Should you go see u201cShe Kills Monstersu201d by the Naples Players at the Sugden Community Theatre? Hell if I know. In all my decades of reviewing shows, Iu2019ve rarely felt as uncertain and as stymied by a play.echo adrotate_group(4); Did I like it? Yes. Did I dislike it? Yes. Would I recommend you go see it? That depends. If you […]
This was my entry for the #areyoubookenough challenge that happens on instagram. June’s theme was “hardware store” and I figured that I could do that :D Please note that this is a Long post with a lot of pictures. To skip this post on your dashboard, press “J”. I started out in the shed with some wood. This was going to be the main feature for the covers. I made some strips of pine for the cover base, and some oak strips (from my old press that broke) for the border. I then ran some pine board through the thicknesser until it was about 1mm thick. As you can see, this board was thin enough to be translucent and I spent a fair amount of time holding it up to the light and admiring the grain. Unfortunately I could only get 3 pieces out of the board. I needed four for the end pages, but I made do - more on that later. Speaking of the end pages, I chose brown kraft paper for the end pages (I was making a springback again). and the paper was joined in the middle with some grey bookcloth. I then glued the wood down on the inside - on the side that would be immediately in from the cover. This was the book guts after sewing and trimming. I was surprised the guillotine actually went through the wooden end pages without too much drama. I must admit that worried me. I rounded the book guts and trimmed the outermost page on either side to work as part of the hinge. Then glued on some thick cotton onto the spine between the tapes. The first lever board went on next and was trimmed to size. I first attempted to make some wire headbands, but that proved too much of a hassle, so I dyed some linen thread a nice brown colour and went that route. I just threaded the needles, tied off the ends and stuck them into the cloth covered core to begin. Then it was just a case of sewing the entire length as normal. Next up was the spine cover/hinge. That is posterboard backed with cloth. When attaching this part you need to make sure it has a 10mm gap on either side of the spine otherwise the lever board wont work properly. I tried using contact adhesive for gluing up the pieces for the spine this time. Worked fine. I then started building up the pattern I wanted on the spine. And I just kept adding to it until I was happy with how it looked. Then it was time to add the leather! This book got to use some of the gorgeous kangaroo leather I’ve had since my birthday last year. It is amazing to work with. I glued it on un-dyed. To colour it I diluted some brown dye and started to build up layers of colour where I wanted it, starting with a dappled base, and then painting in where I wanted darker. Since I didn’t want to waste too much leather on this, since anything under the wooden covers wouldn’t be seen. I just needed a leather covering on the edges. After a fair bit of wrangling, I got it to work. After a couple more coats of dye, I then got my line tools and crisped up the design with the hot tools. This is what it looked like with a buff using nothing but my hand. Next I went onto the wooden covers. I first needed to shape the oak strips into the right shape of the borders. And glued them onto the pine strips to make a board. I then went onto the heart design. Using some simple wood carving chisels, I shaped the MDF hearts. I wanted them to be leather covered, so I needed to dye some more leather. Luckily I had some kangaroo offcuts lying around. These are the covers all glued up. I then gave them a coat of spray varnish before staining it with the same leather dye I used for the leather and gave it a sand to make to look more aged. I glued on the covers and that was when disaster struck. I was in a rush to leave somewhere, so I just whacked it in the press and clamped it down. Little did I realise that the cover slid under the pressure and moved backwards. It was so bad the book didn’t even open properly. And that is why I always back my wooden boards with paper when glueing them to books. In the event that you need to rip it off, you can do so without ruining either the cover or the book. Granted it did require some careful brute force, but I was able to separate them without too much damage. I did have to remove the torn cardboard packer on the front cover and replace it though. I then reattached it with a little more care. Last thing to go on were the leather covered hearts. And there you have it! This was a real challenge for me this month but I’m really happy with how it turned out. Thanks so much for reading. If you would like to help support me in my bookbinding ways, please consider buying me a coffee through Ko-fi. It only costs $3 and all donations will end up going towards purchasing some tomoe river paper. The link is below. Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/BuildingBooks/ Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/buildingbooks/ Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/au/shop/BuildingBooks Help support me by Shouting me a Coffee: https://ko-fi.com/buildingbooks
Looking for help on your next Dungeons and Dragons quest? Want to make an extra-special experience for your TTRPG players? Need a good start for your heroes to stumble across a terrible secret? Well, stop rolling Perception checks you've found the right place! I'm working through every stat block in the Monster Manual and created easy-to-use form-fillable PDF bounty posters perfect for a King's goblin bounty, a missing person's flyer, a warning from a crazed recluse, or anything else you can think up to spur your players' imagination at the table. Easily tradeable online for your Roll20 game or print them as hand-outs at your table to create immersion and fond memories along the way. ............................................................. PRODUCT DETAILS: ............................................................. Package Contents: • 20x illustrated, print-quality, editable PDFs to write your own quests (or use the placeholder quests as is), to share/print for your in-person table or virtual tabletop game! • (Also Included) "White background" versions of each PDF for you to stain, rip, or burn yourself (for the DIY DMs out there). • (Bonus) a bounty board for you to post your fancy new bounties for your players to find. Monster List: • Acolyte, Animated Object, Assassin, Commoner, Cultist, Cult Fanatic, Doppleganger, Gargoyle, Guard, Homunculus, Kenku, Knight, Mage, Mephit, Noble, Rat Swarm, Spy, Scout, Thug, Veteran Shipping: • No shipping necessary, download away! ............................................................. YOU MAY ALSO LIKE: ............................................................. D&D Bounty Poster "Starter Pack" https://www.etsy.com/ca/listing/963551639 D&D Bounty Poster "Beasts and Insects" https://www.etsy.com/ca/listing/1027228459 ............................................................. THANK YOU ............................................................. Be sure to favorite my shop to stay informed about new listings and special offers. Check me out on Instagram @aaronmillardillustration to stay in the loop on deals, new content, and general shenanigans :) Thanks so much for visiting my shop!
