I'm still deciding whether to separate groups of arthropods and create a "playbook" style for different creatures. Crabs, isopods, and beetles are the more dominant species in Bug & Claw, and a playbook style may help specialize certain tables for each. That being said, I've been creating a great many tables like these that will be used in some way or another.
Roll D100 or choose appearance
This is how you look. Why you look this way is up to you.
- Angular
- Barbed
- Banded
- Bristled
- Bulbous
- Chalky
- Cherubic
- Clawed
- Craggy
- Creepy
- Curved
- Delicate
- Dense
- Droopy
- Elegant
- Elongated
- Fanged
- Feathery
- Feeble
- Flexible
- Fluttering
- Frilled
- Gangly
- Gaunt
- Gleaming
- Glinting
- Gnarled
- Gossamer
- Hideous
- Hunched
- Inconspicuous
- Iridescent
- Jagged
- Jointed
- Knobby
- Lanky
- Leafy
- Leggy
- Looming
- Melancholic
- Militant
- Mottled
- Multi-eyed
- Mysterious
- Natural
- Nerdy
- Nimble
- Noble
- Oafish
- Oily
- Ornate
- Patchy
- Peaceful
- Perky
- Piercing
- Plated
- Pointed
- Polished
- Ridged
- Rough
- Rounded
- Rugged
- Scaled
- Scarred
- Segmented
- Sharp
- Shimmering
- Shiny
- Shriveled
- Silky
- Skeletal
- Slender
- Slimy
- Smooth
- Spiked
- Spindly
- Spiraled
- Spotty
- Stalk-eyed
- Stocky
- Stout
- Stubby
- Sweeping
- Swollen
- Tapered
- Temperamental
- Thick-skinned
- Thin
- Thorny
- Transparent
- Trusting
- Twitchy
- Twisted
- Veiny
- Vibrant
- Wiry
- Withered
- Wobbly
- Worn
- Writhing
If you're making similar lists for your games, I recommend this site and just adjusting the letter at the end of the URL:
https://www.yourdictionary.com/articles/adjectives-that-start-with-c