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The '''Draconomicon''' can refer to one of three sourcebooks for [[Dungeons & Dragons]] which, as the title suggests, focus on examining the [[Dragon]]s of D&D. The first Draconomicon was printed for [[Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition]]. In [[Dungeons & Dragons 4th Edition]], the Draconomicon was revived as a series of [[splatbook]]s; two volumes were printed, focusing first on the [[Chromatic Dragon]]s and then on the [[Metallic Dragon]]s. It's possible that the [[Catastrophic Dragon]]s and [[Linnorm|Scourge Dragons]] may have had their own Draconomicon (either shared or one for each of them), but if it was planned, it was cancelled when Mearls took over as leader of D&D and slowly scrapped 4e to bring out [[Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition]]. As a result, Catastrophic Dragons are only detailed in the [[Monster Manual]] 3 and in a pair of articles in [[Dragon Magazine]] issues #424 and #425, whilst the Scourge Dragons have never seen the light of day.
 
==3e Draconomicon==
This version of the Draconomicon is broken up into 5 chapters and 2 appendixes. Like many 3e [[splatbook]]s, it's useful to both DMs and players.
 
Chapter 1 is '''All About Dragons''', and is an in-depth biology textbook-style examination of draconic physiology, their life cycle, psychology and society, both in general and focusing specifically on the [[Metallic Dragon]]s and [[Chromatic Dragon]]s. It includes an extended primer on the Draconic language and 3e religion writeups for the [[Dragon Gods]].
 
Chapter 2 is '''A DM's Guide to Dragons'''. This covers a variety of subtopics, including how to use dragons in your campaign, tips on running a dragon encounter, and a plethora of new mechanical goodies for dragon NPCs; feats, spells, magic items and [[Prestige Classes]], culminating in mechanics for Advanced Dragons. It contains the following PrCs:
* Bloodscaled Fury
* Disciple of Arshardalon
* Dispassionate Watcher of Chronepsis
* Dragon Ascendant
* Elemental Master
* Hidecarved Dragon
* Sacred Warder of [[Bahamut]]
* Unholy Ravager of [[Tiamat]]
 
Naturally, this means that Chapter 3 is '''The Player's Perspective'''; advice on battling dragons, new feats, new spells, new magic items. It includes the new [[Cleric Domains]] Domination, Dragon, Glory, Greed and Wealth, and an assortment of new [[Prestige Classes]], detailed below. The final segment examines the various ways of including dragons in an adventuring party, examining their advantages & disadvantages before discussing them as mounts, cohorts, special mounts and familiars before touching upon them as player characters. Surprisingly, this book does ''not'' contain rules for using dragon races-as-classes; that kind of awesomeness was relegated to [[Dragon Magazine]], with issue #320 having rules for [[Metallic Dragon]]s and being followed up by rules for [[Chromatic Dragon]] PCs in issue #332.
* Dracolyte
* Dragonkith
* Dragonrider
* Dragonslayer
* Dragonsong Lyrist
* Dragonstalker
* Hoardstealer
* Initiate of the Draconic Mysteries
* Platinum Knight
* Talon of Tiamat
 
Chapter 4 is the inevitable '''New Monsters''' chapter, featuring the following new beasts:
* Abyssal Drake
* [[Dracolich]] template
* Draconic Creature temlate
* [[Dragonkin]] monster/PC race
* [[Dragonnel]]
* Elemental Drake (Air, Earth, Fire, Ice, Magma, Ooze, Smoke, Water)
* [[Faerie Dragon]]
* [[Fang Dragon]]
* Spiked Felldrake
* [[Ghost|Ghostly Dragon]] template
* [[Golem]] (Dragonbone, Drakestone, Ironwyrm)
* [[Half-Dragon]] (Half-Dragons for [[Oriental Dragon]]s, [[Gem Dragon]]s, and the [[Planar Dragon]]s introduced here)
* Hoard Scarab
* Landwyrm (Desert, Forest, Hill, Jungle, Mountain, Plains, [[Swamp]], Tundra, [[Underdark]])
* [[Planar Dragon]]s (Battle, Chaos, Ethereal, Howling, Oceanus, Pyroclastic, Radiant, Rust, Styx, Tarterian)
* [[Shadow Dragon]]
* Skeletal Dragon template
* Squamous Spewer
* Storm Drake
* [[Vampire|Vampiric Dragon]] template
* [[Zombie|Zombie Dragon]]
 
