This is a speed-drawing of a fantasy creature that is often bullied for being weak in most RPG games (Fighting Fantasy, Dungeons and Dragons, etc). I find this annoying, as they are cool little monsters that are a small challenge for new game-players. I was playing a small D&D game with four other people including the DM. It was going good until one of our players fell down a chasm and the three of us above the chasm had to go down too, so we set off. On our way in the chasm, my character (a Dragonborn Sorcerer) was attacked by a black tentacle which was definitely mentioned in Volo's Guide to Monsters, and we escaped. Later on we came down a path and passed through a new area of the tunnel. Suddenly, the manager of the store we were in who was playing (A Half-Orc Barbarian) turned blind, another player (a barbarian gnome) turned mute and I turned deaf. I decided to use the spell 'message', which transfers a message to someone else, and they can respond, even if they have been turned mute. As for the other player, he was an elf, and the effects did not touch him. So I used the message onto the gnome, and we started to talk about what was going on. We carried on walking down the path when the elf saw three goblins up ahead. My character did not know this, so the elf mouthed the word 'Goblin' at me, and I knew what was up. We got into a fight, which we won, and we carried on walking down the path. We came into a room with lots of statues in it. It was brilliant, but there was a door on the other side of the room, which we opened, which was filled with treasure. I used 'detect magic', which was quite useful, as all the statues with monkeys started to light up, as well as a ring the gnome picked up, and two cloths, which I took. So we began by destroying the monkey statues. There was one monkey statue with hands over its eyes, and the half-orc barbarian destroyed it, and he could see again. I decided to destroy the statue with the hands over its mouth. However, that was bad, as I turned mute. Luckily, there were lots of these monkey statues, and I destroyed another mute statue, and a deaf statue, and gained back normality, and the gnome destroyed another mute statue and could speak again, and that's where we left off.
Credit to Undertale for the music (Asgore) Credit to D&D (Dungeons and Dragons) for inspiring me to make this :)