Multiattack. The wyvern makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its stinger. While flying, it can use its claws in place of one other attack.
Bite. Melee Weapon Attack: +7 to hit, reach 10 ft., one creature. Hit: 11 (2d6 + 4) piercing damage.
Claws. Melee Weapon Attack: +7 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 13 (2d8 + 4) slashing damage.
Stinger. Melee Weapon Attack: +7 to hit, reach 10 ft., one creature. Hit: 11 (2d6 + 4) piercing damage. The target must make a DC 15 Constitution saving throw, taking 24 (7d6) poison damage on a failed save, or half as much damage on a successful one.
Description
Cousins to the great dragons, wyverns have two scaly legs, leathery wings, and a sinewy tail topped with a poison stinger that can kill a creature in seconds.
What a chad
try this one, you have to scroll a lil bit. https://imgur.com/a/aO8yx
So its Ark survival then because that game has the exact same mechanic, steal an egg and then milk an adult female.
So.... Does that make Wyverns mammals?
I'm loving the flyby combat strategy that this monster uses, its ten feet reach in combination with its eighty feet flying movement speed makes it highly efficient at focusing single targets. This monster is highly rewarding to fight against using polearms, which allow characters to make opportunity attacks against it. Alternatively, characters could use spells or equipment that force the Wyvern to stay grounded, where it loses its hit-and-run capability.
I myself was able to somehow tame two adult wyverns, and proceeded to forget about them until recently
They infact can speak draconic but it is increadibly hard to get them to talk at all as they hate social interaction, even with their own kind. Here is a youtuber I recommend with all the info you need about D&D Wyverns and much, much more.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNydvzvico8&t=382s&ab_channel=MrRhexx
Well they still lay eggs, so I'm not sure. But it does depend on which model of classification you're using. The modern one goes by ancestry, I believe, so it's pretty hard to apply to dnd. However dragons in general are warm blooded, and lay eggs, so they don't have milk, the yoke of the egg fulfills that role.
I believe in FR, wyverns feed their young live prey so they can practice using their stinger. The parent can't just kill the prey as wyverns hate the smell/taste of other wyverns venom.
So going by standard lore, the appropriate method for raising a wyvern hatchling is by taking prisoners in combat and sicking it on them.
Chaotic_charisma
Well played, sir. That was quite a lovely sonnet.
Feed it: Hunt medium or small (but not
smalltiny) beasts in the forest, chop 'em to small pieces, an' give him.Train it: throw him to tiny villages of evil men with 2-4 guys that can fight (minor fighters) and see how he survives, an' cure his wounds.
Make urban guys not scare: give him a costume of mastiff.
Make him love ya an' go after ya: Dunno. Maybe "Scouting" can give ya an idea about "go after ya" but for "make him love ya"-dunno.
Ride him: Buy a horse or any other urban mount when he is young and show him how you ride him, and when he is adult, dress up as a bugbear and kill the urban mount against his eyes.
Sounds like they play ARK
The name of the creature is Wyvern. When spoken aloud, it sounds like Why Vern? Hence the joke.
Feed it small mammals.
no, not in stat block or lore immediately below, not cannon in 5e
i don't give a shit what old editions say not in 5e, doesn't count
So my dm thought it would be a good idea to let our bard SEDUCE a wyvern, Now we have an egg that our dm said was going to hatch soon, i wonder what will come out, a wyvern or an abomination?
Whatever happens, its going to be terrifying.
What is all the species of wyvern?
That's pretty easy: Wyvern.