Folks could get thrown off by PF's draconal agathions, however.
Draconals come in five colors: black, green, red, white, yellow. Of those, four are traditional chromatic dragon colors, and each can appear in varying ways, including a more straightforward flat color, a gemstone-like or even pearlescent version, or metallic. But all of them are pure Neutral Good, being as they are the leadership of the agathions, PF's equivalent of D&D's guardinals.
True, back in PF1, they were sometimes mistaken for Chromatic Half-Dragons. Each color of Draconal in PF1 actually represented something. From d20PFSRD:
Black: Black is a balance between male and female energy, and represents the sky, stars, immortality, and leadership. Black draconals are immune to fire damage, and their breath weapon is fire. A black draconal adds
Fire,
Glory, and
Luck to its list of possible domains.
Green: Green is slightly skewed toward masculinity. It represents wood, plants, and flowers. Green draconals are immune to cold damage, and their breath weapon is cold. A green draconal adds
Animal,
Plant, and
Water to its list of possible domains.
Red: Red is a strongly masculine color, and most red draconals are male or have aggressive or gregarious personalities. Red represents fire, light, and warding against bad luck. Red draconals are immune to fire damage, and their breath weapon is fire. A red draconal adds
Fire,
Protection, and
Sun to its list of possible domains.
White: White is slightly skewed toward femininity, and most white draconals are female or have protective or serene personalities. White represents brightness, fulfillment, metal, mourning, and purity. White draconals are immune to cold damage, and their breath weapon is cold. A white draconal adds
Artifice,
Liberation, and
Repose to its list of possible domains.
Yellow: Like black, yellow is a balance between male and female energy. Yellow represents earth, oracles, stone, and luck. Yellow draconals are immune to acid, and their breath weapon is acid. A yellow draconal adds
Earth,
Glory, and
Luck to its list of possible domains.
I am not sure if PF2 kept this feature for its' Draconals. But I can imagine that their Aasimar descendants could be mistaken for Dragonborn.
