Guen is a magical creation, not an actual normal panther. She has whatever immunities the plot needs her to have for a given book.
Early books were also written under different edition rules, so you'd have to go check which version of D&D was out when that was written.
Seasaurus mostly suffers from the hollow neck, but those sections could be rotated around to hide it if someone were actually planning to display it like that.
Now show us the Orgysaur mode.
If the monster is considered as Victor's child, he could claim Frankenstein as a family name.
Of course, that would require Victor to not be a total prat, and then 75% of the book wouldn't have happened.
The problem with the Jedi is that, by the time of the movies, they've fossilized. They haven't had a huge threat or a problem they couldn't solve with just their reputation and a little saber-waving in so long that they're no longer capable of handling one when it does come up. Combined with...
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