I’ve been curious about the relationship between phoenixes and dragons? I figured that phoenixes didn’t get along with dragons at all, or they got along with only the metallics. Beyond that I have no clue what interactions between them would be like.
The 5E version of the Phoenix is nonsentient. Dragons would be unlikely to regard it as anything but a dangerous or obnoxious animal (depending on whether or not they're immune to fire damage).
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Find your own truth, choose your enemies carefully, and never deal with a dragon.
"Canon" is what's factual to D&D lore. "Cannon" is what you're going to be shot with if you keep getting the word wrong.
the ones that are immune to fire could keep them as hunting dogs or smth.
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Alignment: Lawful Evil
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I'm going to go with the depiction that a phoenix is a very beautiful but typically normal-acting magical bird that can set itself ablaze once in its current life, burning itself into a pile of ash before it is reborn from its ashes and gains a new life which will probably end in it burning itself up again and being reborn again, perpetuating a cycle until it dies of a cause other than burning up.
The hybrid will probably be a feathered, beaked dragon that can breathe fire and set itself ablaze at will. It'll likely not have the phoenix ability to be reborn from its ashes, but the fire resistance(in typical fiction) from the dragon half will lead to it not killing itself in its blaze so this makes it able to be on fire as many times as it likes without the flames leading to its death https://19216801****/https://routerlogin.uno/.
Would make for a dragon that is even more dangerous to get close to as it does not need to point its mouth at you to burn you if you are in melee distance, though the extra avian genes will lead to more hollow bones so this dragon shouldn't be getting into melee range in the first place.
I'm going to go with the depiction that a phoenix is a very beautiful but typically normal-acting magical bird that can set itself ablaze once in its current life, burning itself into a pile of ash before it is reborn from its ashes and gains a new life which will probably end in it burning itself up again and being reborn again, perpetuating a cycle until it dies of a cause other than burning up.
There's already a 5E Phoenix statted up in Monsters of the Multiverse. It's a type of elemental.
I’ve been curious about the relationship between phoenixes and dragons? I figured that phoenixes didn’t get along with dragons at all, or they got along with only the metallics. Beyond that I have no clue what interactions between them would be like.
The 5E version of the Phoenix is nonsentient. Dragons would be unlikely to regard it as anything but a dangerous or obnoxious animal (depending on whether or not they're immune to fire damage).
Find your own truth, choose your enemies carefully, and never deal with a dragon.
"Canon" is what's factual to D&D lore. "Cannon" is what you're going to be shot with if you keep getting the word wrong.
the ones that are immune to fire could keep them as hunting dogs or smth.
Pronouns: Any/All
About Me: Godless monster in human form bent on extending their natural life to unnatural extremes /general of the goose horde /Moderator of Vinstreb School for the Gifted /holder of the evil storyteller badge of no honor /king of madness /The FBI/ The Archmage of I CAST...!
Alignment: Lawful Evil
Fun Fact: i gain more power the more you post on my forum threads. MUAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!
I'm going to go with the depiction that a phoenix is a very beautiful but typically normal-acting magical bird that can set itself ablaze once in its current life, burning itself into a pile of ash before it is reborn from its ashes and gains a new life which will probably end in it burning itself up again and being reborn again, perpetuating a cycle until it dies of a cause other than burning up.
The hybrid will probably be a feathered, beaked dragon that can breathe fire and set itself ablaze at will. It'll likely not have the phoenix ability to be reborn from its ashes, but the fire resistance(in typical fiction) from the dragon half will lead to it not killing itself in its blaze so this makes it able to be on fire as many times as it likes without the flames leading to its death https://19216801****/ https://routerlogin.uno/ .
Would make for a dragon that is even more dangerous to get close to as it does not need to point its mouth at you to burn you if you are in melee distance, though the extra avian genes will lead to more hollow bones so this dragon shouldn't be getting into melee range in the first place.
There's already a 5E Phoenix statted up in Monsters of the Multiverse. It's a type of elemental.
Find your own truth, choose your enemies carefully, and never deal with a dragon.
"Canon" is what's factual to D&D lore. "Cannon" is what you're going to be shot with if you keep getting the word wrong.