In 3.5 they'd likely have bonuses somewhere along the lines of extra racial Hit Dice, +10 Strength, +4 (or more) Con, +2 Dex, Dark Vision, and a bunch of other buffs. If familiar with Warhammer Fantasy Battles, think one of their Ogres compressed into a ~7' to ~8' body (much leaner, too) and you wouldn't be far off for the average Predator. That's the question asked in Predator: Concrete Jungle, a game set in the. I say at least as if we treat them as NPCs their Hit Die could be much higher (as recall that the second Predator movie had one get shot in the gut with a shotgun, have liquid nitrogen blasted into the wound, was struck by lightning, and lose an arm, and remain at least semi-functional), and strength-wise the AvP movies have had them throw Xenomorphs into stone pillars hard enough that the stone cracks (which could easily be past 19 Strength, seeing as how 18/00 is thematically meant for stuff like Olympic Athlete-esque fighters). Never mind the fact that our favourite alien uber-hunter is lacking in the. Xenomorph, or Predator, but the game's single-player campaign added a story line, which all takes place on the same planet. A Predator in D&D, assuming we're speaking them in the thematic D&D setting and are excluding outliers like "Kid w/ slingshot > Predator Hunter", would be something like: At least 4d8+1 in 2nd Edition (or 4D8+11 in 3.5), and 18/00 strength. Predator: Concrete Jungle: PS2 & Xbox (2005).
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