Drahr'Hatir
The Dragon god of Creation
Hatir first helped make all things, and created all that exists and all that will exist. Their greatest challenge was piecing together where it should all go.
Their brother may have simplified things, but the two both decided to create the gods of magic to help them simplify their tasks. And after they did, and finalized the plans for the world, they took up mortl forms upon their work. Hatir created kingdoms prioritizing the preservation of life, and helping find purpose to those without it.
Divine Domains
Physical Description
Special abilities
While the twin dragons have several unique passive abilities as a consequence of their divinity, such as naturally stabalizing the world unconciously by existing, a few in particular stand out.
- Divine dragons can choose both a dragonlord champion, as well as lesser disciples that act as secondary counterparts to themselves. These 'disciples' do not gain the limit defying capabilities as a dragonlord, but gain the telepathic communion and the ability to channel some of their power. The only other dragon capable of this feat is the guardian dragon Kirenax.
- Divine dragons reincarnate after their death, their egg reappearing somewhere on the world. Said egg appears either within the former incarnations corpse, near a trusted place or person, or at a randomized spot within the world, depending on how the death occured.
- Divine dragons gain a kickstart in terms of knowledge and capabilities by copying the memories and attributes of a desceased individual. This allows the dragon to have nescessary skills and world knowledge early on, and provide the desceased a way for their desires to be acted on. This is not the same as the person being reborn, and the divine dragon will still be a dragon first and their mimiced self second.
- Divine dragons have the capability to channel etheric energy in a similar way to an Eikon, but with more pronounced effect. This is a major factor as to why so many gain kingdoms and run them so well. A large group of people can feed energy into a dragon, but unlike an Eikon, a divine dragon can passivly and unconciously feed that energy back towards the people. A kingdom linked to such a dragon will flourish when the dragon flourishes, and vice versa.
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