>>5397167>>5397168>>5397171>The moons make the ice crash and shatter on itself, just as they turn the waters below turbulent and violent. A Flounder Feeder struggles against the tide to avoid being dashed on the rocks. It turns and pushes its tail, normally a doomed effort, but the long, thin spokes jutting from its cartilage make it possible. They catch the water, slowing its momentum just enough to flop forward. It misses a ridge by half its body length and will never know how close to death it came.The Flounder Feeder’s stabilizers have grown longer and noticeably more effective, letting them turn more efficiently. At the same time, they’re prone to catching on passing objects and their thin width and soft material makes them brittle. It isn’t uncommon for a Flounder Feeder to have one of its stabilizers snapped and missing but it’s uncommon for them to die from this alone. It is possibly the quickest turning predator in the narrow band ecosystem, though this isn’t by an enormous margin.
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