A Cockatrice head is a rare drop from a Cockatrice. When obtained, it can be stuffed by the Taxidermist in Canifis which costs 2,000 coins. It can then be mounted in the Skill Hall of a Player-owned house, or can be exchanged for 25 zeal points at the Soul Wars minigame for a minitrice pet. A Ring of wealth will increase your chances of this drop.
You don't you actually use it to make a spirit cockatrice puch.
to get it back you cant
Very low, I am after one but the thing is I have probably killed over 2,600 of those and not one has been dropped.
There is no fast way other than to keep killing cockatrices, I must have killed over 1,000's of them and not one has dropped for me either.
Cockatrice heads are not able to be sold on runescape's grand exchange. They are also not able to be traded.
The Cockatrice egg is a "bonus" drop from a Cockatrice (level 37 combat), which makes it among regular drops from this creature. It is used in Herblore and Summoning.Herblore: used to create summoning potions.Summoning: used to create Spirit cockatrice pouches to summon Spirit cockatrices.It can`t be incubated at a pet shop.They can also be made from a normal chicken egg by using the Spirit cobra's scroll Ophidian Incubation.Also note that having a Spirit Cockatrice familiar seems to boost the odds of getting the drop of a cockatrice egg while fighting against Cockatrices, and the Spirit Cockatrice will also create one every now and then.
A cockatrice's spirit is to turn others into stone. For example, in my little pony the cockatrice turned twilight and the chicken into stone.
No, Cockatrice is free in its entirety. Cards are stored in a database.
A cockatrice is a mythical creature often depicted as a two-legged dragon or serpent with a rooster's head. In medieval legend, it is said to have the ability to kill with its gaze or breath, similar to the basilisk. The cockatrice is associated with various folklore and is sometimes considered a symbol of evil or treachery. Its origins can be traced back to ancient texts, evolving through various cultural interpretations over the centuries.
The cockatrice was supposed to come from an egg laid by a cock (i.e. a male chicken) and incubated by a toad
In Europe and Libya.
scene 5,lines 19-20Juliet talks about the "death-darting eye of cockatrice" in III ii 47. The cockatrice was a mythological beast similar to the basilisk, involving the tail of a snake and the body, wings and head of a chicken. Like a basilisk a cockatrice could kill with a look.