WYVERN Any village swineherd who has heard more than a single story about dragons is likely to come
WYVERN Any village swineherd who has heard more than a single story about dragons is likely to come away with some half-formed impression of their grandeur. There’s an argument to be made that this plays into the scheming of the dragons themselves - famously vain creatures that they are - but there is simply no denying that, by and large, drakes are a noble breed of great physical beauty. Chromatics: vast, snarling, scheming creatures, studded with scales of scarlet and topaz… Metallics: even larger in size but wise and meditative, sheathed in lustrous snakeskin like spun silver and gold… even the so-called lesser breeds, shoots that deviate from the stem of dragon-kind, usually retain some faded glimmer of their more magnificent cousins. Usually.There is, they say, no beast that will quicker dispel the illusion of dragons as creatures of nobility as the Wyvern. Like a gangly, embarrassing cousin they are rarely acknowledged by the “true” breeds, yet they are far more numerous, which speaks, perhaps, to their pigeon-like success at populating the world.Compared to the average Chromatic, the Wyvern is a stunted, bony parody of a dragon. Its body is barely larger than an elephant, its intelligence subhuman. Its scales range from mottled brown, through half-formed greens to pale, sandy yellows and whites, depending on its surroundings - the idea of camouflage is anathema to full-blooded dragons, but Wyverns will take their advantages wherever they can get them. Finally, and most markedly, Wyverns at some point deviated from their greater kin in the loss of their draconic forelimbs. This seems not to have affected them much, however, as they continue to scramble about deftly using their wings.-Wyverns are great! This was fun to draw. I hope you like it!Joe’s tumblr -- source link
#artist joe#monster manual#type dragon#neutral