Dragon Cave

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Dragon pixel art

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: Sometimes a Rhambutan

  • Laid on:Mar 24, 2016
  • Hatched on:Mar 28, 2016
  • Grew up on:Mar 31, 2016
  • Overall views: 4,724
  • Unique views: 728
  • Clicks:2

Canopy Dragons love to soar above the tropical jungles and other densely forested areas. Their billowing, layered wings create generous lift that allows them to ascend effortlessly over the warm jungle. While their unique wings do not make them the fastest flyers, they are champion gliders. To further this end, dexterity, maneuverability, and grace are all judged by the females when selecting their mates from the males that can accurately complete the exhausting and elaborate courtship dance between the close growing branches of the upper canopy.

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

Sometimes a Rhambutan always suspected that he was different from the other neotropicals: while he didn't mind bananas, he didn't think they were anything special. In fact, he has always preferred laichi fruit. It took until he was older and finally met another canopy dragon, but afterwards he was embarrassed that he ever mistook himself for a neotropical. He isn't obsessed with bananas. Some of the traveling dragons try and convince him that outside the Madder Jungle, there are neotropicals that are not obsessed with bananas, but he doesn't believe it.

Unsurprisingly, Sometimes a Rhambutan isn't obsessed with rhambutans either, considering them only a sometimes food. He is, however, quite over-excited by laichi fruit; although he often calls them 'rhambutans' and rhambutans 'laichi' by accident. He has a similar problem with several other word-pairs, such as 'fork' and 'spoon', 'artichoke' and 'asparagus', and 'cow' and 'wash-board'. He doesn't try to do it, it's unintentional.