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The Mystery of the Missing Adamantine Dragon (And How We Can Fix It)

The Mystery of the Missing Adamantine Dragon (And How We Can Fix It)
WizKids recently dropped a heavy hitter into the world of miniatures with the release of the Adult Adamantine Dragon from their Pathfinder Battles line, and honestly? The fine folks of
Wizkids sent me one of these glorious minis for me to talk about and add it to my collection. Head on over to their website, here, and grab any of their great dragon minis for your own collection. After taking a long look at this great mini, Itās got me wondering:
Why hasnāt D&D ever made an official Adamantine Dragon?
I mean, come on. Adamantine is the poster child for indestructible, badass fantasy metalāitās the stuff of legendary armor, unbeatable gates, and āgood luck ever breaking this chestā moments. Yet for all the metallic dragon types in D&D (gold, silver, bronze, brass, copperā¦), adamantine has never gotten its own scaly mascot.
Letās roll up our sleeves and speculate a littleāand then letās homebrew something awesome to fill the gap.
š§ Why No Adamantine Dragon in D&D?
A few possible reasons:
āļø Balance Issues
An adamantine dragon would have to be extremely toughāmaybe even unkillable if designed like the metal itself. That could pose huge challenges for game balance, especially if a party expected to ever actually defeat one.
š Lore Saturation
Early editions of D&D already had a sprawling mess of dragonsāchromatics, metallics, gem dragons, planar dragons, shadow dragons, faerie dragons⦠Thereās a point where adding āyet another flavorā might dilute the mystique.
šØ Thematic Fit
The existing metallic dragons tend to symbolize virtues or cosmic principlesāgold dragons championing wisdom, silver dragons nurturing heroism, etc. Adamantine doesnāt inherently carry a ānobleā ideal; itās pure physical dominance, which might muddy the lore themes Wizards of the Coast tried to maintain.
š¤Or maybe⦠they just havenāt gotten around to it yet. (Cāmon WotC, call me!)
š”ļø So Letās Fix It: Adamantine Armor for Dragons!
Even if D&D wonāt give us a fully-adamantine dragon, thereās no reason you canāt suit up your regular dragons with adamantine armor and create some truly legendary threats for your players.
Hereās a quick homebrew idea for Adamantine-Plated Dragons:
š Adamantine-Plated Dragon (Template)
Armor Up
A dragon clad in adamantine plates has the following enhancements:
-
Armor Class (AC) +3
Their natural defenses are boosted by layers of near-indestructible metal. -
Damage Immunity: Nonmagical Bludgeoning, Piercing, and Slashing
Only magic or adamantine weapons can even scratch them. -
Siege Monster
The dragon deals double damage to objects and structures. -
Reflective Shell (Recharge 5ā6)
Once per round, if hit by a magic missile, line, or spell that requires a ranged attack roll, the dragon can attempt a DC 18 Constitution saving throw. On a success, it reflects the attack back at the caster.
Weakness:
-
The adamantine armor is heavy. The dragonās fly speed is reduced by 20 feet, and its Dexterity saving throws suffer a ā2 penalty.
š² Adamantine Armor Variants
Want to spice it up even more?
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Spiked Adamantine Armor: Creatures that grapple or physically attack the dragon without reach take 2d8 piercing damage.
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Runed Adamantine Plates: The dragonās armor hums with ancient runes, granting resistance to force damage and counterspell once per long rest.
š° Story Hooks for Adamantine Dragons
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The Forge Awakens: The players discover a dwarven vault hiding the remains of a dragon outfitted in adamantine armorāonly itās waking up after a few centuries of hibernation.
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Bounty of the Unbreakable Beast: A kingdom offers riches beyond measure to any heroes brave enough to slay a rogue silver dragon thatās covered itself in stolen adamantine plates.
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The Armor is Cursed: The adamantine armor was crafted by ancient wizardsāand it slowly corrupts the dragon into an unstoppable, mindless engine of destruction.
š¬ Final Thoughts: Time to Shine, Dragons
The arrival of WizKidsā Adult Adamantine Dragon proves thereās a huge appetite (pun intended) for dragons that push the limits of traditional fantasy tropes. Even if D&D hasnāt officially given us an adamantine dragon yet, that doesnāt mean we canāt homebrew something unforgettable.
Because honestly? Your players deserve to face a dragon so tough that even the gods would think twice before picking a fight.
And hey, if WotC ever announces an official Adamantine Dragon be sure that I will be talking about it!
Thanks for reading. Until Next Time, Stay Nerdy!!