Tuesday, April 14, 2015
How Many Dragons have You Actually Used in Your Campaigns?
The game that most of us cut our teeth on is named Dungeons & Dragons, but how many dragons have you actually encountered in game (dungeons is generally countless)?
Sure, back in my early days of gaming, when every dungeon map was filled like it belonged to the old Bard's Tale computer game, finding an ancient red dragon in a 10' x 10' room was nothing special. Heck, his neighbor was probably Asmodeus.
I don't think I've used a dragon in a game session in over 25 years - maybe 30.
How about you? How big a place do dragons old in your "Dungeons & Dragons?"
Labels:
gaming thoughts
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Tenkar's Tavern is supported by various affiliate programs, including Amazon, RPGNow,
and Humble Bundle as well as Patreon. Your patronage is appreciated and helps keep the
lights on and the taps flowing. Your Humble Bartender, Tenkar
Blogs of Inspiration & Erudition
-
-
Manifestation of the Yellow Stone Horror - A Mini Campaign Idea Using The Victorious Rpg & Wreched Eqoque Session Eight - Martian Capture - The PC's were captured by the Martians! The PC's got in over their heads after the alien Otyugh telepathically called in the Martians! They arrived withi...6 hours ago
-
Norkers & Thorkers - Norker (n). 1. One who norks. 2. A Fiend Folio monster I use a lot. (Warning - stats are AD&D, and I've made them different for GURPS.) One thing I love a...11 hours ago
-
Miskatonic Monday #390: The Forbidden Beat - Much like the Jonstown Compendium for RuneQuest: Roleplaying in Glorantha and The Companions of Arthur for material set in Greg Stafford’s masterpiece of...14 hours ago
-
Dungeons & Dragons White Box 15 - *Light: A spell to cast light in a circle 3” in diameter, not equal to full daylight. It lasts for a number of turns equal to 6 + the number of levels of...15 hours ago
-
Free GM Resource: HexLands Web App - [image: Free GM Resource: HexLands Web App] I haven't done a Free GM Resource in a while, and I almost missed this one (*despite several emails on the sub...19 hours ago
-
October '25 in Review - What a month! I'm honestly not entirely sure how I managed it all! Between all the various things the kid had going on, getting ready for Halloween, watchi...21 hours ago
-
Dolmenwood part1: Best OSR thing ever? - Im having a break from Patreon for a bit or charging for a while. Will be by updates on Ethyria book (another dungeon level and some...1 day ago
-
Giant Bat Monster - This is a 3d printed giant bat critter that I picked up somewhere, quite a while ago, and printed on my Mars Pro. It sat on my workbench unpainted for ...1 day ago
-
Mystery surge of blog visits in August 2025 - Over the course of this blog’s sixteen years of life, it typically has received in the range of 5,000 – 10,000 page visits per month. A handful of times ...1 day ago
-
Resources Recommendation for Greyhawk's and Dave Arneson's Blackmoor - Over in /r/osr/, user *acathiadm* asked a question about the Egg of Coot: I am doing a take on the Egg of Coot, in Blackmore, Northern Greyhawk. If you ...1 day ago
-
One for Sorrow - By Stone FableStone Fable LTD5eLevel Fucking 3 As you enter the town, you notice the hurried movement and averted eyes of the people passing you on the str...2 days ago
-
October Movie Challenge: 30 Days of Night (2007) and Dark Days (2010) - Here we are, the last day of the Horror Movie Challenge! I figure I'll work in some vampire movies. Special note: You lose something when watching movie...2 days ago
-
October Horror Challenge - The Rest... - As I said in my last part, despite not posting I've been taking part in the challenge. Here's what I watched since the last post with brief thoughts. I wat...2 days ago
-
Community Greyhawk – The Bright Wyvern - Today we take a look at Greyhawk’s Dungeons Volume 4: The Bright Wyvern by Davide Quatrini. This is a 4 page pdf, but that includes a public domain cover a...4 days ago
-
A Review of 'Medieval Welsh Lyrics' Translated by Joseph P. Clancy - I have no idea who recommended this book to me but thanks to whoever it was! ‘Medieval Welsh Lyrics’ has some of the most startling, vivid, awakening and s...5 days ago
-
On alignment, part II: religion and philosophy - *"The more laws and commands there are, The more thieves and robbers there will be." **- Tao Te Ching.* I was reading about the history of philosophy and h...5 days ago
