Creeper

Creepers are gigantic human-sized armless praying mantis species, unlike how the Minecraft series showed them (which are usually portrayed as glitched out pigs). Creeper are carnivores that mainly feed on smaller insects, spiders, fish, frogs, lizards, young crocodilians, snakes, birds, and small mammals. The reason they explode is due to reproduction, after they had mated around one month ago, the female creepers (only adult female creepers explode, while males and young creepers do not explode) will try to find an animal (ranging from the size of a rabbit to the size of a horse) as a host for her offspring, and when she explodes like a bomb (which will not only kill her, but can also harm anyone/anything that are near her), her eggs fly off and spreads, if they don't land on any hosts or suitable host, the eggs will die, but if they land on the host, the developing young will start to grow. The eggs of the creeper are usually found under skin of humans, other sapient species/beings, beavers, rabbits, hares, chickens, turkeys, peafowls, pigs, goats, sheep, cattle, mules, donkeys, horses, bison, and among others (but not Dylanusids, Demons, nor Aliens as they are immune to the creeper's egg spreading ability into hosts, so dylanusids, demons, and aliens do not get creeper eggs under their skin), where the creeper eggs started out small (about the size of a mite, but before the hatchlings break out of the eggs, the eggs can be the size of a raisin, which can cause some pain under the host's skin), when the eggs hatch, the baby creepers can chew their way out of the skin, but is usually harmless other than it can cause pain as a result of baby creepers eating through the host's skin, and the baby creepers (which are about the size of a tiny grape) runs away from the hosts and any other species that want to eat the baby creepers (which are defenseless as they lack the strength of their jaw muscles to fight back). They are very common, since they are thriving well in cities and are not showing any signs of becoming endangered species.