There is a YouTuber, a great content creator, who makes very thorough, interesting, and thoughtful videos about Lore (usually about the Forgotten Realms), who has made a video about the anatomy of dragons. All taken from official sources. A great compilation, almost a thesis, and presented in a very professional manner. It is in Spanish, but you can turn on English subtitles.
I have never played dungeons and dragons just head some and watched from the side lines so I don't know a whole lot, but I was curious if I tried to join could I be a dragon, that is what my OC is? They are humanoid sort of, but have a lot of dragon features like wings, tail, fire breath, and a more animalistic behavior than a sane human.
I have never played dungeons and dragons just head some and watched from the side lines so I don't know a whole lot, but I was curious if I tried to join could I be a dragon, that is what my OC is? They are humanoid sort of, but have a lot of dragon features like wings, tail, fire breath, and a more animalistic behavior than a sane human.
D&D doesn't have a playable dragon species per se, but there are Dragonborn, which you can read more about here. They're a sort of dragon-like humanoid species.
They do not have wings, though they can gain a temporary flight capability once they reach level 5. They do have a breath weapon, which can be fire-based, or one of several other types of damage; you choose this at character creation when you choose what type/color of dragon ancestry they have.
I have never played dungeons and dragons just head some and watched from the side lines so I don't know a whole lot, but I was curious if I tried to join could I be a dragon, that is what my OC is? They are humanoid sort of, but have a lot of dragon features like wings, tail, fire breath, and a more animalistic behavior than a sane human.
D&D doesn't have a playable dragon species per se, but there are Dragonborn, which you can read more about here. They're a sort of dragon-like humanoid species.
They do not have wings, though they can gain a temporary flight capability once they reach level 5. They do have a breath weapon, which can be fire-based, or one of several other types of damage; you choose this at character creation when you choose what type/color of dragon ancestry they have.
There is also the Draconic Sorcerer class that allows you to pick a dragon type and gain elemental powers based on it, as well as breath-related spells and eventually actual dragon wings.
There are certain book(s) that offer actual dragons as playable races advertised by Ginny Di, but they are not from Wizards of the Coast.
To answer the forum question though, I really am fascinated by the lore, personalities, tactics and builds of the many dragons.
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There is a YouTuber, a great content creator, who makes very thorough, interesting, and thoughtful videos about Lore (usually about the Forgotten Realms), who has made a video about the anatomy of dragons. All taken from official sources. A great compilation, almost a thesis, and presented in a very professional manner. It is in Spanish, but you can turn on English subtitles.
It's worth watching. Here's the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PL58eyjdwx8&t=1919s
Enjoy it!
I have never played dungeons and dragons just head some and watched from the side lines so I don't know a whole lot, but I was curious if I tried to join could I be a dragon, that is what my OC is? They are humanoid sort of, but have a lot of dragon features like wings, tail, fire breath, and a more animalistic behavior than a sane human.
D&D doesn't have a playable dragon species per se, but there are Dragonborn, which you can read more about here. They're a sort of dragon-like humanoid species.
They do not have wings, though they can gain a temporary flight capability once they reach level 5. They do have a breath weapon, which can be fire-based, or one of several other types of damage; you choose this at character creation when you choose what type/color of dragon ancestry they have.
pronouns: he/she/they
There is also the Draconic Sorcerer class that allows you to pick a dragon type and gain elemental powers based on it, as well as breath-related spells and eventually actual dragon wings.
There are certain book(s) that offer actual dragons as playable races advertised by Ginny Di, but they are not from Wizards of the Coast.
To answer the forum question though, I really am fascinated by the lore, personalities, tactics and builds of the many dragons.