-
OSR: Treasure Curves & Generation Procedures - Work continues on the Treasure Overhaul, and that means math. Part 1: Gem and Jewellery Generation The book will include treasure tables, so I've spent quit...1 week ago
-
Paladin Kits - Ranked and Reviewed! - First there was *The* *Complete Fighter's Handbook*. Then there was another one of it. It was called *The Complete Thief's Handbook.* Then there was anot...1 week ago
-
The Tax, the Tithe, and the Levy - The life of a Knight isn’t all myth-seeking and feast-eating. Sometimes you’re called in for proper work, namely taking stuff from vassals and bringing i...1 week ago
-
Ten Friggin Hill Cantons Wizards - 10 Wizards of the Hill Cantons # Name Description 1 Magister Dobromil the Cauterizer Specializes in magical “cleaning” of reality leaks. Wears fou...1 week ago
-
On Bounty, Questions worth asking. - Well? Will we? Available Now! https://sinlessrpg.com ------------------------------ *Hack & Slash* Follow, Twitch, Support, Donate to end Cancer (5 ...2 weeks ago
-
Rob Kuntz at Lucca Comics & Games 2025 - If you are planning a trip to Europe (like right now) and wish to catch up with me in person, make sure to book a detour via *Lucca Comics & Games*, ...2 weeks ago
-
ChatGPT seems to have opinions about the sort of games I want to play - I've been continuing my experimentation in using AI to code games/game aids by playing around with a character generator for the various threads of gamin...3 weeks ago
-
The Follow Me, And Die! Kickstarter Is Now Live! - Follow Me, And Die! The Card Game is now Live on Kickstarter! https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1587147156/follow-me-and-die-the-card-game3 weeks ago
-
What is the point of the OSR? - Over on Reddit, Kaliburnus asks What the point of the OSR is? He concludes his post with some questions. So, honest question, what is the point of OSR?...3 weeks ago
-
Tombs: Fantasy Made Mortal... - So Gregorius 21778 has released *The Tomb of Ferkhat the Dreaded* for Blood of Pangea, complete with an excursion into an Egyptian-inspired burial. We lo...3 weeks ago
-
Unboxing the 2025 D&D Starter Set - I grabbed the 2025 Dungeons & Dragons Starter Set at Barnes & Nobles on Friday. An 'undented' copy. Because it is a Starter Set and meant to assist he...5 weeks ago
-
Musings on the OSR Blogosphere and Forums - Link to discussion There are some posts on the historical OSR blog scene that I’ve read recently from the Grumpy … Continue reading →5 weeks ago
-
How do you do piracy… in SPACE!? - Interstellar space travel in Iridium Moons was always going to be a form of hyperspace jump like in Star Wars or Traveller. Simply because it’s the one for...1 month ago
-
The line has been crossed - I hope all you fuckers enjoyed your Blue Sky. It is coming. You reap what you sow.The right to free speech is a hill I will die upon.Slight update: Anyone...1 month ago
-
Zock Bock Radio return engagement - German AD&D superfan and podcast host Settembrini (who already had me on his show a couple-three years back) recently completed a two-year-long run thro...2 months ago
-
Tomb of the Blind and Deaf Dead - So the cat is out of the bag thanks to Tobias Schulte-Krumpen, who posted the above image to the Lamentations of the Flame Princess facebook group. I ...2 months ago
-
Eyes of Idola, Part 2 - This is Part 2. Here is Part 1. *Concept 1: Entering the Dungeon* Descending the stairs into B1, the party reach rooms that are dark, crowded, flooded, a...2 months ago
-
[BLOG] News on the March! Episode X. - This post continues the series of brief play reports I have been posting on Discord. This does not cover every single session (sometimes, recon and setup...2 months ago
-
The First Dungeon Crawl in History - Mapping a Lost Session Report, Part II - Today detailed reports from game sessions are common. Until recently, some of the oldest I knew of were to be found in Alarums & Excursions, but only ra...3 months ago
-
A long overdue hobby update! - Welcome back to the Vault everyone! 2025 is going by in a blur; I last posted in February, almost started a post in March and now it's the end of May. W...5 months ago
-
All Work and No D&D Makes Homer Something Something - I have a problem. I haven't played an RPG in about a year. Circumstances in my life are such that I have precious little free time. Now that I've written...5 months ago