Chapter 5 is '''Sample Dragons''', and has a fully fleshed out and statted up series of dragons, consisting of one dragon from each of the age categories for each of the [[Chromatic Dragon]] and [[Metallic Dragon]] species.
 
Appendix 1 is '''The Dragon's Hoard''', which consists of assorted mechanics and rules to make it both easier to generate a dragon's hoard and to create more variety in the hoard's contents, as well as using it to generate plot hooks or setting development. It ends, of course, with some sample hoards.
 
Appendix 2 is an '''Index of Dragons''', which is exactly what its name suggests; a list of every single  dragon-typed monster, both "true" and "lesser", as well as an identification of where it hails from, listing both official splatbooks and 3e edition-centric issues of [[Dragon Magazine]] at the time of printing.
 
==4e Draconomicons==
Unlike their 3e counterpart, the 4e Draconomicons were strictly DM-centric. They both had roughly the same sort of outline, with each divided into 4 chapters that were broken up into sub-topics, although their base content differed.
 
===Chromatic Draconomicon===
Chapter 1 is '''Dragon Lore''', and like its namesake in 3rd edition, it's essentially a biology textbook on dragons. It covers draconic origins within the [[World Axis]] cosmology, anatomy, psychology, sociology, language and religion, as well as taking an in-depth look the distinct sub-breeds of the book's focus dragon family. This means that whilst the basic points are repeated between the Chromatic and Metallic Draconomicons, the precise execution differs, since each family has distinctive psychological traits and an outlook on society, religion, etcetera. One thing that both share in particular is that the Religion sub-chapter doesn't convert the [[Dragon Gods]] to 4e; that kind of hyper-focused deity goes against 4e's design style. Instead, it examines their relationship with the gods of the [[Dawn War]] pantheon... although some of the old Dragon Gods do slip in as dragon-focused Exarches. This Draconomicon restores [[Aasterinian]], [[Astilabor]], [[Chronepsis]] and [[Falazure]].
 
Chapter 2 is '''A DM's Guide to Dragons'''. In this chapter, DMs are presented with guides to running combat and social encounters with dragons, a number of chromatic dragon-focused adventures, advice on using chromatic dragons as [[adventurer]] patrons, advice on designing a draconic hoard, a collection of chromatic dragon-related artifacts, several rituals created by dragons, the use of dragon body parts as ritual components, and a list of famous chromatic dragons from the [[Dragonlance]], [[Forgotten Realms]] and [[Greyhawk]] settings.
 
Artifacts featured in this book consist of:
* Illthuviel's Blackened Heart
* BLue Orb of Dragonkind
* Spear of Urrok the Brave
* Unconquered Standard of [[Arkhosia]]
 
Chapter 3 is '''Dragon Lairs''', and is exactly what it says on the tin; an assortment of chromatic dragon lairs fleshed out for use in your 4e campaign.
 
Finally, Chapter 4 is all about '''New Monsters''', broken in to several categories (detailed below), plus  the Draconic Creature and Dragonguard templates and a variety of Alternative Powers for Chromatic Dragons, including mechanics for Polychromatic Dragons (halfbreeds of two different Chromatic strains).
 
