Gramarye gruffon

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The Gramarye gruffon is a monster in the series.

Characteristics[edit | edit source]

Gramarye gruffons are large bipedal green-skinned demons with bat-like wings on their back, long tails, and absent-minded expressions. They wear simple roughspun tunics, leather boots, and metal bracers around their wrists. These gruffons have learned some dark magic, but are still capable of hurling boulders like other gruffons. Gramarye is an archaic term for magic, sorcery, or occult learning.

Appearances[edit | edit source]

Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies[edit | edit source]

Gramarye gruffon (アロダイタス Arodaitasu)
Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies
Model
Bestiary no.
#143
Family
Demon
Experience
1,310
Gold
145
HP
215
MP
22
Attack
150
Defence
125
Agility
76
In-game description

Grown-up gruffons who are beyond the boulder-throwing badness of their boyhoods, and now know Zammle as well.

They bought books to learn about Zammle, but were so busy slacking off that it took them a century to study it.

Spell(s)
Zammle
Skill(s)
Boulder Dash (120% Earth damage to one character)
Sweet Breath
In a gruff (wastes turn)
Location(s)
Eastern Wormwood
Western Wormwood
Grotto (Ruins, rank 3)
Item(s) dropped
Wing of bat116
Safety shoes (rare, 1/64)
Fire resistance *
0%
Ice resistance *
0%
Wind resistance *
0%
Blast/Lightning resistance *
-50%
Earth resistance *
0%
Dark resistance *
50%
Light resistance *
0%
Drain Magic resistance
0%
Whack resistance *
50%
Dazzle resistance *
50%
Fizzle resistance *
25%
Fuddle resistance *
25%
Paralysis resistance *
50%
Snooze resistance *
50%
Poison resistance *
0%
Stun resistance *
50%
Blunt resistance *
25%
Deceleratle resistance *
25%
Sap resistance *
25%
Spooky Aura resistance *
25%
Charm resistance *
75%


In Other Languages[edit | edit source]

Language Translation Meaning
EspañolNecrogrifeteFrom the Spanish necromante and "Grifete", itself derived from grifo', the Spanish word for "griffon".
FrançaisEscogrillefonFrom the French escogriffe and griffon.
DeutschUri-GeierPossibly derived from Uri Geller, an Israeli-British illusionist.
ItalianoMagigrifoFrom the Italian magia and grifo.

Related monsters[edit | edit source]