The dragon, the horse and the knight
Not quite what happened in the story ("Hiram and Richard"), but close. Gold dragons are among the nicest of thier breed, usually quite unwilling to hurt nice people...but push them hard enough and they are still dragons. They may not choose to find room for you in their stomach, but they can still take out their irritation on you in some other manner.
Of course if it were a red dragon, or most other dragons besides a Bronze, Silver or Gold, the knight would be with his horse right now. 83
Of course if it were a red dragon, or most other dragons besides a Bronze, Silver or Gold, the knight would be with his horse right now. 83
Category Artwork (Digital) / Vore
Species Western Dragon
Size 1280 x 982px
File Size 1.71 MB
Copper and Brass are Chaotic rather than Lawful good and I rather suspect that if the dragon here was either of those varieties the knight would already be a bulge. The higher level metallic dragons are, it seems to me, more confident in their station and less likely to dispose of an annoying (but possibly just misguided) knight by showing him that they can digest armor AND the person wearing it. 83
Still being chaotic means you don't follow rules of the law but rather do what feels right. Eating a sentient being alive and whole never feels right to those whom have a good alignment. Neutral doesn't care and evil actually loves doing such acts if they can.
At least that is how I have been playing it as DM. ^^;
At least that is how I have been playing it as DM. ^^;
Well, that is the difference between good and evil, obviously. Brass dragons used to tend fairly heavily toward neutrality and I have always thought Coppers leaned that way a bit too, thus my assertion that the smaller good dragons are more likely to eat annoying knights than the bigger ones.
Not just any human, an adventurer.
We're talking heroes who can take ten times as many hits as an ordinary human or throw fireballs (which white dragons take +50% damage from) or call upon the power of the gods to smite their foes, or steal their horde out from beneath them and stick a blade in their heart.
And unlike dragons they usually hunt in packs.
We're talking heroes who can take ten times as many hits as an ordinary human or throw fireballs (which white dragons take +50% damage from) or call upon the power of the gods to smite their foes, or steal their horde out from beneath them and stick a blade in their heart.
And unlike dragons they usually hunt in packs.
It's a D&D gold dragon, and obviously a quite small and young one. In the story this is from he doesn't meet the dragon face to face until he is much too weak to fight it, from the dragon's weakening poison breath. I left that part out of the drawing so I wouldn't have to explain it all.
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