''Chromatic Dragons:''
* Brown Dragon
* Gray Dragon
* Purple Dragon
* Chromatic Wyrmlings (Black< Blue, Brown, Gray, Green, Purple, Red, White)
 
''[[Planar Dragon]]s:''
* [[The Abyss|Abyssal Dragons]] (Frostforged Wyrm, Deathmask Dragon)
* [[Astral Sea|Astral Dragons]] (Battle Dragon, Pact Dragon)
* [[Elemental Chaos|Elemental Dragons]] (Blazewyrm, Dragon Eel, Tempest Dragon, Pyroclastic Dragon)
* [[Feywild]] Dragons ([[Faerie Dragon]], Mirage Dragon, Wretch Dragon)
* [[Shadowfell]] Dragons (Blight Dragon, [[Shadow Dragon]])
 
''[[Undead]] Dragons:''
* [[Dracolich]] (Bone Mongrel, Stoneborn, Icewrought, Dreambreath)
* [[Wraith|Draconic Wraith]] (Wyrm Whisp, Soulgrinder]]
* [[Zombie|Draconic Zombie]] (Winged Putrescence, Rotclaw, Deathless Hunger, Rancid Tide)
* [[Skeleton|Skeletal Dragon]] (Razortalon, Bonespitter, Siegewyrm)
* [[Vampire|Vampiric Dragon]] (Thief of Life, Bloodwind)
 
''Other Creatures:''
* [[Abishai]] (Wrack, Storm, Inferno)
* Draconic Parasite (Hoard Scarab, Swarmtongue)
* [[Dragonborn]] (Sellsword,, Exemplar of Tiamat, Fire Adept, Bloodreaver, Warmaster, Annihilator)
* [[Dragonspawn]] (Greenspawn Sneak, Brownspawn Marauder, Bluespawn Stormlizard, Greenspawn Razorfiend, Grayspawn Fleshtearer, Purplespawn Nightmare, Redspawn Devastator)
* [[Drake]] (Ambush, Portal)
* [[Kobold]] (Hobbler, Wyrmwarped, Dragonkin)
* Living Breath
* Squamous Thing
 
''(Chromatic) Dragon Hall of Fame:''
* Ashardalon
* Cyan Bloodbane
* Dragotha
* Gulgol
* Nefermandias
* Rime
* Tiamat
* Zebukiel
 
===Metallic Draconomicon===
Chapter 1 is '''Dragon Lore''', and like its namesake in 3rd edition, it's essentially a biology textbook on dragons. It covers draconic origins within the [[World Axis]] cosmology, anatomy, psychology, sociology, language and religion, as well as taking an in-depth look the distinct sub-breeds of the book's focus dragon family. This means that whilst the basic points are repeated between the Chromatic and Metallic Draconomicons, the precise execution differs, since each family has distinctive psychological traits and an outlook on society, religion, etcetera. One thing that both share in particular is that the Religion sub-chapter doesn't convert the [[Dragon Gods]] to 4e; that kind of hyper-focused deity goes against 4e's design style. Instead, it examines their relationship with the gods of the [[Dawn War]] pantheon... although this one does have some new "Dragon Gods", which are dragon-focused Exarches; Athearsauriv, Edarmirrik, Thurkeavaeri, and Vivexkepsek
 
Chapter 2 is '''A DM's Guide to Dragons'''. In this chapter, DMs are presented with a guide to including metallic dragons in their world - including using them as patrons or in other roles, running combat and social encounters with metallic dragons, metallic-centric adventures and campaigns, metallic-founded organizations, and metallic-based artifacts.


The '''Draconomicon''' can refer to one of three sourcebooks for [[Dungeons & Dragons]] which, as the title suggests, focus on examining the [[Dragon]]s of D&D. The first Draconomicon was printed for [[Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition]]. In [[Dungeons & Dragons 4th Edition]], the Draconomicon was revived as a series of [[splatbook]]s; two volumes were printed, focusing first on the [[Chromatic Dragon]]s and then on the [[Metallic Dragon]]s. It's possible that the [[Catastrophic Dragon]]s and [[Linnorm|Scourge Dragons]] may have had their own Draconomicon (either shared or one for each of them), but if it was planned, it was cancelled when Mearls took over as leader of D&D and slowly scrapped 4e to bring out [[Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition]]. As a result, Catastrophic Dragons are only detailed in the [[Monster Manual]] 3 and in a pair of articles in [[Dragon Magazine]] issues #424 and #425, whilst the Scourge Dragons have never seen the light of day.
Organizations featured in this book consist of:
* The Blood of Barastiss
* The Guardians of the Gates
* The Grand Assemblage of the League of Eternal Discovery
* The Solemn Order of the Knights of Saint Vercesien the Gold
 
Artifacts featured in this book consist of:
* Blood of Io
* Seal of the Lawbringer
 
Chapter 3 is '''Dragon Lairs''', and is exactly what it says on the tin; an assortment of metallic dragon lairs fleshed out for use in your 4e campaign.
 
Finally, Chapter 4 is all about '''New Monsters''', broken in to several categories (detailed below), plus rules for changing dragons from Solo monsters to Elite monsters and assorted Alternative Powers for metallic dragons.
 
''Metallic Dragons:''
* Brass Dragon
* Bronze Dragon
* Cobalt Dragon
* Mercury
* Mithral
* Orium
* Steel
* Metallic Wyrmlings (Adamantine, Brass, Bronze, Cobalt, Copper, Gold, Iron, Mercury, Mithral, Orium, Silver, Steel)
 
''Hollow Dragons''
 
''Other Creatures:''
* [[Couatl]] (Rogue Serpent, Redeemer)
* [[Draconian]]s (Adamaaz, Aurak, Baaz, Bozak, Ferak, Kapak, Kobaaz, Sivak)
* [[Drake]] (Liondrake, Vulture Drake)
* Drakkensteed
* [[Kobold]] (Dragonkin, Wyrmguard)
 
''(Metallic) Dragon Hall of Fame:''
* Andraemos
* Bahamut (Platinum Dragon, Old Man with Canaries, Aspect of Bahamut, Kuyutha the Exarch)
* Jalanvaloss
* Niflung
* Silvara
* Valamaradace


[[Category: Dungeons & Dragons]] [[Category: Splatbooks]]
[[Category: Dungeons & Dragons]] [[Category: Splatbooks]]

Revision as of 04:46, 7 April 2019

The Draconomicon can refer to one of three sourcebooks for Dungeons & Dragons which, as the title suggests, focus on examining the Dragons of D&D. The first Draconomicon was printed for Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition. In Dungeons & Dragons 4th Edition, the Draconomicon was revived as a series of splatbooks; two volumes were printed, focusing first on the Chromatic Dragons and then on the Metallic Dragons. It's possible that the Catastrophic Dragons and Scourge Dragons may have had their own Draconomicon (either shared or one for each of them), but if it was planned, it was cancelled when Mearls took over as leader of D&D and slowly scrapped 4e to bring out Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition. As a result, Catastrophic Dragons are only detailed in the Monster Manual 3 and in a pair of articles in Dragon Magazine issues #424 and #425, whilst the Scourge Dragons have never seen the light of day.

3e Draconomicon

This version of the Draconomicon is broken up into 5 chapters and 2 appendixes. Like many 3e splatbooks, it's useful to both DMs and players.

Chapter 1 is All About Dragons, and is an in-depth biology textbook-style examination of draconic physiology, their life cycle, psychology and society, both in general and focusing specifically on the Metallic Dragons and Chromatic Dragons. It includes an extended primer on the Draconic language and 3e religion writeups for the Dragon Gods.

Chapter 2 is A DM's Guide to Dragons. This covers a variety of subtopics, including how to use dragons in your campaign, tips on running a dragon encounter, and a plethora of new mechanical goodies for dragon NPCs; feats, spells, magic items and Prestige Classes, culminating in mechanics for Advanced Dragons. It contains the following PrCs:

  • Bloodscaled Fury
  • Disciple of Arshardalon
  • Dispassionate Watcher of Chronepsis
  • Dragon Ascendant
  • Elemental Master
  • Hidecarved Dragon
  • Sacred Warder of Bahamut
  • Unholy Ravager of Tiamat

