The format of this changed several times while I was working on it, trying to figure out the best way to lay it out.
I included my little comparison sketches on the side. It took a bit of study to work out the leg structure for a dragon. Ultimately I think it came out fairly good, the legs are the same length as a humans, but the proportions end up different, being digitigrade. The upper leg is slightly longer, the lower leg is considerably shorter, and the foot is elongated with the heel lifted.
Internally the structure is mostly the same, and that means the muscles are just different lengths, but all the same.
I included my little comparison sketches on the side. It took a bit of study to work out the leg structure for a dragon. Ultimately I think it came out fairly good, the legs are the same length as a humans, but the proportions end up different, being digitigrade. The upper leg is slightly longer, the lower leg is considerably shorter, and the foot is elongated with the heel lifted.
Internally the structure is mostly the same, and that means the muscles are just different lengths, but all the same.
Category Scraps / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 1280px
File Size 543.3 kB
Personally I see dragons having digitigrade legs over all, so Razor gets them in his design. It's also partly because he naturally stands on all fours, like most dragons in D&D and other fantasy worlds, he only stands upright when he needs to use his hands for something.
This leg design does lend a little more spring to his step though, so he can leap into the air on takeoffs and bound around fairly fast for a 20 ton beast. He's still not very agile being the size he is, but he makes up for that in a big way with his brains.
This leg design does lend a little more spring to his step though, so he can leap into the air on takeoffs and bound around fairly fast for a 20 ton beast. He's still not very agile being the size he is, but he makes up for that in a big way with his brains.
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