Dragon, Death

Aberdeen Bestiary detail of a dragon.
Dragon Detail, Aberdeen Bestiary / Wikimedia Commons.
Armor Class
0 [19]
Hit Dice
11
Attacks
Bite (2d6+2)
Special
undead, freezing fog breath, claw paralysis, mummy rot
Move
12/24 (when flying)
HDE/XP
13/2,300

Description

A death dragon is a skeletal, lich-like dragon: an ancient dragon that has chosen undeath for reasons inscrutable to mortals.

In place of the breath weapon it had in life, a death dragon breathes freezing fog in a cloud roughly 100 feet long and 55 feet wide. A successful saving throw halves the damage; a failed saving throw also inflicts a rotting curse like mummy rot.

When a death dragon strikes with a claw rather than biting, the claw can paralyze as a ghoul’s touch, though elves gain no special immunity. A successful saving throw resists the paralysis.

Use the normal White Box dragon age rule for breath damage. A death dragon is usually treated as ancient unless the Referee wants a weaker specimen.

Dragons

All dragons have a breath weapon of some kind, which can be used up to three times in a day. The Referee chooses when a dragon will use the breath weapon or may roll for it (50% chance) in any given round.

Referees should not roll for a dragon’s hit points, like one would for other monsters. Instead, determine the age category of the dragon—this will give both the dragon’s hit points per hit dice and how many points of breath weapon damage per hit dice the dragon inflicts.

For example, an “Adult” dragon has both 4 hit points and 4 points of breath weapon damage per hit dice. So an “Adult” black dragon with 6 HD would have 24 HP and deal 24 points of acid damage when using its breath weapon.

Table 41: Dragon Age Category

Table 41: Dragon Age Category
RollAgeHit Points/Hit DiceDamage/Hit Dice
1Very Young11
2Young22
3Immature33
4Adult44
5Old55
6Very Old (100 years)66
7Aged (100–400)77
8Ancient (400+)88

Table 42: Dragon Breath Weapons

Table 42: Dragon Breath Weapons
Shape*Type
CloudGaseous
ConeFiery/Frosty
LineSpitting

* The dimensions of a dragon’s breath differ according to the dragon’s type.

Note that dragons, while dangerous opponents, are not by any means invincible. In a medieval-type fantasy world, dragons are a common problem rather than a godlike creature of legend—so the statistics for dragons reflect a deadly but not mythical foe. The Referee is, of course, free to create stats for a more “mythical” conception of dragons. Since dice aren’t rolled for dragon hit points, it is possible for a truly mythical dragon to have more “numbers” per die than it’s actually possible to roll on a hit dice.

See Also

Other creatures in the Dragon category: Dragon, Black, Dragon, Blue, Dragon, Cave, Dragon, Cloud, Dragon, Gold, Dragon, Green, Dragon, Plains (Yellow Dragon), Dragon, Red, Dragon, Sea (Gray Dragon), Dragon, White.

Source note: This creature is converted from The Basic Fantasy Field Guide of Creatures Malevolent and Benign – Omnibus Edition, 1st Edition Release 4, © 2010–2025 Chris Gonnerman, R. Kevin Smoot, James Lemon, Matt Sluis, and Contributors. The Basic Fantasy Field Guide textual material is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International; this page adapts that creature to White Box.