a harpie =D
The Loch Ness Monster.
To make a creature so blissful... but that obviously doesnt work out and he is left with what he considers a monster.
Infestation Pandemic will make it so your Creature Swap can't do anything to their Iswarm monsters. That means they have a choice - pick an Iswarm monster, meaning Creature Swap's resolution will fail and nothing will be exchanged. Or if they have a non-Iswarm monster, they could pick that instead and let that be exhanged with your chosen monster.
He wished Frankenstein to make him a mate, a female creature just as ugly and deformed as himself.~
the narrator agreeded to make a companion for the monster so the monster was not alone or sad and so nobody hurted them and allso it was frankenstains fault for leaving the monster alone with out a companion
Since there is still considerable debate about whether there actually is such a creature as the Loch Ness Monster, it is a bit premature to make any definitive statement about its color, nonetheless, if there is such a creature, it may very well be green. It would probably be a reptile, and most reptiles are green.
nosferatu = vampire siren= mythical creature that lures sailors to their death a vampire isn't the best monster to use if your trying to make them look good, niether is something that lures them to there death. also, they are a specific type, not just overall. but good try
It was all because of Victor's lie to the creature. He told the creature that he would make another monster, but as a female, so they could live a love life together. Victor did not follow through with this, causing him to declare war on all mankind.
The Creature frightens an old man and is chased from a village. The Creature carefully observes a family in its cottage. The Creature murders Frankenstein's brother. The Creature asks Frankenstein to create a companion for it.
Actually I don't think it would have been wise for him to make a female creature. The creature told Frankenstein that if he would make him a wife, he and she would go far away from the world of men and he would never again harm a living thing. Frankenstein, as many people know, did not do this, fearing that the female might not agree with the creature's plans or that they would hate each other. This, in my opinion, would to little to change the creature's ways. Besides this, there is not telling what the female's actions would be. Also, Frankenstein thought, even if she did agree to join the creature in exile, they might reproduce, and so he destroyed the nearly completed female, setting the creature on to more murders. The solution to the reproductive problem, of course, is devastatingly simple: Frankenstein should simply have built a female without reproductive organs.
In the book, the creature wanted the doctor to make him a bride, when the doctor refused, the creature sought revenge. In the 1930s movie, the monster wanted to kill the doctor. The idea for a bride came in the second movie.
It depends on the individual strengths and weaknesses of the monster and the demon. In some cases, a monster may possess abilities or powers that could allow it to defeat a demon, while in other situations, a demon's magical abilities or resilience may make it more powerful than a monster. Ultimately, the outcome would be determined by the specific characteristics of each creature involved.