Gargoyle

Gargoyles and Fire Gargoyles are enemies in Heretic. They are small, red and have wings, allowing them to float and fly around the map.

Normal gargoyles at close range slash at the player with their claws and can dive at the player from range to quickly close the distance. They have 40 hit points. Unlike the lost soul in Doom, the impact of a gargoyle's swoop will make Corvus grunt, but does not actually injure him; only when the gargoyle starts clawing will damage be inflicted.

The fire gargoyles will instead throw small fireballs at the player, lacking both the swoop and the melee attack. They also have 80 hit points, the same as the regular golem.

Gargoyles appear on almost every level of Heretic.

Description of gargoyle from the manual: ''Half-demon and half-bat. these wicked red beasts are the Order's guard dogs of the sky.''

Description of fire gargoyle from the manual: As if flying demons weren't enough, Fire Gargoyles toss balls of fire down on their unsuspecting enemy.

Tactical analysis
Gargoyles are smaller than other bad guys making them harder to hit. The ability to fly and their small size grants them a high level of mobility and ability to access small areas.

Both types of gargoyle look exactly alike, but can be identified by observing their attack behavior at range: those that swoop in at the player are always the regular variety, while fire gargoyles will hang back and throw projectiles.

While gargoyles may be easy to dispatch individually, with a single point-blank blast of the Ethereal Crossbow killing the regular variety most of the time, they often appear in large groups where they can potentially overwhelm the player. When encountered in smaller groups, even the Elven wand is generally sufficient.

The two varieties of gargoyle will infight each other, but regular gargoyles ignore the swoop impact of their bretheren.

Data

 * 1) These tables assume that all calls to P_Random for damage, pain chance, impact animations, backfire checks, and smoke trails are consecutive. In real play, this is never the case: counterattacks and AI pathfinding must be handled, and of course the map may contain additional moving monsters and other randomized phenomena (such as flickering lights). Any resulting errors are probably toward the single-shot average, as they introduce noise into the correlation between the indices of "consecutive" calls.
 * 2) Fire Gargoyles are immune to eachothers fireballs and hence can not damage each other excepting indirect damage caused by exploding puff pods.

Appearance statistics
The Gargoyle is first encountered on these maps:

The Fire Gargoyle is first encountered on these maps:

The IWAD contains the following numbers of Gargoyles:

The IWAD contains the following numbers of Fire Gargoyles: