Red dragon

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The red dragon, D, is a monster that appears in NetHack. It has a younger form in the baby red dragon, D. The red dragon has fire resistance both intrinsically and from its scales, and its breath weapon is a ray of fire that does 6d6 damage rather than the standard 4d6.

Ixoth is a unique red dragon that serves as the Knight quest nemesis.

Generation

Main article: Dragon#Generation

Players will not see baby red dragons through normal random monster creation outside of aligned branches and levels such as the Oracle and Sokoban, and they can also be hatched from dragon eggs. Adult red dragons start appearing around the midway depths of the dungeon; red dragons can be generated in throne rooms as early as dungeon level 15, and may appear when a throne at this depth or lower is looted.[1] Red dragons can be generated if a chaotic spellcaster casts the summon nasties monster spell.

In addition, a red dragon is guaranteed to appear on the Plane of Fire; like all dragons in the End Game, this one has much more HP than most.

Red dragons have a 13 of dropping a set of +0 uncursed red dragon scales along with their corpse (120 if the dragon was revived).

Strategy

See also Dragon#Strategy

Red dragons have the strongest breath weapon of all dragons, but fire resistance is not too difficult to obtain, and the red dragon can be dealt with like most of its kin. If you still lack fire resistance by the time you encounter one, eating its corpse is a good idea.

History

NetHack 2.3e introduces the red dragon along with all of the other modern dragon types and their breath weapons, except for silver. In versions before this, there was only one dragon with a fiery breath attack, and its corpse always provided fire resistance, making it an "ancestor" to the modern red dragon; in this version, the different-colored dragons would still leave behind a "standard" dragon corpse.

NetHack 3.0.0 introduces baby red dragons alongside the other baby dragons. This version also distinguishes all color dragons, their younger stages and their corpses, and introduces dragon scale mail.

NetHack 3.1.0 introduces red dragon scales along with the other colors, as well as the current method of obtaining dragon scale mail.

Variants

Variants of NetHack often subject dragons to extensive changes, including the red dragon.

Biodiversity patch

In the biodiversity patch, the red dragon is renamed to the firedrake. Ixoth is no longer a red dragon, but instead the white-colored Hwitwyrm, though his attacks and attributes remain the same.

SLASH'EM

Main article: Dragon (SLASH'EM)

As with all other dragons in SLASH'EM, baby red dragons have a base level of 4 instead of 12, and can be encountered via random generation in ordinary levels with a frequency of 2; they are also eligible for creation on many levels that generate random D on level creation. Adult red dragons have a base level of 18 instead of 15.

Baby red dragons hit as a +1 weapon, and adult red dragons hit as a +3 weapon. Tame adult red dragons have a chance of turning traitor.

UnNetHack

In UnNetHack, all dragons have their breaths, resistances, and colors randomized, allowing any non-chromatic dragon to appear as red.

Encyclopedia entry

In the West the dragon was the natural enemy of man. Although preferring to live in bleak and desolate regions, whenever it was seen among men it left in its wake a trail of destruction and disease. Yet any attempt to slay this beast was a perilous undertaking. For the dragon's assailant had to contend not only with clouds of sulphurous fumes pouring from its fire breathing nostrils, but also with the thrashings of its tail, the most deadly part of its serpent-like body.

[ Mythical Beasts by Deirdre Headon (The Leprechaun Library) ]


"One whom the dragons will speak with," he said, "that is a dragonlord, or at least that is the center of the matter. It's not a trick of mastering the dragons, as most people think. Dragons have no masters. The question is always the same, with a dragon: will he talk to you or will he eat you? If you can count upon his doing the former, and not doing the latter, why then you're a dragonlord."

[ The Tombs of Atuan, by Ursula K. Le Guin ]

References