Paul Farquhar
Legend
A search of FR wiki mentions "served by seven gold wyrms", which presumably can be identified with the seven yellow birds. This seems to first appear in the 2nd edition Draconomicon.
I count seven.Even if, the card art itself doesn't show all seven canaries.
Checks again.....then again...th-oh wait: NOW I SEE IT!!I count seven.
I don't know if everything in DDO is an auto-include in Eberron's canon, Eberron's canon being more focused on sourcebooks and all that...Grandmaster of Flowers is also a Monk Epic Destiny in D&D Online, so the title is also part of Eberron.
That's close, but the artwork had him sitting, and if I remember correctly, laughing. And having a cane.I'm looking for the image in question, does it seem like the mini in this Tweet is based off of what you are remembering?
I vaguely recall seeing something in the 5e books, but it must not have seemed that important.Well, his wandering persona is mentioned in thenPHB, MM, and DMG, I believe.
Yes, the canaries are indeed polymorphed gold dragons.A search of FR wiki mentions "served by seven gold wyrms", which presumably can be identified with the seven yellow birds. This seems to first appear in the 2nd edition Draconomicon.
I was just doing a little reading and never realized that both D&D and the Final Fantasy video game series appropriated the name of Bahamut from Arabian mythology. Not the description, though, just the name, as it appears it is D&D that originates Bahamut as a dragon.