Gryphons are one of the first intelligent species we invented for the
Squawk Role-Playing Game, but they have settled on their current form only recently. This drawing is a slightly modified version of the original and totally awesome design by my brother Ulrich.
The bird-like appearance is superficial: Gryphons and
Gargoyles belong to a fictional group of archosaurs resembling crocodiles with long, flexible, otter-like bodies. (Also in this fictional family are the snake-like
guivres.) While Gargoyles became stealthier with naked, color-changing skin, Gryphons became large, powerful, tiger-like predators with huge claws. At some point the Gryphon ancestors aquired insulating pseudo-feathers similar to dinosaurs and pterosaurs, and lost their teeth, so Gryphons rip at their prey with sharp beaks.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEinJS4Oyo7Ts_spJeToVYizRnNj_k-UKkAEfNgtoJjMVsgwKVNgU9lnAVoKcrOfmnO39x0hcdNFaaYGAbZemqlINon6IOczKB0D8TYHVUo56-tFXjJLx5gaeXn3ODDQgWv68Y0fKRcVgBw/s400/abbadon-cockatrice-enhanced.jpg)
Gryphons are extraordinarily flexible, moving like a cross between a cat and a snake. All of their joints have a wide range of motion. They can curl up into a ball and wrap around trees. This flexibility helps them to climb, move through tight spaces and crawl through tall ground cover when stalking prey.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjdOPCkCRWcHaazT6y0mOirINA9-0lHMUkt2Kg6f0NbT4mDpqdsEh_u8QYGd8KC-NrEIzzhTDDTsH28YpUADV_s206K4j3aZ70qsjl-uD83dj71q_CO4fq9NsogeO1qKwVr1D41dSGyjnc/s400/gryphon_3fingers.jpg)
At one point gryphons were becoming a less flexible dinosaur design related to archaeopteryx and sickle-clawed dromaeosaurs. In this drawing we can see a combination of archaeopteryx, feathering, anthropomorphic torso and sickle-clawed feet. (It looks like I left an extra toe on one of the feet.) This is totally unlike the current Gryphon idea.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhXixbZGs5K-hC1ZPTI_6DDOMmrz4QpsA1Ms_MBrioNIff31n8HF7XC3iJ2S6E0SbjJc3HOE_ONOYLNaV4KqrOm2EkQifdKr9UsgUdpIEeYNcO2Wktn7vBFe9_MsUUpB6hDMoUN4A-eoVU/s400/gryphon_small-modernized.jpg)
Here is an effort to rehabilitate the same drawing as a modern gryphon with a toothless beak and four huge talons on each foot. The tail, with it's archaeopteryx-like feather pattern, will probably have to go.
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