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Converting True Dragons

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Something else we need to visit:

The aquatic dragon is amazingly maneuverable for such a large beast. In this environment, it moves above or below a large enemy or a party of small foes, striking out at once with its jaws, all four clawed feet, and its spike-tipped tail.

Should we leave a note that the tail slap (and possibly sweep) deals half piercing damage due to the spikes?

Should we give it two additional claw attacks equal to its primary two, or something more akin to rake? Either way, we need to note that it may only use such attacks while in water.

Also, since it lacks wings, we need to note that it lacks wing buffet attacks.
 

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I'd say that the tail slap gets 1/2 piercing, but not the sweep.

Rather than rake, why don't we just say that it has 4 claws starting at Medium size (or whatever age category that is). That is, it gains the extra 2 claws instead of the wing buffets. I don't think rake quite seems appropriate.
 



Been really busy this week preparing for our high school homecoming (it's our 20th - ack!) so I haven't been active here, but looks like Shade's got that strangulation and tail attacks spot on, and the claw attacks look good to me.
 

Dragon, Brine
Climate/Terrain: Any ocean
Frequency: Very rare
Organization: Solitary
Activity Cycle: Any
DIET: Omnivore
INTELLIGENCE: Low (5-7)
TREASURE: Special (see table)
ALIGNMENT: Chaotic neutral
NO. APPEARING: 1 (2-5)
ARMOR CLASS: 2 (base)
MOVEMENT: Sw 9
HIT DICE: 11 (base)
THACO: 9 (base)
NO. OF ATTACKS: 1 +special
DAMAGE/ ATTACK: 4d10
SPECIAL ATTACKS: Breath weapon, spells, surprise
SPECIAL DEFENSES: Variable
MAGIC RESISTANCE: Variable by age
SIZE: H (26’)
MORALE: Champion (15)
XP VALLUE: Variable

Brine dragons are fully aquatic; they cannot fly or walk on land, nor breathe air. They do not enjoy even breaking the sea’s surface, but sometimes do so if given the proper incentive, such as a boatload of juicy humans.

These massive creatures look much like plesiosaurs with draconian heads. They have flippers where other dragons have claws, and their oversized teeth make them appear as if they are smiling all the time. The grin is not a friendly one.

The hide of the brine dragon is rough and mottled, ridged and craggy. The scales are irregular, and do not fit together well. Huge clumps of salt dot its body, some so old that they are discolored and cannot be dissolved in the water.

Combat: The brine dragon is a good swimmer. Its unwieldy bulk belies its swimming ability; brine dragons can move through the oceans without causing so much as a ripple. As a result, opponents suffer a -1 penalty on their surprise rolls. The dragon itself is acutely aware of disturbances in the currents, and is surprised only on a 1-in-10 chance. It attacks with little or no provocation. Sometimes it doesn’t attack, even when combat might be expected; brine dragons are extremely capricious and unpredictable.

The brine dragon’s bite causes terrible damage and can badly gouge large marine creatures such as whales or amphidragons.

Breath weapon/Special Abilities: The brine dragon breathes a cloud of alkaline-salt-and-saliva-based spray that burns like acid. The cloud is 90 feet long, 45 feet wide, and 45 feet high. Those successfully saving vs. breath weapon suffer half damage. The brine dragon can use this breath weapon once every three rounds. The breath weapon can be used equally well underwater, on the surface, or against an aerial target.

Brine dragons are themselves immune to poisons and acids. As a brine dragon ages, it gains several magical abilities (See table), each usable three times per day.

Habitat/Society: Brine dragons are unpredictable, violent, and have nihilistic tendencies. They have no leader or society.

Brine dragons make their lairs out of coral and rock formations, using their caustic breath and spittle to glue together a convenient cave. Each brine dragon stakes out its turf, which can vary day to day from 100 yards to ten miles across. Its cave remains its only point of fixed interest.

When a brine dragon lays its eggs, the female usually stays around and raises the hatchlings, though sometimes the male stays and does the job instead. Other times both parents stay and raise the hatchlings, or both parents leave and let the eggs fend for themselves. Sometimes the parents get hungry and just eat the eggs or young. Their extremely random parenting keeps the number of brine dragons low.

Ecology: Brine dragons get their name from their love of salt. The dragons eat salt and also absorb it as they swim the oceans. Often they can be found in coastal salt marshes.

Brine dragons hate black dragons and will attack them at every opportunity. Otherwise, they will eat nearly anything, including marine undead.

Originally appeared in Monstrous Compendium Annual Volume Two (1995).
 

Body length ranges from 5-8 at wyrmling to 92-102 at great wyrm.

Breath weapon ranges from 1d4+1 to 12d4+12.

SLAs are gained as follows: Melf’s acid arrow (age 6), stinking cloud (age 8), fear (age 11), and cloudkill (age 12).

MR begins at age 5 at 10% and increases by 5% thereafter.

Treasure is nil until age 4, which is ½ F, then F for ages 5-7, F and G for ages 8-9, and F, G,H thereafter.
 

If the body length is in feet, I'd say this sounds pretty big. Probably like the Red/Gold progression, but I could go a step down.

Breath weapon sounds closest to White, but we could just go with the original. Cone of acid, I guess.

Physical stat progression is probably pretty good, mental pretty bad.
 

Looking at other 2e dragons…

It is about the same size as a black dragon.
Its breath weapon is slightly weaker than a white dragon’s (d4s vs. d6s)
Spell resistance progression is nearly identical to black dragon.
Bite damage is greater than even a gold dragon, so we should probably give them powerful bite (treat as one size category larger).
They have no true spellcasting, just SLAs.
 

Let's go with black size & SR, 1d4 breath/age category. Definitely powerful bite (and maybe augmented crit?).
 

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