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'''Chromatic Dragons''' are one of the many specific breeds of [[dragon]] native to [[Dungeons & Dragons]] and [[Pathfinder]]. They are one of the two most iconic family groupings of D&D dragons, alongside the [[Metallic Dragon]]s. Lesser D&D dragon families have include the [[Catastrophic Dragon]]s, [[Ferrous Dragon]]s, [[Gem Dragon]]s, [[Oriental Dragon]]s (or "Imperial Dragons", for [[Pathfinder]]) and [[Planar Dragon]]s.
'''Chromatic Dragons''' are one of the many specific breeds of [[dragon]] native to [[Dungeons & Dragons]] and [[Pathfinder]]. They are one of the two most iconic family groupings of D&D dragons, alongside the [[Metallic Dragon]]s. Lesser D&D dragon families have include the [[Catastrophic Dragon]]s, [[Ferrous Dragon]]s, [[Gem Dragon]]s, [[Oriental Dragon]]s (or "Imperial Dragons", for [[Pathfinder]]) [[Planar Dragon]]s, and [[Epic Dragon]]s.


In an expansion of the [[alignment]] mechanic, chromatics helped define what our frenemies on TVTropes calls "Color Coded For Your Convenience", where the general color-scheme of a dragon immediately helps you figure out what they are as a general rule.
In an expansion of the [[alignment]] mechanic, chromatics helped define what our frenemies on TVTropes calls "Color Coded For Your Convenience", where the general color-scheme of a dragon immediately helps you figure out what they are as a general rule.

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Chromatic Dragons are one of the many specific breeds of dragon native to Dungeons & Dragons and Pathfinder. They are one of the two most iconic family groupings of D&D dragons, alongside the Metallic Dragons. Lesser D&D dragon families have include the Catastrophic Dragons, Ferrous Dragons, Gem Dragons, Oriental Dragons (or "Imperial Dragons", for Pathfinder) Planar Dragons, and Epic Dragons.

In an expansion of the alignment mechanic, chromatics helped define what our frenemies on TVTropes calls "Color Coded For Your Convenience", where the general color-scheme of a dragon immediately helps you figure out what they are as a general rule.

Chromatic Dragons are always based on "plain" colors, and are usually portrayed as Evil aligned in various different ways depending on the precise breed. Their associated patron goddess is Tiamat, who materializes as a gargantuan she-dragon with five heads, corresponding to the five most iconic breeds of Chromatic Dragon.

Black Dragon

Black Dragons favor swampy lairs and are also known as "skull dragons" for their skeletal facial features. They tend to be described as particularly cruel and sadistic, even by dragon standards. They wield gouts of acid slime as a breath weapon.

Blue Dragon

Blue Dragons are iconic for their single enormous snout-tip horn, like a rhino's. Using powerful blasts of lightning breath to vaporize foes, they are traditionally considered denizens of the desert - which many fans find a little weird, given they are, y'know, bright freaking blue. 4th edition made them prefer coastal regions and other places where storms are common, instead. They are traditionally portrayed as amongst the most reasonable and least malevolent of the Chromatics; show them respect, and they'll usually leave you alone.

Green Dragon

Favoring forest environments, Green Dragons are characterized as manipulators and head-gamers par excellence. These dragons had it kind of rough in 3rd edition; with the change to poison rules in that edition, their traditional breath weapon, a gout of poisonous vapor, no longer worked, so they were forced to use corrosive fumes and do acid damage instead. They went back to poison after 3rd edition.

Red Dragon

The most iconic of all D&D dragons, Red Dragons are arrogant, greedy, hot-tempered, flame-spewing, malevolent brutes.

White Dragon

Smallest and weakest of their kind, White Dragons are feral and savage, notably inferior in intelligence to the other Chromatic breeds. Their icy breath weapon is nothing to sneeze at, though.

Brown Dragon

Introduced in the Forgotten Realms in AD&D, Brown Dragons are desert-dwelling burrowers who have changed markedly over the editions. Rising to prominence in 4e as part of the Chromatic Draconomicon, they were given back limited flight (traditionally not available to them) and were given the strange trait of being gourmet epicures; they love food and prize unique flavors and cooking skills. Brown Dragons use high-velocity gouts of sand to scour flesh from bone.

Gray Dragon

Gray Dragons didn't exist until 4th edition adapted them from the minor "outcast" dragons of Faerun known as Fang Dragons, giving them caustic, petrifying slime as a breath weapon, petrifying claw and bite attacks, and an obsession with hunting. Prior to that, the only claimant to the name "Gray Dragon" was a breed of linnorm.

Purple Dragon

Like Brown Dragons, Purple Dragons were adapted from a Forgotten Realms dragon of AD&D, the Deep Dragon. These slender, serpentine Chromatics are the primary draconic denizens of the Underdark, using their psychotropic venom breath and power to turn into insubstantial shadows to sate their wanderlust by roaming the ever-changing depths of the world.