-
Playing at the World 2E V2 Arrives - With the release of its second volume, the second edition of *Playing at the World *is finally complete. The two books combined total well over 1,000 ...5 months ago
-
Blogs on Tape season 6 has begun! - Hi everybody! Its been a minute. How are you? Everything is awful all the time? Horrors never cease? You’re being driven mad by the weight of the unfathoma...6 months ago
-
Lexicon of Klarkash-Ton, Hierophant of Atlantis: Lupanar - This time, we follow the good High Priest to the far future, to the final continent of Earth, Zothique, for a a tale of ennui and love: Morthylla. Witho...7 months ago
-
Articulations - Creating house rules, custom rules specific to a local group or campaign, has been common throughout the history of D&D. What makes an effective house rule...9 months ago
-
Writing playlists for all occasions - Hello again! Going off the idea of inspiration elaborated on by the prior post, I also have music playing while I write my various games and fiction pieces...10 months ago
-
The Tarot of Pips - Somewhere in your dice collection is a die like this one, the humblest of dice. Although you don't know it, this small white die carries with it a secr...10 months ago
-
Pirates and Necromancers, a Play Report - Over the Thanksgiving weekend we did a lot of gaming ranging from “off-table” domain level stuff to some solo adventures to spell and magic item rese...10 months ago
-
It's been a bit - Hey everyone, I hope you are doing well! I've had a lot going on and haven't had much time to blog lately. Heres a recap of gaming events and other st...1 year ago
-
*'s in SpaaaaaAaaaace - A lot of SF (including a certain 2D6 RPG grandaddy) deal with ancient aliens taking humans from Earth and dropping them, fleas and all, on one or more w...1 year ago
-
Last move - to self-hosting! - As my vote regarding Substack in the “marketplace of ideas”, I’m moving to self-hosting. I’m now at (and hopefully staying for a long time at) Blog: ht...1 year ago
-
Osamu Tezuka (1928 - 1989) - [image: Osamu Tezuka - Shonen Magazine Cover, 1970]Shonen Magazine Cover, 1970 [image: Osamu Tezuka - Shonen Magazine Cover Illustration 1970]Shonen Maga...3 years ago
-
Clean Your Room - Looking back at my little blog here. That last post… wow, I was having fun playing WOW Classic! That was August of 1999 and I was having a blast… it was ...3 years ago
-
-
Steve Jackson Interview - James Maliszewski recently did an interview with Steve Jackson over on his Grognardia blog. Steve chats about the beginnings of The Fantasy Trip and upcomi...5 years ago
-
The Hero’s Journey 2nd Edition, Campbellian roleplaying at its best! - (this review done using the reviewers own purchased copy) I have been a James Michael Spahn fan since he wrote his Swords & Wizardry Companion. His writing...5 years ago
-
ToAD Monster of the Week: Crocoman - Now that I'm back doing the blog thing I thought I would use Tome of Adventure Design to create monsters for The Black Hack. Using the monster tables in th...5 years ago
-
More Arden Vul Art - Another great piece from Del, this one's the Forum of Set: a place that the PCs may spend quite a bit of time within.5 years ago
-
OCHRE SAND - Init +0 Ranged Atk • fire burst +3 (1d14+1, 20') AC 17 HD 3d6 MV 60 Act 1d24 SP 'breath' weapon, sideslip, perfect silence, morphing Fort +5 Ref +8 Will...5 years ago
-
Strange, Dangerous, and Inhuman: The Fey and Fairie - When I was a boy I loved fairy tales. Jack and the Beanstalk, Puss in Boots, Rumpelstiltskin - I devoured all of it. My fascination that there was a strang...5 years ago
-
The Faithful - An Optional Archetype for Sharp Swords & Sinister Spells Revised Edition - Work on the revised edition of Sharp Swords & Sinister Spells is moving along. This will be a hefty tome, with a LOT of tools and new options to customiz...6 years ago
-
Dungeons & Dragonmead Fall Schedule - *As you know, I run public classic Dungeons & Dragons games at **The Loaded Die**/Metro Detroit Game Night's Board Game Nigh at **Dragonmead**, in Warren...6 years ago
-
Fiction in Airhde - On a whim this weekend, I picked up some fiction off the TLG store. *A Houseless God & Other Tales* and *The Mirrored Soul & Other Tales*, both by the T...6 years ago
-
-
