signals by vibrating its mantle against the glass of its containment trench, luring a control choir close enough to drag them through the observation wall.

Prazutis ordered those lines purged.

The surviving alchemists changed their approach. Rather than attempting to tame a monster after birth, they built obedience into the embryonic nightmare. Developing Thalassûr were suspended in black nutrient seas, surrounded by sonic catechisms, sacrificial drownings, and carefully measured exposure to the dark side. Zhaqiri priest-choirs chanted the name of the Dreadtide Sovereign through the water until even the unborn beasts reacted to the rhythm. Kainate control spurs were grown into the mantle rather than implanted after maturity. The creature’s hunger was not suppressed; it was given direction.

The first stable Thalassûr emerged during a storm cycle over the Tof Exclusionary Zone. The water around its trench turned black for nine kilometers. Every lesser predator fled. Three Blackwake juveniles refused to approach the site despite handler commands. When the new beast opened its eyes, the observation crews saw two red lights burning in the abyss and heard a pressure-call that cracked reinforced transparisteel two levels above the containment chamber.

Its first field deployment became a legend among the Zhaqiri.

A hidden Tof remnant fleet, concealed among drowned volcanic channels, had evaded Kainite patrols for weeks. Rather than waste conventional assets, the Kainate awakened the first Thalassûr. It reached the harbor beneath cover of a dead storm, released ink into the channels, and waited until rescue craft began searching for lost patrol boats. Then it rose. Tentacles wrapped ships, pylons, and cliffside docks at once. Escape lanes collapsed under falling stone. Submersibles vanished into black water. By dawn, the harbor was gone. Its wreckage had been pulled into a trench and arranged around the sleeping beast like trophies.

The Zhaqiri named it Thalassûr, meaning roughly “The Sea That Hungers.” Afterward, the term became the name of the whole line.

No Thalassûr is bred casually. Each requires years of gestation, obscene quantities of biomass, dark side saturation, and constant handler supervision. Most remain bound to specific territories rather than being moved like conventional weapons. To awaken one is a strategic act, part military deployment and part religious disaster. Kainate admirals do not mark Thalassûr zones as simple hazards; they mark them as living sovereignties beneath the waves.

Within the Tof Exclusionary Zone, they have become the final warning. A ship may survive Riftmaw waters. A fortress may withstand Surfskinners. A convoy may, with luck and firepower, escape a Blackwake. But when the sea turns black and the red eyes rise beneath the storm, there is no battle in the ordinary sense. There is only the question of how much wreckage will remain for the Zhaqiri to worship.

To the Kainate, the Thalassûr are crown-beasts, siege monsters, and living interdiction assets. To the Zhaqiri, they are sacred terrors. To Tof, they are the last proof that conquest did not merely take the world’s kingdoms.

It taught the ocean to hate.


 

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