Converting True Dragons


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Shade

Monster Junkie
Despite its name, the following dragon bears little resemblance to its namesake in the Epic Level Handbook.

Dragon, Prismatic
Climate/Terrain: Temperate or tropical
Frequency: Very rare
Organization: Solitary (clan)
Activity cycle: Day
Diet: Omnivore
Intelligence: High (13-14)
Treasure: See below
Alignment: Chaotic neutral
# Appearing: 1 (2-4)
AC: 0 (base)
Movement: 9, Fl 30 (C), Sw 12
Hit Dice: 11 (base)
THAC0: 9 (base)
# Attacks: 3 plus special
Damage/Attack: 1d6+1 (x2)/1d20+2
Special Attacks: Breath weapon, spells, special
Special Defenses: Fear
Size: G (30’ base length)
Morale: Fanatic (17-18)
XP Value: see below

Prismatic dragons are closely related to gem dragons, although some of their characteristics, and their almost superstitious reverence for copper dragons suggest that they are somehow related to that subspecies as well. While all dragons tend to be greedy and self-important, prismatic dragons are extremely so. Sustained flattery and figts of precious metals and gems can often influence and cloud the judgement of a prismatic dragon. A gift that exploits the dragon’s boundless vanity, such as a mirror or a song exalting its wisdom and beauty, can make this creature forget almost any wrong done to it.

While not evil, the prismatic dragon quickly grows impatient with talk that is not of immediate interest to it. Such banter is silenced in the most expedient manner, typically with a spell or fierce tail slap.

At birth, their scales are bright, mirrorlike silver except for several distinct bands of color at its midsection—red, organge, yellow, green, blue, and purple. Over time, the colors spread and fade, and the shiny scales give way to pastel hues with dazzling refractive qualities (much like a holographic image). As its natural colors fade, the dragon gains great control over its shimmering scales. By the adult age, the scales are a homogeneous translucent blue-gray, with patches or bands of color confined to wing tips, claws, and face. A basic hypnotic pattern power develops that increases with age—great wyrms can make themselves virtually invisible and can project complex illusions simply by manipulating their scales.

Prismatic dragons speak their own language, which is 30% intelligible to speakers of the copper dragon tongue. They do not share a common language with other dragons, though many can converse with any intelligent creature (the chance for this is 10% +5% per age category).

Combat: A prismatic dragon prefers to use its breath weapon or spells to kill, wound, or incapacitate its enemies, lest it run the risk (however slight) of having the beauty of its magnificent hide diminished by the weapons of “mortal pests.” Insulting words or deeds, may, however, cause these hot-tempered creatures to attack with abandon. Prismatic dragons eschew enchantment/charm spells as unnecessary for creatures as awesome as themselves. Conjuration/summoning and Atleration spells are much more to their liking.

Breath Weapon: The breath weapon is a cloud of gas, 10 feet high and 30 feet in diameter, that roils forward 10 feet per round, dispersing in a number of rounds equal to the dragon’s age category. This cloud contains swirling patterns of sparkling particles and bright, interweaving colors. In illumination of torch brightness or better, those who view the cloud must save vs. spell or be affected as if by a rainbow pattern spell (Wisdom bonuses apply; dwarf and Halfling Constitution bonuses and the illusionist specialty bonus to saving throws do not). Even the dragon itself can be affected by the hypnotic properties of the cloud; a prismatic dragon below adult age is enthralled on a roll of 1 on 1d20 for a round, checking once per round until it shakes off the effect.

The breath weapon itself transmutes water into a milky, luminous solid matter similar to mother-of-pearl. Although the material is not ice and does not melt, it does evaporate under the same conditions as liquid water; exposed to air or sunlight, a mass of this material will eventually dissolve. While solid, the water has the same saving throws as wood of the same thickness. When the gas cloud contacts a stream, river, lake, or similar body of water, the water solidifies to a depth of one-half inch per age category of the dragon (3 inches for an adult, age category 6).

Water-based creatures such as water weirds and elementals must save vs. breath weapon or die. A surviving creature suffers 1d12 points of damage per age category and is slowed for 1d4 turns. The creature’s physical attack damage is increased by 50% for as long as it is slowed.

Creatures with a high water content (such as humans and demihumans) are also vulnerable to the breath weapon. The gas permeates the skin, making it crack and flake away like peeling bark, and causes severe trauma to organs and muscles. This has three effects (modified by a saving throw):
  • Initial exposure to the gas causes 4d6 damage. Prolonged exposure does not inflict additional damage.
  • The equivalent of a slow spell for one round per age category of the dragon.
  • Additional damage while slowed: strenuous activity (running, melee) inflicts 1d8 per round, moderate activity (spellcasting, walking, firing a bow) inflicts 1d8-4 points of damage. No damage or negative damage means that a cast spell is not disrupted by pain.
A successful saving throw vs. breath weapon halves the initial damage and duration of the slow effect, but does not affect the additional damage of straining traumatized muscles.

Special Tactics: Prismatic dragons often lie in ambush in a lake or deep river, using their wings or waveform power (achieved at juvenile age) to drench prey. If a drenched prey fails a saving throw against the breath weapon, all saturated clothing, ahir, and so on hardens into a solid shell, much like a body cast. The shell must be broken before the victim can move again.

Wet surfaces that do not absorb water well (bare skin, leather, metal) will receive only a thin coating, as easily broken as an eggshell. Most people will have no trouble moving their hands or speaking.