This warrior for justice and fairness was born to put an end to Avaritia's greed. He's taken all of that monster's riches and redistributed them fairly amongst those who need it. This is just the beginning of his mission! Mr. Beast is here to stay. Not permanently breedable First released as a free Legends Pass reward (2020) Mr. Beast Challenge (2020) Mr. Beast Challenge (2021, 2021) Mini Maze Island (April 7, 2021) Name, design and skills are inspired by YouTuber MrBeast.
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by Wayne Reynolds In this article, I am going to do my best to run down what is known about one of the most legendary monsters in D&D history: Tiamat, the five-headed dragon. I have gone through many different Dungeons & Dragons products and can now present to you a fairly definitive look at one of the most popular villains in the game. I'm sure I've missed some stuff, but this should give you a solid foundation of knowledge to help run Tiamat effectively. First I'm going to go over a few miscellaneous things about Tiamat. Then I will run down details about Tiamat from each edition of Dungeons & Dragons. Tiamat Is Not Takhisis? Takhisis by Clyde Caldwell In the Dragonlance setting, there is a goddess named Takhisis who is very similar to Tiamat. Different products say different things about what the deal is with these two. Some suggest that they are the same being, others say that they are aspects of each other. Apparently, the Planescape supplement On Hallowed Ground presents them as completely separate entities. In Tiamat's Monster Mythology entry, there is a vague notation: In the 5e book Fizban's Treasury of Dragons, it is made official: Takhisis is Tiamat. Tiamat from the Dungeons & Dragons Animated Series Tiamat on the cartoon is this sort of other-villain, a force of nature that hates the heroes and their enemy Venger, alike. Tiamat is shown to have multiple lairs. She often dwells in this weird demiplane known as the Dragon's Graveyard, a place where magic items are more powerful. I am usually not one to advocate for Wizards of the Coast to use material from the cheesy 80's cartoon, but I'd love to see the dragon's graveyard worked in to official lore. It's much cooler than a lot of the stuff Tiamat is involved with in the D&D game. It feels "special", like it should. Tiamat Miniatures There's two Tiamat miniatures made for the game. The old one shows Tiamat on her feet, while the new one shows her flying in the air. They're both expensive, but very cool to own. AD&D 1st Edition In the 1e Monster Manual, Tiamat is listed under "Chromatic Dragon.". From what I understand, in the original D&D white box, Tiamat is called "The Chromatic Dragon". We learn that: She rules the first plane of the Nine Hells where she spawns all of evil dragonkind. Her heads can cast spells, use breath weapons, or bite. She can only use each breath weapon once per day. Each head can cast two spells. The blue head casts 4th level spells, the red head casts 5th level spells. If a head is cut off (it only takes 16 points of damage to do so) it grows back the next day. She has five consorts in her lair. If her body takes 48 points of damage, she is sent back to hell. Dragon Magazine #38 Tiamat has a few spells Lenard Lakofka strongly advises that Tiamat be made a deity. He offers a revised stat block, changing her AC from 0 to -3 (in old editions, a low AC is good). He submits that she is an arch devil and has a slew of at-will spells like Animate Dead and Teleportation. +2 or better weapon to hit her. Vorpal blades will not sever a head (!?) unless a natural 20 is rolled. He lists her consorts and says that they can cast spells and that Tiamat gets rid of them when they get old. How shallow! He further notes that protection from evil/devil just plain do not work in hell. I appreciate Lenard's zeal here. He is really trying to make sure Tiamat is a big deal. I also love the idea of a party of heroes fighting five dragons, one of each type, at the same time! Dragon Magazine #75 I've covered this legendary Ed Greenwood "Nine Hells" article previously, but for the sake of completion... Her lair in hell is known as "The Dragonspawn Pits". When she mates, it is in a protective ring formed by the other four. Hmm. She bears litters of 1-4 "mewlings" (I love Ed Greenwood). It says that most of her offspring are regular dragons, but any newborn spawn who are multi-headed are eaten by her! Tiamat loves finding new 1st to 5th level spells. Throne of Bloodstone This is a really insane adventure for impossibly-high level PCs: "For Character Levels 18-100". The heroes learn that they can destroy the Wand of Orcus by dipping it in the