Ravensburg Reboot: Streamlined City Map - I mentioned in my last post how I was tweaking and reworking parts of my Ravensburg setting. Today I streamlined the city map. The old map had lots of redu...6 years ago
-
The Withered Crag available now - I just enabled the sale of the PDF version of The Withered Crag at DriveThruRPG a few minutes ago, and the custom print version will be available startin...6 years ago
-
Annihilation Rising Goes live - The latest in Fail Squad Games’ Quick Kick projects has gone live and needs your support!! This project is only running 11 days and ends on 5/28/2019! ...6 years ago
-
James's Celebration of Life - We could not have asked for a prettier day for James's service. It was a bit chilly and windy but gorgeous. A heartfelt thank you to all that joined us tod...6 years ago
-
Trap Tuesday: A step back - I will get back to Tomb of Horrors soon. I found a topic that was interesting enough to take a break. While interacting in a 5E group on Facebook I talked ...6 years ago
-
Let's Talk About Pacing! - The idea, I think, is that the RPG is ultimately about the long game. Even rolling back to the early days of Basic & Expert, the goal of the player was...6 years ago
-
Profane and Profound Prep Part 2 - This is part 2 of my work to edit my magic items for a DMsGuild release, along with adding cursed items along the way. Here is part 1. Bone of a Saint 8000...6 years ago
-
MIDDLE DUNGEONS LEVEL FIVE 158 STAIRS. - 158 STAIRS. These stairs descend thirty feet to Area 79 on Level 6.6 years ago
-
Please, I don't do paid advertisements - don't ask. - A little note since people have asked me about this. My video channel's *not* an advertising platform, so I'm not available for hire if you want to promote...6 years ago
-
New website! - Slowly but surely, all the content here will make its way — in updated form! — to my new website: timbannock.com. For fairly obvious reasons, that site wil...6 years ago
-
Please Update Your Link! - If you're seeing this, it means your link to the Greyhawk Grognard blog is out of date. Please update your link to www.greyhawkgrognard.com (RSS feed is h...7 years ago
-
Total Sales for WB:FMAG - Hi Folks, It's been a long time since I provided an update for the sales of White Box: Fantastic Medieval Adventure Game. *LULU* Print: 396 PDF: 433 *OBS*...7 years ago
-
How can We Destroy this Campaign World? - d12 1. You must trick a bard into strumming the *Chords of Fate* on the *Lute of Annihilation* 2. Legends tell of thermonuclear weapons beneath megadunge...7 years ago
-
Mord Mar - Session 5 - We had another successful delve into the dungeon yesterday. The delvers: Moira, the Magic-User Radovan - Human Cleric (of Odin?) Khazgar Stonehand - Dwarf ...7 years ago
-
Yodeling For Yokels or The Further Misa(d&)dventures - This is the one of those posts that points out the lack of current posts. Over the last week or three, there has been postponed Labyrinth Lord (twice, one...7 years ago
-
Bundle of Fantasy Age - Bundle of Holding: Dragon Age/Fantasy Age: Available until March 12. PA Presents: Fantasy AGE Freeport live play Green Ronin in 2018 The Fantasy Age RPG ma...7 years ago
-
New Free PDF Module: The Hyqueous Vaults - A new dungeon module—written in celebration of OSRIC's 10th Birthday—by Rebecca Dettmann, Allan T. Grohe, Jr., Jimm Johnson, Matthew Riedel, Alex Zisch, a...7 years ago
-
Session XCIII: One Pissed Off Dragon! - Our ongoing Swords and Wizardry sandbox campaign... *Current Player Characters:* *Thenus* (Ranger) *Wang Du* (Monk) *Wolfheir* (Viking) *Arg* (Half-orc) ...8 years ago
-
Swords & Wizardry Light: Session # 6 - Two months after our last session (thanks to things like 8th grade finals, a 4 year-old's birthday and party, Father's Day, etc.), we finally had our next ...8 years ago
Never used one as a DM and never met one as a player. I should probably do something about that.
ReplyDeleteAs I said on G+
ReplyDeleteIn my published adventures: Once (Assault on the Southern Horn) A youngling dragon who has joined the cult of the horn and has been made an overseer.
In my home campaigns: I tend to use my version of Drakes which are identical to dragons but have the intelligence of a wolf or dog. Dragons are rumored and one NPC is actually a red dragon disguised as the General Inquisitor of the largest kingdom's state religion. The players have actually done work for her and our Wizard (who tends to dress like the 10th Doctor) is suspicious of her.
