This dragon, alongside the one Maleficent turns into in the old Disney's Sleeping Beauty, is why I love 4-limb dragons best.Yep, love that dragon! The movie is dark and gritty and in-your-face real to me. Younger players don't seem to know the movie, which is a pity IMO of course, but understandable. If I was playing and you used the name, I would just sit back with a big grin on my face and enjoy the moment.
Wow, somebody else still exists that read the Horseclan books?This probably had as much impact on my D&D as anything, although, to be fair, Lloyd Alexander would easily take this spot as well:
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Source: Swords of the Horse Clans
Artist: Ken Kelly (1981)
The combination of SF and fantasy has always been strongly ingrained into my brain about how D&D should work. The series has been a huge impact and is probably one of the bigger influences in the post-apocalyptic fantasy genre. Hmm.... I should hunt these down and reread them, but, I'm afraid I'd probably not like them as much as I did at ten or twelve years old.
Maleficient has separate wings and forelimbs as a dragon.This dragon, alongside the one Maleficent turns into in the old Disney's Sleeping Beauty, is why I love 4-limb dragons best.
Oh indeed! I must remember another one then!
We had missing people from our game last night, so since they are all younger and newbies, I took over Dragonslayer and we all watched it. Yeah, they liked it.This dragon, alongside the one Maleficent turns into in the old Disney's Sleeping Beauty, is why I love 4-limb dragons best.
Nice to see some Chris Achilleos art in the thread, he did a lot of fantasy art, and a lot of the Moorcock novel covers.