blood from Tiamat's heart and bringing it to Bahamut, god of good dragons. Bahamut himself teleports our heroes right to Tiamat's Den, and the heroes immediately battle Tiamat and her 5 consorts (one chromatic dragon of each color) in a combat arena. If the PCs fail and flee, Bahamut is not happy. He teleports them back to Tiamat's Den, still wounded, and battle the bad guys again. Of course, Tiamat and her 5 consorts are fully healed. AD&D 2nd Edition Monster Mythology I love this book. In fact, I love most of these blue DM reference books from 2e. This book talks a bit about Bahamut (the good guy dragon god) and Io, the supreme god of dragons. The flavor for Io is beyond Epic. "Io is the creator of all dragonkind, father of the Sleeping Deep Dragons whose spirits lie at the core of many worlds still, the whose blood, thoughts, and life force established the ground for creation and sustain it still" In 4th edition, they altered this a bit. Io was cut in half by a primordial, and the two halves became Bahamut and Tiamat. There is an epic destiny that allows a PC to unite Tiamat and Bahamut to re-form Io. It happened in my Scales of War campaign. This is Io about to be cut in half by a primordial Tiamat is a nasty lady: "...she enjoys such wretched pastimes as torture, bickering, and fighting among her consorts, as well as destroying valuables and treasures which her avatars bring to her.." Her avatars bring her treasure? I don't get that. Isn't an avatar just a projection of herself? Her stats are different: Her AC got bumped to a -12! Each of her heads can use their breath weapons three times per day Immune to all spells under 5th level The Blue head's breath weapon does 14d12+14! Can you imagine rolling 14 d12's at once? They'd roll all over the place. The author did a fantastic job of fitting tons of info into a single page Planescape - Fires of Dis I went over this ad nauseum here. Part of this adventure details Tiamat's lair in Hell, except that the author declares that the heroes have no chance of battling the dragons or obtaining the treasure, so it is not detailed! There's cursed treasure, a wisdom-draining lake, super-hot gold, and a door to Dispater's realm that you have to crawl through. Dragon Magazine 260 An-Ur This is pretty awesome. An article on children of Tiamat! An-Ur, The Wandering Death: He lives in the ethertal plane eating concentrated ethereal mist. He doesn't like fighting. He can summon ether cyclones that send you to some other plane. Eh. Dhrakoth the Corrupter: A black dragon with scarred, oozing, membranous wings. This creature is the pinnacle of undeath. It breathes "pure decay", doing 10d8 damage and corrupting living tissue reducing a character's Charisma by d4 points! Wow. He also has an energy-drain breath weapon that drains 2 levels in one shot. Because he feeds on life energy, anyone slain by Dhrakoth cannot be raised or even wished back to life! He can animate dead and commands a legion. Tiamat apparently created Dhrakoth by fusing his essence (he was a thing in the negative energy plane) with a dragon. While he works with Tiamat, his ultimate goal is to slay all living things. Mordukhavar Mordukhavar the Reaver: The spawn of Tiamat and a Pit Fiend (one of the Dark Eight, the generals of the Blood War). OK, that's just awesome. It has six attacks a round, all of them cause a save vs. poison. If you fail, you're in a coma for d4 rounds. Breath Weapon #1: Hellfire! It does 22d10 damage. Breath Weapon #2: Corrosive acid. 20d8 damage. If you fail your save, it may destroy your items! Mordukhavar serves Tiamat and travels Hell doing her bidding. He also commands a legion and aspires to become one of the Dark Eight. D&D 3rd Edition Deities and Demigods by Jeff Easley AC: 69! You need a +4 weapon to hit her. She has blindsight for 10 miles. Each breath recharges in d4 rounds. They even list her magic items. She's got a portable hole, an amulet of the planes, a cloak of displacement... all sorts of stuff. The Red Hand of Doom Azarr Kul by Howard Lyon This adventure is considered by many to be one of the best adventures of the modern era. It is set in the generic Elsir Vale, a place revisited in the 4th edition semi-sequel Scales of War adventure path. This adventure is about The Red Hand, a tribe of hobgoblins and monsters who worship Tiamat. One of their allies is a blue dragon named Tyrgaron. The heroes do all sorts of cool stuff in this adventure, like trying to recruit an elf army to battle The Red Hand. In the end, they must go to The Fane of Tiamat to take out the leader, Azarr Kul. I feel very conflicted about giving spoilers to the end of this adventure, so look away if there's any chance