I've been playing or running games since 1989 and only used one dragon in that time. It was a white dragon in book 2 of the Reign of Winter AP for Pathfinder.
ReplyDeleteOften enough that I don't know the number.
ReplyDeleteFour times and they always bring the pain.
ReplyDeleteVery *very* rare. I do have one coming up i my current B/X game... and hinted at so the players know they can press on and face it with a potential TPK, or pull back and avoid it. It's a white dragon, and I have nine players(!!!!) at the table, so they might be able to handle it.
ReplyDeleteMost are new to old school D&D. I've told them that if they survive this dungeon (it's a Dyson Logos map with a custom module), we'll have the option of switching to 1st edition or an OSR clone with higher levels and run through a campaign. With my typical 75% XP inheritance for replacing dead characters. One idea I am having as I think about this post is to run them up through all the classic dragon types as they advance in levels.
Never used one as a GM (though I've rarely GMed more than a session or two until recently).
ReplyDeleteBut as a player we've met them twice, both under 3.5 rules:
The first time we fought a red dragon. We almost killed the thing at the expense of the entire party. My character (a kobold sorcerer ironically) was the last member standing and even got in a blow that killed the thing. Unfortunately the dragon had some sort of magic jar ability and switched bodies at the last moment, so TPK.
The second dragon was run with the same group using different characters and is detailed here:
http://www.protozoic.com/2005/10/05/goblins-1-dragons-0/
Since 1978 I have run my world and the Player Characters ran into one dragon, and that was up in Thunder Valley must south of the City of Stone. The Dragon was basically a gigantic iguana, and they wanted to steal one of its eggs from it's nest. That was it. No other dragons appeared in my campaign since then. In addition, I've encountered a dragon in anyone else world to date either.
ReplyDeleteZero
ReplyDeleteI put a green dragon in a tournament scenario I wrote for a convention in 1989. I don't ever recall using a dragon in my regular campaigns.
ReplyDeleteIn my early days I used them from time to time. Frequency Appearing, Very Rare :) But they did show up. Oddly enough blue dragons never showed up, and I really like them.
ReplyDeleteWhen I got back into OSR gaming I noticed the lack of dragons in games based on "Dungeons & Dragons" and decided to do something about it. So now when I build a sandbox there is usually a dragon lurking somewhere in it. Last campaign I ran it was a large black dragon and the players stumbled into it twice while far too low of level to fight it. Fortunately it was about its own business both times and not hunting, so it was content to let them run.
They came up in the G1-3 series, whenever I ran that (which was often).
ReplyDeleteIn my gaming since then, we only had one dragon turn up. It took forever for the PCs to stumble across it, but it is one of a bunch. Even on the current side quest they are on, I made sure to put a dragon in.
I'm absolutely putting dragons in the way of the PCs over and over. Not as front-and-center as Skyrim, but not rare, either.
I try my damndest NOT to run a campaign that hasn't got at least one dragon in it. I feel that it is part and parcel of running / playing D&D and I wouldn't be doing right by the players fi I didn't trow a dragon at them every so often.
ReplyDeleteThat said, the first dragon to show up in my second-last 3.5 campaign was CR26 when the party was level 12. But they got to fight a slightly less scary dragon afterwards.
In our current 5e campaign the characters smartly decided not to engage with the green dragon they saw (but never met).
In the last campaign, the players fought 1 dragon... In games I run, a rarely use "young" dragons as I believe they should be awe inspiring and fear inducing. Killing a young dragon just seems less epic.
ReplyDeleteI did have them fight several dragon-men (a stronger version of dragonborn / draconian mash up) which were pretty serious boss fights in themselves.
One. Years ago. An immature white dragon. The hero had armor made of its scales.
ReplyDelete(That said, I do use these frequently - http://mojobob.com/roleplay/add2cmm/drakmyst.html - especially the mandrake.)
ReplyDeleteTwice, the first one was taken out by a vorpal sword, which was the last time I'll ever out one of those in a treasure hoard. The second was a companion to a recurring villIan who liked to do fly by attacks, casting spells while the green dragon breathed on the party. That combo was well respected, albeit not particularly well liked, by the players.
ReplyDeleteTwice, the first one was taken out by a vorpal sword, which was the last time I'll ever out one of those in a treasure hoard. The second was a companion to a recurring villIan who liked to do fly by attacks, casting spells while the green dragon breathed on the party. That combo was well respected, albeit not particularly well liked, by the players.
