Abissäger

Abissäger is a monster of the ??? species that you are free to use in a game or other media. If you have differences in your game or other media, add a sub heading for that difference below one category.

Physiology
They are gargantuan blue, aquatic monsters with algae growing on their back. Their skin is a light blue when near the surface, and navy blue or black in the deepest reaches of the ocean. They have a thick coat of algae on their back which contains seaweed with small hooks. Their head is almost square-shaped, with very small eyes. They have two large hooked horns coming from the side of their head. Their bottom jaw is shelled, with several spikes coming from the back of the jaw. They have several pairs of flippers, growing shorter as they go along the body, and a thick, spade-shaped tail. They have blue stripes of a strange pattern running from their eyes to the end of their tail.

Behavior
They will attack only if attacked themselves, as usually the thing attacking them is the smallest fraction of their size. Other than that, they normally drift peacefully through the sea, normally asleep. They only wake up for three things: air, food, or to kill a threat.

Abilities
The seaweed on their back can grab and tangle hunters, acting as a grapple attack. They can also fire a water beam able to blow holes in mountains.

Rage and Tired States
Users can customize this panel to fit their version.

Mounts
It can be mounted in several places: the head (on the left horn), the back, and the tail.

Attacks
Users can add their own attack sets here.

Breakable Parts
Horns x2- A horn will break.

Back x2- More soft tissue on the back is exposed.

Flippers x8- A flipper will break.

Tail x5- The tail will continuously lose tissue until it eventually can be broken

Equipment
Users can add their own equipment, but the names of the sets I made are Profondità (Blade) and Herrscher (Gunner).

Trivia

 * This is T1GREXHUNTER's first free-to-use monster.
 * It's name is derived from Abisso, the Italian word for abyss, and Jäger, the German word for hunter.