Some of the smallest draconic creatures in the multiverse, kobolds display their draconic ancestry in the glint of their scales and in their roars. Legends tell of the first kobolds emerging from the Underdark near the lairs of the earliest dragons. In some lands, kobolds serve chromatic or metallic dragons—even worshiping them as divine beings. In other places, kobolds know too well how dangerous those dragons can be and help others defend against draconic destruction. Whatever their relationship to dragons, kobold scales tend to be rust colored, although the occasional kobold sports a scale color more akin to that of a chromatic or a metallic dragon. A kobold’s cry can express a range of emotion: anger, resolve, elation, fear, and more. Regardless of the emotion expressed, their cry resonates with draconic power. —D&D Beyond Yet another diminutive race for you to choose from. Although, this one is pretty unique. Just a cool Draconic race to play. Kind of like a tiny Dragonborn. This drawing came out very well. Captures all of the strength and musculature of this tiny but powerful creature. Six in-progress pictures below. |
Why you should practice drawing Kobolds: All together now: Anthropomorphic beast men! But even more so, Reptilian beast men. From dragons, dragonborn, lizardmen, troglodytes, yuan-ti, bullywugs, and kuo toa, to name a few, D&D has no shortage of humanoid reptilians. Sci-fi and super hero genres are also populated with tons of lizard and amphibian men. You can never go wrong knowing how to draw an anthropomorphic reptile.
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April 2024
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