Absorbent surfaces, such as normal clothing, must be shattered. A successful bend bars roll cracks the shell on one limb sufficiently to allow movement. An immobilized, statue-like victim can tip himself over, shattering the shell if it fails to save vs. crushing blow. No amount of tapping from within the shell can break it. A solid blow against AC 6 frees one limb or the torso if the shell fails its saving throw vs. crushing blow. The shell absorbs 5 points of damage, the rest affects the trapped victim. When one part of the shell shatters, the shell covering an adjacent limb is 50% likely to shatter as well.

Special Abilities: Prismatic dragons are not born with any special abilities, but soon develop formidable powers.

Very Young: They can manipulate the color of their scales to produce a color spray effect once per day.
Juvenile: Waveform, three times per day (molds a 10-foot cube of water per level into various forms, such as enormous waves; on solidified water this acts as a stoneshape spell).
Adult: Hypnotic pattern twice per day, even while otherwise attacking or spellcasting.
Old: Camouflage ability, 50% invisible, plus 10% per age category beyond old.
Venerable: Illusionist spell effects: change self, mislead, displace (as cloak of displacement), spectral force, halluncinatory terrain, and vacancy; to a total of 20 rounds per day.
Great wyrm: All of the above powers at will.

Habitat/Society: Most prismatic dragons come from an uncharted island in a tropical sea, where dozens of their kind live in an anarchic but rarely violent society. Here, power and prestige are won by competitions of magic, innate powers, and physical beauty. At the center of the island is a huge volcanic crater lined with immense crystals and precious gems. Away from the island, when more than one prismatic dragon is encountered, it is invariably a mother and young, not a mated pair. Prismatic dragon eggs are pale pink to yellow, with many copper flecks.

According to the legends of prismatic dragons, they and all other gem dragon species originated on the island. They say that the Creator Dragon (often described as a copper Great Wyrm) carved the gem dragons from the native crystals of the island and breathed life into them. As she dug deeper, the Creator Dragon found increasingly precious gems from which to shape her likeness. Eventually, she found the most precious and beautiful crystal she had ever seen. The other gems—emeralgd, sapphire, ruby, diamond—were flat and ugly by comparison, so the Creator Dragon threw those dragons into the sea to drown. However, some escaped their fate, and their descendants now live a wrongful existence against her will. From this most beautiful gem, the Creator Dragon carved the first prismatic dragon and gave it life with her last breath.

Ecology: Like most dragons, prismatic dragons can eat almost anything. They prefer, however, to hunt and eat large fish and marine mammals, washing down their meal with quartz and sometimes cleansing the palate with some silver. In general, prismatic dragons consider the gem dragons their enemies, and use lesser species (like humans) to destroy them.

Strangely, prismatic dragons never mate on their home island, so young adults are encouraged to go out into the world. Females are welcomed back only if they return with young, but males may never return.

Every 20 to 22 years, a prismatic dragon female (young adult to very old) living abroad is overwhelmed by her mating instincts. The urge is very strong, for she can mate successfully for only two weeks. During this time, she exhausts herself by flying as high and long as possible during the day, releasing powerful pheromones that can travel up to 200 miles. She also reflects the sunlight in urgent but graceful rhythms and color sequences. This light is a mating beacon that no males of the species can resist. When a male prismatic dragon is attracted, he abandons his usual activities (guarding his hoard and defending his territory from enemies) and scans the horizon for the beacon. If the pattern of the lights is clumsy, he may not respond. If more than one responds, they compete with mating lights of their own.

Originally appeared in Dungeon Magazine #51. This is the Monstrous Compendium Annual Volume Four version.
 

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Shade

Monster Junkie
A few quick observations:

1. A name change is probably in order. "Rainbow" dragon is already used. Maybe "spectrum dragon" or "aurora" dragon?

2. That breath weapon needs some serious simplification. I proposed a flat 1d6/age category damage (rather than 4d6) with 1 round/age category slow. We can just note that the damage dice increase to d12 vs. water-based creatures. Of course, we'll need to retain the rainbow pattern bit and water transformation powers. And possibly a "symbol of pain" like effect. It sounds like a spread.

3. The SLAs are mostly good, except we need to trim down that list at ancient.
 

RavinRay

Explorer
A few quick observations:

1. A name change is probably in order. "Rainbow" dragon is already used. Maybe "spectrum dragon" or "aurora" dragon?
"Pastel" dragon? :lol: Or, based on their purported origins, tourmaline or opal, since these are the two popular multicolor gemstones. (I do use both for homebrew dragons.)

2. That breath weapon needs some serious simplification. I proposed a flat 1d6/age category damage (rather than 4d6) with 1 round/age category slow. We can just note that the damage dice increase to d12 vs. water-based creatures. Of course, we'll need to retain the rainbow pattern bit and water transformation powers. And possibly a "symbol of pain" like effect. It sounds like a spread.
Perhaps we can modify the effects of horrid wilting with regard to the damage to watery creatures? I've considered that as a variant effect to the topaz dragon's breath weapon, incidentally.

According to the legends of prismatic dragons, they and all other gem dragon species originated on the island. They say that the Creator Dragon (often described as a copper Great Wyrm)…
Could this creator be an aspect or avatar of Hlal perhaps? ;)
 
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freyar

Extradimensional Explorer
Whew, these are a mouthful!

I think I like aurora dragon, though a multicolor gemstone might work.

Let's definitely simplify that breath weapon.

First off, what do the ability progressions look like?
 



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