Naturally, this means that Chapter 3 is The Player's Perspective; advice on battling dragons, new feats, new spells, new magic items. It includes the new Cleric Domains Domination, Dragon, Glory, Greed and Wealth, and an assortment of new Prestige Classes, detailed below. The final segment examines the various ways of including dragons in an adventuring party, examining their advantages & disadvantages before discussing them as mounts, cohorts, special mounts and familiars before touching upon them as player characters. Surprisingly, this book does not contain rules for using dragon races-as-classes; that kind of awesomeness was relegated to Dragon Magazine, with issue #320 having rules for Metallic Dragons and being followed up by rules for Chromatic Dragon PCs in issue #332.

  • Dracolyte
  • Dragonkith
  • Dragonrider
  • Dragonslayer
  • Dragonsong Lyrist
  • Dragonstalker
  • Hoardstealer
  • Initiate of the Draconic Mysteries
  • Platinum Knight
  • Talon of Tiamat

Chapter 4 is the inevitable New Monsters chapter, featuring the following new beasts:

Chapter 5 is Sample Dragons, and has a fully fleshed out and statted up series of dragons, consisting of one dragon from each of the age categories for each of the Chromatic Dragon and Metallic Dragon species.

Appendix 1 is The Dragon's Hoard, which consists of assorted mechanics and rules to make it both easier to generate a dragon's hoard and to create more variety in the hoard's contents, as well as using it to generate plot hooks or setting development. It ends, of course, with some sample hoards.

Appendix 2 is an Index of Dragons, which is exactly what its name suggests; a list of every single dragon-typed monster, both "true" and "lesser", as well as an identification of where it hails from, listing both official splatbooks and 3e edition-centric issues of Dragon Magazine at the time of printing.

4e Draconomicons

Unlike their 3e counterpart, the 4e Draconomicons were strictly DM-centric. They both had roughly the same sort of outline, with each divided into 4 chapters that were broken up into sub-topics, although their base content differed.

Chromatic Draconomicon

Chapter 1 is Dragon Lore, and like its namesake in 3rd edition, it's essentially a biology textbook on dragons. It covers draconic origins within the World Axis cosmology, anatomy, psychology, sociology, language and religion, as well as taking an in-depth look the distinct sub-breeds of the book's focus dragon family. This means that whilst the basic points are repeated between the Chromatic and Metallic Draconomicons, the precise execution differs, since each family has distinctive psychological traits and an outlook on society, religion, etcetera. One thing that both share in particular is that the Religion sub-chapter doesn't convert the Dragon Gods to 4e; that kind of hyper-focused deity goes against 4e's design style. Instead, it examines their relationship with the gods of the Dawn War pantheon... although some of the old Dragon Gods do slip in as dragon-focused Exarches. This Draconomicon restores Aasterinian, Astilabor, Chronepsis and Falazure.

Chapter 2 is A DM's Guide to Dragons. In this chapter, DMs are presented with guides to running combat and social encounters with dragons, a number of chromatic dragon-focused adventures, advice on using chromatic dragons as adventurer patrons, advice on designing a draconic hoard, a collection of chromatic dragon-related artifacts, several rituals created by dragons, the use of dragon body parts as ritual components, and a list of famous chromatic dragons from the Dragonlance, Forgotten Realms and Greyhawk settings.

Artifacts featured in this book consist of:

  • Illthuviel's Blackened Heart
  • BLue Orb of Dragonkind
  • Spear of Urrok the Brave
  • Unconquered Standard of Arkhosia

Chapter 3 is Dragon Lairs, and is exactly what it says on the tin; an assortment of chromatic dragon lairs fleshed out for use in your 4e campaign.

Finally, Chapter 4 is all about New Monsters, broken in to several categories (detailed below), plus the Draconic Creature and Dragonguard templates and a variety of Alternative Powers for Chromatic Dragons, including mechanics for Polychromatic Dragons (halfbreeds of two different Chromatic strains).

