I’m going ahead and hit “doubt” on that statement as I looked at my 2014 Monster Manual before writing my previous message and the word “nearly” is absent in that description.
I don’t know what to tell you. I went to 5etools, looked at the 2014 lore, and directly copy-pasted that exact quote. You can check yourself. If I wrote it, I’d have spelt unrecognisable with an s instead of a z. Maybe it got errata’d at some point?
Ok, so I’m sorry about my previous tone, it seems that the mimic article, on 5etools and the SRD website, is the source of our confusion and disagreement: each time the description appears twice, first without the word “nearly” (under “False Appearance”) then once with it. That 2nd description, under “Imitative Predators”, does not appear in the Monster Manual. I could not check what D&D Beyond says because I do not have access to its contents.
Yeah, I think 5e tools uses the first ever printed version, while WotC reprint and edit the lore in the Monster Manual a LOT. D&D Beyond would probably be a third entry entirely. I’m glad we’re on the same page now (or rather, we were on the same page, but the books were different).
I copy-pasted from the 2014 entry.
I’m going ahead and hit “doubt” on that statement as I looked at my 2014 Monster Manual before writing my previous message and the word “nearly” is absent in that description.
I don’t know what to tell you. I went to 5etools, looked at the 2014 lore, and directly copy-pasted that exact quote. You can check yourself. If I wrote it, I’d have spelt unrecognisable with an s instead of a z. Maybe it got errata’d at some point?
Ok, so I’m sorry about my previous tone, it seems that the mimic article, on 5etools and the SRD website, is the source of our confusion and disagreement: each time the description appears twice, first without the word “nearly” (under “False Appearance”) then once with it. That 2nd description, under “Imitative Predators”, does not appear in the Monster Manual. I could not check what D&D Beyond says because I do not have access to its contents.
Yeah, I think 5e tools uses the first ever printed version, while WotC reprint and edit the lore in the Monster Manual a LOT. D&D Beyond would probably be a third entry entirely. I’m glad we’re on the same page now (or rather, we were on the same page, but the books were different).