
Welcome to Dragon Cave! Dragon Cave is an online adoptables game. Collect eggs, raise them to adulthood, and then breed them to create interesting lineages. New dragons are added regularly!
Viewing Dragon: (7V1Q)

- Laid on:Sep 12, 2010
- Hatched on:Sep 16, 2010
- Grew up on:Sep 20, 2010
- Overall views: 1,678
- Unique views: 506
- Clicks:29
Hellfire Wyverns are so named for their foul tempers and fiery visages. Their social structure places all females above all males, due to superior physical characteristics and violent dispositions. Forced subservience of the males causes them to become vicious, petty, antisocial, and passive-aggressive compared to the aggressive and social females. However, orphaned hatchlings raised by foster parents of another species can develop surprisingly even tempers and mellow dispositions, proving that their defining unpleasant nature is, in fact, a learned behavior.
Dragons are highly-intelligent reptilian creatures that—from a human perspective, at least—appear to live forever. Many different varieties of dragon exist, each with their own unique qualities, habitats, and behavior. Adolescence in dragons is usually marked by the growth of a hatchling’s wings, although not all breeds of dragons grow wings and some breeds have other traits that indicate the beginning of maturation. In Galsreim, dragons and humans coexist peacefully.
User Description
Being a dragon where the females were far superior to the males of their species, she also had that mindset. All males were far below her and did not count for much, only to please her whims. Whatever those whims might be, many males went into her lair and some were never seen again. But she didn't care, they were only good for very few things. Some of the other dragons called her arrogant, but they weren't brave enough to face her wrath. She was the "Queen" so to speak and the leader of this pride of dragons and she knew that none would challenge her post. She rested her head on her front legs and wrapped her tail around her body as she watched over the others.