Chromatic Dragons:

  • Brown Dragon
  • Gray Dragon
  • Purple Dragon
  • Chromatic Wyrmlings (Black< Blue, Brown, Gray, Green, Purple, Red, White)

Planar Dragons:

Undead Dragons:

Other Creatures:

  • Abishai (Wrack, Storm, Inferno)
  • Draconic Parasite (Hoard Scarab, Swarmtongue)
  • Dragonborn (Sellsword,, Exemplar of Tiamat, Fire Adept, Bloodreaver, Warmaster, Annihilator)
  • Dragonspawn (Greenspawn Sneak, Brownspawn Marauder, Bluespawn Stormlizard, Greenspawn Razorfiend, Grayspawn Fleshtearer, Purplespawn Nightmare, Redspawn Devastator)
  • Drake (Ambush, Portal)
  • Kobold (Hobbler, Wyrmwarped, Dragonkin)
  • Living Breath
  • Squamous Thing

(Chromatic) Dragon Hall of Fame:

  • Ashardalon
  • Cyan Bloodbane
  • Dragotha
  • Gulgol
  • Nefermandias
  • Rime
  • Tiamat
  • Zebukiel

Metallic Draconomicon

Chapter 1 is Dragon Lore, and like its namesake in 3rd edition, it's essentially a biology textbook on dragons. It covers draconic origins within the World Axis cosmology, anatomy, psychology, sociology, language and religion, as well as taking an in-depth look the distinct sub-breeds of the book's focus dragon family. This means that whilst the basic points are repeated between the Chromatic and Metallic Draconomicons, the precise execution differs, since each family has distinctive psychological traits and an outlook on society, religion, etcetera. One thing that both share in particular is that the Religion sub-chapter doesn't convert the Dragon Gods to 4e; that kind of hyper-focused deity goes against 4e's design style. Instead, it examines their relationship with the gods of the Dawn War pantheon... although this one does have some new "Dragon Gods", which are dragon-focused Exarches; Athearsauriv, Edarmirrik, Thurkeavaeri, and Vivexkepsek

Chapter 2 is A DM's Guide to Dragons. In this chapter, DMs are presented with a guide to including metallic dragons in their world - including using them as patrons or in other roles, running combat and social encounters with metallic dragons, metallic-centric adventures and campaigns, metallic-founded organizations, and metallic-based artifacts.

Organizations featured in this book consist of:

  • The Blood of Barastiss
  • The Guardians of the Gates
  • The Grand Assemblage of the League of Eternal Discovery
  • The Solemn Order of the Knights of Saint Vercesien the Gold

Artifacts featured in this book consist of:

  • Blood of Io
  • Seal of the Lawbringer

Chapter 3 is Dragon Lairs, and is exactly what it says on the tin; an assortment of metallic dragon lairs fleshed out for use in your 4e campaign.

Finally, Chapter 4 is all about New Monsters, broken in to several categories (detailed below), plus rules for changing dragons from Solo monsters to Elite monsters and assorted Alternative Powers for metallic dragons.

Metallic Dragons:

  • Brass Dragon
  • Bronze Dragon
  • Cobalt Dragon
  • Mercury
  • Mithral
  • Orium
  • Steel
  • Metallic Wyrmlings (Adamantine, Brass, Bronze, Cobalt, Copper, Gold, Iron, Mercury, Mithral, Orium, Silver, Steel)

Hollow Dragons

Other Creatures:

  • Couatl (Rogue Serpent, Redeemer)
  • Draconians (Adamaaz, Aurak, Baaz, Bozak, Ferak, Kapak, Kobaaz, Sivak)
  • Drake (Liondrake, Vulture Drake)
  • Drakkensteed
  • Kobold (Dragonkin, Wyrmguard)

(Metallic) Dragon Hall of Fame:

  • Andraemos
  • Bahamut (Platinum Dragon, Old Man with Canaries, Aspect of Bahamut, Kuyutha the Exarch)
  • Jalanvaloss
  • Niflung
  • Silvara
  • Valamaradace