
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: Enva-Quoa

- Laid on:Dec 18, 2011
- Hatched on:Dec 21, 2011
- Grew up on:Dec 24, 2011
- Overall views: 2,293
- Unique views: 775
- Clicks:7
Split Dragons use their sharp teeth and wings to hunt large animals and rarely eat plants. They are intelligent dragons who enjoy mental challenges, preferably alone; Split Dragons are normally solitary except during mating season. When mating, many dragons come together in a group to raise their eggs and hatchlings. These groups tend to be very noisy—reminiscent of a thunderstorm—and last only until the hatchlings are capable of surviving on their own.
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.
Two-headed dragons are unique enough to deserve a separate classification from ordinary dragons. They have two necks, two brains, two mouths, but one stomach and one main body. The two heads usually work together, but there are times when they will fight each other, snapping back and forth. Their unique anatomy prevents them from breeding with single-headed dragons.
User Description
Enva-Quoa is Gemini Cave's unofficial matchmaker. She has a knack for knowing when two dragons are compatible and the subtlety required to bring them together without being too obvious about it (most of the time, at least). Despite her skill in pairing off others, Enva-Quoa remained mateless for years, and not for lack of looking. She never lost her sense of humor, though, and responded to any teasing on the matter with a lack and a joking comparison of her situation to the old proverb of white dragons making lousy patients. Now that she's finally found a mate, Enva-Quoa uses her own experiences as a lesson in the importance of patience and determination.
