Just bring back Basic D&D rules where dragons of a given species had a percent chance to be capable of speech and spellcasting. Under those rules, most dragons were beasts. I think all golds, half of all reds, and less than half of the other chromatics (only 10% of whites IIRC) could speak and cast.A'koss said:You know... I wish that D&D never made the Dragons out to be so intelligent and wise. Here you have a perfectly capable engine of destruction and then you give it an Int & Wis so high that it practically begs to be run in a way contrary to it's design. If I had my way Dragons would only be just smart enough to be cunning adversaries, and not... living think-tanks. Then I can run mindless dragon rampages with a clear conscience!![]()
Actually, that is not too far off from the way I handle them in my homebrew. I don't run standard dragons per se, linnorms and my own linnorm variants generally occupy that space. They don't have spellcaster levels, but instead each dragon has it's own unique magical abilities - one might have a basilisk-like gaze and a poisonous bite, another might have phantasmal killer-like cloud-breath, etc.Brother MacLaren said:Just bring back Basic D&D rules where dragons of a given species had a percent chance to be capable of speech and spellcasting. Under those rules, most dragons were beasts. I think all golds, half of all reds, and less than half of the other chromatics (only 10% of whites IIRC) could speak and cast.
Doesn't matter that Beowulf died he fought a heroic battle. I'd love to have one of my PCs (well at least the more heroic ones not my sniveling greddy rogue PC) die that honorably.RandomPrecision said:Smaug's in The Hobbit. I don't remember the name of the one in Beowulf, but I do remember that the dragon killed Beowulf, so you might not want to have a battle like that one.
A'koss said:You know... I wish that D&D never made the Dragons out to be so intelligent and wise. Here you have a perfectly capable engine of destruction and then you give it an Int & Wis so high that it practically begs to be run in a way contrary to it's design. If I had my way Dragons would only be just smart enough to be cunning adversaries, and not... living think-tanks. Then I can run mindless dragon rampages with a clear conscience!![]()
Heh, yeah I've never really been on board with the whole draconic compulsion to polymorph and then procreate with anything that's not nailed down either... I think you're idea is certainly, uh, more palatable.Evilhalfling said:I use a type of fearl dragons that have a bit less brains and far less magic.
they still control the surface of the land. They don't polymorph and they dont breed with lesser lifeforms. They can lend power to servants, producing halfdragons, and dragonthralls.
They are the apex predator - numbering close to 25 adults.
Hmmm... I've never even heard of this one before but I get Animal Planet so I'll keep an eye out for it in re-runs.ThirdWizard said:Did you see the Animal Planet "documentary" on dragons? They were around canine level intelligence probably, ferocious beasts. They understood that taking livestock from humans would probably make them mad, but that was about the limit to their reasoning. It was quite the fun show.