For 12 annum after it's discovery the Oboresk was hotly debated, many believed that it's sheer size disqualified it from amphibian status, and that further we should test it for some level of intelligence, as creatures of this stature normally have some sentience. This however, was not the case at all; after extensive study the Oboresk were indeed found to be amphibian as well as not qualifying for sentience. In fact, they did not come close to qualifying as for most of their day they sit almost completely still and absorb nutrients from the ground and the energy from the sun. A more recent bout of debate broke out over the idea that this might be a species halfway between plant and amphibian, and while that is much more viable than the non-amphibian altogether hypothesis, it remains to be seen if it holds water. Let's talk about them really then, shall we? The Oboresk are consistently 186 meters tall and 91 meters round, they have dark grey skin, not so dark as to be visibly indistinct from black though, they sap nutrients from the ground and seem only to move when their nutrients are exhausted (this takes decades) however they often cycle back to the same spots, which are generally replenished after a decade or so. They are not known to hunt but often crush pests, but do not consume them, instead burying them in the ground. These pests are mostly limited to the Strabt, but other reptiles and birds meet the same fate from time to time. They are found mostly in the grassy plains, but are found infrequently scattered throughout what little polar ice there is, and even more infrequently in the ocean itself. There, of course, is some debate as to whether the ocean faring Oboresk is indeed the same species as it seems to differ greatly in attitude and diet (they do infrequently swim and dive to harvest a great number of fish for consumption), but this again is not a fleshed out theory and it could be just as well that they adapt differently to different climates.