Of the four classical elements (earth, air, fire, water), assign ONLY ONE to each of the following monster types, explaining the reasoning behind the association.
But a hell of a lot of these are hybrids, why would they have a single element?
Evan Davis
>chimera thisone is hard to decide because its combo of more creatures. I would go for earth since all animals are somehow connected to it and earth is the only element that indicates some biding or connecting of something. >basilisk I'm going to steal this from Kung fu Panda and go with fire because poison is just transformed fire of dragon so yeah. Fire it is. But also earth can be good if you are talking about snake like basilisk. Because snakes are bound to slither on earth. >griffon Air. King of the flying animals. >dragon Fire. Because tradition. >manticore I would go for Earth. Since it looks like deformed human and humans are just the dust of the earth. >satyr Fire. Has sneaky malicious character, and bad temper. Also looks like some hellspawn. >medusa Earth. Turns enemies into part of earth. Snakes are also connected to earth. >werewolf would go for fire. because werewolf is cursed creature and curses are connected to dark arts of magic and dark arts of magic are connected to fire. >elf I would go for water. Humens are like something born from dirt and mud and water. Elves are lighter, purer than humans so they have more water in themselves. >ghost it depends. air if good, fire if cursed. >dwarf earth. born from stone. >troll also earth (if warcraf like troll than go for fire); >vampire fire. cursed beign, hellspawn >goblin earth
Leo Stewart
>chimera Earth, since the goat and snake overwhelm the dragon and the lion. >basilisk Earth, since it turns things into stone >griffon Earth, as a creature that lives high in the mountain >dragon Earth, because it lives deep in the caves >manticore Earth, since it has spines made from metal >satyr Earth, as it lives and cavorts in the forests >medusa Earth, since it turns things to stone >werewolf What is werewolf but a man with fangs? Earth >elf Earth, since they live closely with nature >ghost Earth, since their bodies are buried there >dwarf Earth, since they are of the mountain >troll Earth, as they turn to stone when the sun strikes them >vampire Earth, since they sleep in the dirt >goblin EAAAAARTH
Lucas Adams
>fire is evil meme please vacate this existence
Christian Richardson
Name one good mythological creature that is good and has connection to fire.
Jason Barnes
>>chimera Earth. Terrestrial beast. Possibly poisonous. Poison is associated with earth >>basilisk Earth because poison >>griffon Air because it's a bird >>dragon Fire because it's a fucking dragon >>manticore Earth because poison >>satyr Earth because spirit of nature >>medusa Earth because petrification >>werewolf Earth because terrestrial beast >>elf Air because sylphlike, and the opposite of dwarves >>ghost Air because it's intangible >>dwarf Earth because it's a fucking dwarf >>troll Earth because it's associated with stone >>vampire Earth because they rise up from the earth and are weak to water >>goblin Earth because they live underground
Tyler Butler
Pheonix
You find it more in the Arabian myths because Zoroastrianism
Chase Carter
Why are you obsessed over earth
Easton Jackson
You too
Justin Morales
>Salamanders are not evil, just neutral like all alchemical spirits >Phoenix >The Firebird from Slavic myths(not the same as phoenix reeeee) >a whole slew of gods >Fire is associated with sun in many mythologies and sun BTFOs anything undead
Jaxson Edwards
>bird that incinerates everything
Phoenix is more of a neutral creature like salamander. I was taklking about good like lawful good. Not of them uses fire as a weapon.
Brandon Rodriguez
since when are vampires weak to water?
Levi Hill
>All these anons saying satyrs are earth Satyrs are wild men, associated with the god Dionysus. They're mythological forms of man's Id, passion, and sexuality. If anything they should be fire.
Zachary Jones
They can't cross moving water in many mythologies.
In Legacy of Kain, water was like acid to them, and Legacy of Kain is 10/10 setting.
Literally christian angels, what with wheels on fire and flaming swords and one of their main dudes being called "fire of god". In contrast, the main archcunt is called "morning star" or "lightbringer".
Dominic Wilson
they're just earthposting, user.
Henry Rodriguez
What the hell are you talking about. I wrote fire. >christian angels Good point. Very well I concede. Okay so maybe not fire=evil bur fire=danger? Can we agree on that?
Evan Wood
Any element can be dangerous.
Also in japanese mythology the small deity Kojin represents "tamed" fire, and in general across mythologies fire gods tend to be messengers, protectors of the household or blacksmith patrons.
Luis Roberts
...and then there's Loki.
Jace Bailey
Angels.
Xavier Cooper
Never saw him using fire.
Bentley Green
No because it can be the fire in the hearth that brings warm and security. Or the fire that casts light, defending you from the dangers of darkness. Also fire being chaos, another common meme, should also die since while volatile fire is also a symbol of human control over nature.
Thomas Ramirez
The Christian God shows up as fire a lot.
Levi Martin
Fire = Danger is an incredibly modern invention. Look at all the belief structures with their hearth spirits and gods of the forge and the like. For as long as parts of the world remained untamed, fire was life. It was our light in the darkness and our warmth in the cold. It forged our weapons and cooked our food.
Now that everyone has electric stoves and microwaves and lives clumped together in too-small buildings, fire has suddenly become dangerous because you only ever see it when something goes wrong. But that's only because we've hidden it in the power plants and the factories.
Yes, fire can burn things. But to say that fire should be defined by that is like saying that earth should be defined as dangerous because of all those cavers who get stuck and die.
Matthew Cooper
Aren't snakes traditionally associated with water?
Logan Flores
>chimera earth. They are the amalgamation of many creatures, like how earth is the mixture of many materials and alloys are the mixture of many metals. >basilisk earth. They turn people into stone. >griffon air. They fly. >dragon fire. They breathe fire. >manticore air. They fly and shoot thorns that also fly. >satyr water. Share many of the same reasons as elves. Also, their patron god is also the god of wine. Alcohol removes one's own inhibitions, making them chaotic like water. >medusa earth. They turn people into stone. >werewolf water. The moon affects the tides of the ocean and is often reflected on a pond's surface. Werecreatures are everchanging like everchanging water. >elf water. They're whimsical, like a bending river. They're attuned to nature, like the flow of water. They're beautiful and sexual, like sea nymphs. They're alien, like that which lurks at the bottom of the ocean. >ghost air. They're insubstantial, like air. >dwarf earth. They work with the earth, live in the earth, and were born from the earth. >troll water. They regenerate and mutate like water and live under bridges over water. >vampire air. They can turn into mists and bats which fly. They move with supernatural celerity and grace. They live in darkness, which I associate with air. >goblin fire. They're rambunctious pests and breed, grow, and spread quickly. They ruin everything to sustain themselves, like fire.