DnD:Blue Dragon
- Breath weapon: Line of lightning
- Habitat: Sandy Deserts/ Coastal Areas
- Diet: Meat from large animals such as camels, snakes, lizards, and also plants
- Preferred Treasure: Sapphires
- Alignment: Lawful Evil
- Image: Wizards.com image
- Notes:
- Blue dragons are the second most powerful of the classic chromatic dragons. They have single large horns protruding from their heads and large, frilled ears. The tail is thick and bumpy. The wings are more pronounced than most other species. They smell like ozone or sand.
- They are more likely to be mocking and manipulative than outrightly cruel or murderous to 'lesser' creatures, aided by their natural talents for hallucination. They trick desert travelers into drinking sand or going miles out of their way.
- Blue dragons are mostly carnivorous though they will eat plants on occasion. Camels are the preferred food. They are enemies of brass dragons.
- Blue dragons are unusual for chromatics in that they keep fairly well-ordered, hierarchical societies.
- Despite their evil nature, they are excellent parents to their young, and rarely leave their eggs unattended. Blue dragon eggs must be buried in warm sand to incubate. Blue wyrmlings are quick to taunt any other creature. They hunt small desert creatures for food.
- The typical blue dragon lair is dug into desert rock formations with two entrances: one at ground level, hidden by the sand, and one opening onto a high ledge on which it can perch and survey its territory. Each lair also has a cavern with a pool of water and sandy beach, which its inhabitant will use for drinking and relaxation.
- The blue dragon excels at aerial combat. They discharge lightning at aerial foes, or at creatures on the ground. They are powerful at spell craft and adept at burrowing in sand. They often lie in wait just below the surface of the desert for prey. When they are so burrowed, their large horns can be mistaken for pointed desert rocks.
Sources and Notes
- Wikipedia - Blue Dragon (accessed 2019-11-17). Most information presented here is from 3rd edition. ↑