ReplyDeleteFairly frequently. Dragons from the earliest days of AD&D have had age classes making them relatively appropriate foes for even low level (though maybe not starting) characters. I did go through my phase of Ancient Red Dragons in small rooms with Asmodeus next door, but even when I started to try having dungeon ecology that made some sense, there were lots of ways to have dragons in the area or nearby.
ReplyDeleteEven when I haven't used a dragon in an actual encounter, there have been encounters rife with dragonsign. I once had someone the party was looking for, found dead just inside a tower, frozen solid, the door knocked in and gouged with large claws. The party knew he'd been the victim of a nearby white dragon and took appropriate precautions henceforth while exploring the tower and dungeon. There was no dragon, but it sure made them careful, which was the effect I was aiming for. 3:-)>
I like to use undead, golems, giants, evil humanoids, monsters from Greek mythology, slimes, and giant animals (in roughly that order of preference). Dragons just don't interest me, I guess.
ReplyDeleteAs a DM: never. As a player, I've encountered two, with only one being a combat encounter.
ReplyDeleteIn my case rather than worrying about how many dragons I run, I'd rather deal with how I run the dragon. For instance, I have a Greek alchemist name of Aeros Aristophanes, who is in truth a storm dragon living on AErth because Phaeree gives him the willies. Even as a dragon he steps lightly, for he doesn't like destruction and chaos. He enjoys storms, being a storm dragon after all, but he doesn't like anything did messes with the order of things.
ReplyDeleteI've used them plenty. Younger dragons turning up far more often than gigantic city killers. Nothing says badass NPC like a dragon on watch duty or used as a steed. I don't know why DMs avoid them, maybe a bunch of cheapskates who don't want the PCs making off with a dragon's hoard.
ReplyDeleteAlmost no dungeons in the usual sense as well.
ReplyDeleteWow. I guess it's been about twenty years or so. It was a Red in Basic D&D.
ReplyDeleteNever used a dragon as a GM (not sure why), but I've met plenty as a player.
ReplyDelete-Ed
Always a distinct lack of dragons in the games I played growing up. Decided to remedy that in my latest C&C campaign. Just had the party encounter a twin young white dragons trying to move in and establish tribute in the local area. The party was about second level. Encountered them twice. Now have rumors of a green dragon in the swamps.
ReplyDeleteLots of Dragons in my last campaign: the players defeated a Green Dragon on The Isle of Dread, then later a Red Dragon, then rescued a Gold Dragon who became their friend and offered one of them a lift, then faced some Githyanki who rode Red Dragons as steeds.
ReplyDeleteAll the time these days. I think in the 1990s I probably had maybe 5-6 dragons in ten years show up in total, and none from 2000-2005. Then in 2006 I realized I had used dragons so infrequently that there was a wealth of storytelling potential I had built up. I ran a one year campaign that was all dragons practically, about my own setting's take on Bahamut and Tiamat. Then used dragons periodically ever since. Currently my latest game has had no less than three dragon encounters in about fifteen sessions.
ReplyDeleteI think I've used them once or twice. Been so long I can not remember the particulars.
ReplyDeleteDragons are actually pretty central to my campaign world which has been running for 12 years off and on and the players have encountered three maybe four dragons directly, dealt with the aftermath of an inter house assassination of a dragon and heard lots of rumors and occasionally seen dragons winging here or there, Because dragons are so central to the world, no one has yet been brave enough to try taking one on, fearing the consequences. Though I am sure it will happen someday.
ReplyDeleteAt least once per campaign; we even had a 3.x game at one point where the whole premise was "we're dragonslayers and we are out to hunt dragons to extinction," in which I think we killed four adult-or-older dragons and a bunch of their halfdragon spawn over the course of most of a year of weekly play.
ReplyDeleteI use dragons very very rarely. The last one I genuinely remember using was the Black Dragon in one of the early 3e modules (Forge of Fury maybe?) It killed 2/3 of the party before being defeated. Most of my dragon deployments have had similar results.
ReplyDeleteHad an entire castle full of Dragons and Dragon riders. Party sneaked into basement where there were seven sleeping including two very large red ones and decided to sneak right out again. Use dragons fairly frequently, but not until the characters are fifth level and usually one at a time. Gold and Silver dragons often showed up disguised as humans when I needed a tough NPC.,
ReplyDelete