Okamebi are descended from the same common ancestor as mist wolves. They are equally able to evaporate their bodies into a mostly transparent mist, however they possess various flickering lights around their bodies which do not disappear when they do.
They are generally at best unpleasant tricksters, at their worst vindictive and dangerous.
They inhabit murky shady areas of swamps and marshes and are well known for leading travelers off track. When they're just joking around they will get a traveler lost, when they're feeling malicious they will lead you to a sink hole and abandon you.
When the war between the wolves began they took up alliance with the fire type wolves and began focusing most of their mal intent at the interloping domestic dogs, often reporting in with the fire type dragon wolves for rewards.
They aren't all bad, most of them just want to be left alone, but there a few bad apples and all that.
Their colors are mostly muted grays and greens, the sorts of colors old swamp wood, algae and lichens come in.
There are two coat types - coarse and long. Coarse coats are similar to typical wolf coats though more wiry to the touch, almost bristly. The long coats have trailing furnishings in the chest, belly and back of the legs giving them a Spanish moss look when dry and a drifting swamp weed look when wet.
They are generally at best unpleasant tricksters, at their worst vindictive and dangerous.
They inhabit murky shady areas of swamps and marshes and are well known for leading travelers off track. When they're just joking around they will get a traveler lost, when they're feeling malicious they will lead you to a sink hole and abandon you.
When the war between the wolves began they took up alliance with the fire type wolves and began focusing most of their mal intent at the interloping domestic dogs, often reporting in with the fire type dragon wolves for rewards.
They aren't all bad, most of them just want to be left alone, but there a few bad apples and all that.
Their colors are mostly muted grays and greens, the sorts of colors old swamp wood, algae and lichens come in.
There are two coat types - coarse and long. Coarse coats are similar to typical wolf coats though more wiry to the touch, almost bristly. The long coats have trailing furnishings in the chest, belly and back of the legs giving them a Spanish moss look when dry and a drifting swamp weed look when wet.