Zardnaar
Legend
Amethysts are purple, ergo they are purple dragons, just not Purple dragons. And the original purple dragon wasn't a Purple dragon either, it was a Black dragon.
Aware. The PDKs are military order. Dragonrider tie in is stupid imho.
Amethysts are purple, ergo they are purple dragons, just not Purple dragons. And the original purple dragon wasn't a Purple dragon either, it was a Black dragon.
It’s currently popular, in the way pseudo-medieval knights were 40 years ago. Ditching the dragonrider subclass was stupid imo.Aware. The PDKs are military order. Dragonrider tie in is stupid imho.
D&D is about being cool and fun, not about being fossilised in the past. If something is no longer cool it needs to change.Purple Dragon Knights are military order, not a bunch of fighters with pet dragons.
Another point to ponder --- how many actual Purple Dragon Knights are there? It's really a question of how many amethyst dragons are signed up. More specifically, I think this must be something almost exclusively limited to Wrymlings (Medium, and able to carry Small riders) and Young dragons (Large, so they can carry Medium riders). Adult dragons are probably ready to do something else. For a Young dragon, a decade or three with the PDKs is just a cool broadening experience, like a gap year doing volunteer work.
I guess my head canon is that "Purple Dragons" or "Purple Dragon Knights" are acceptable terms for the organization as a whole, but only the ones who have paired up with dragons are "Knights" per se. Pendragon sometimes uses the title "Esquire At Arms" for someone who is a former squire and now a professional warrior but isn't a full knight for whatever reason. I think some of the Crusades era knightly orders used the term "sergeant" for a non-knight warrior of the order.In older material thousands.
They're basically the army.
This town has 700, that castle 1100 sort of thing.
If something is no longer cool it needs to change.