of you playing The Red Hand of Doom. You're ruining it for yourself.. Once Azarr Kul is slain, Tiamat tears the roof off and swallows his corpse. The heroes must battle an aspect of Tiamat. If has an AC of 25 and 174 hit points. Each head can breathe every d4 rounds (doing 12d8 each!). D&D 4th Edition Draconomicon: Chromatic Dragons On page 158, there is a truly epic Tiamat trap. All five heads breathe. It nearly killed my entire party. This trap is part of a mini-adventure called The Regnant Fane. The fane was created by none other than Azarr Kul before he was slain. Tiamat laid some eggs in here..! My heroes kept the eggs and raised the dragons as pets (this seems to happen a lot in my games). Tiamat gets a full entry starting on page 244. "A nightmarish synthesis of hatred, rage and draconic might embodied in the form of a five-headed dragon." She's the evil goddess of wealth. greed and envy. All evil dragons pay homage to her. She is rumored to have the ability to take the form of a dark-haired female mage. In 4e, she lives in the Astral Sea, on a floating island called Tytherion. It's a place of gloom and lightless terror. This is a clean break from Tiamat being trapped in Hell, and I'm not sure why they did this. What's weird is that in the 4e cosmology, Hell is in the Astral Sea. Her stats are crazy. She rolls initiative 5 times! One for each head. She can have all five heads breath at the same time, doing ongoing 25 acid/cold/fire/lightning/poison. There's a few sidebars detailing deity discorporation and suggestions on how to slay Tiamat for good. They still kept the Maggot Pit from Fires of Dis, though. Dungeon Magazine #172 - Legacy of Io Tiamat vs. Bahamut by William O'Connor This is one of my favorite adventures of all time. It is part of the Scales of War adventure path, which is about Tiamat's evil schemes from start to finish. Rather than list each adventure in the path, I'm just going to discuss the two most directly relevant to Tiamat herself. The plot of this adventure is that Tiamat has killed Bahamut. What our heroes don't know is that Bahamut had placed a portion of his essence in a deva named Amyria, an NPC who's been a part of our heroes for a very long time in the path. Amyria can be used to bring Bahamut back to life. To stop Tiamat's schemes and to resurrect Bahamut, the must find an artifact known as The Arrow of Fate, a spear made of Io's blood. Way back in the Dawn War, Io was cut in two by a primordial. The two halves became Bahamut and Tiamat. The little leftover blood became the Arrow of Fate. Dungeon #175 - Last Breath of the Dragon Queen This is a fantastic adventure, the culmination of the Scales of War adventure path. Our heroes go into Tiamat's lair and kill her! I highly recommend that you take this lair and stick it in hell, over top of the "Fires of Dis" version. Tiamat's lair is on Tytherion in an area known as Azharul. Her lair itself is known as the Caverns of Fiery Splendor. Bahamut gives our heroes canaries which can transform into gold dragon mounts to help them battle her. Tiamat is on this platform way up in the air, held aloft by a twisting column of lava. At the base, there's five statues. If the PCs try to fly up to her, the statues fire disintegrator beams which pretty much just instantly kill you. Each of these statues is linked to an ancient dragon lurking in the lair. Killing the five ancient dragons deactivates the statues. These five dragons are ancient brood mothers. This is another odd thing about the 4e Tiamat. It says that "For all her power, Tiamat is unique among dragonkind and cannot lay eggs herself." This not only contradicts lots of previous lore, it also contradicts the 4e Draconomicon. Red Dragon Brood Mother: Lurks on islands in a vast pool of magma. She's pregnant with dragon eggs! Green Dragon Brood Mother: She lurks in a a pool of water with many floating logs. She is attended two by a pair of dragonborn vampires. White Dragon Brood Mother: She lurks in ice and water. Her eggs aren't hatching, so she tried using necrotic energy on them. Black Dragon Brood Mother: She's in a forest of twisted trees. Blue Dragon Brood Mother: She is in a dusty room with mini-cyclones flying about. by Mike Schley The final fight with Tiamat is beyond epic. When I ran this in 2010, I had to adjust the brood mother stats, as the 4e monster math often erred on the side of too many hit points, not enough damage. But the Tiamat fight went perfectly. This battle was the culmination of 114 sessions of D&D. D&D 5th Edition The Rise of Tiamat The entire first storyline of 5th edition is about a cult trying to bring Tiamat out of Hell and into the world. So the whole "Tytherion" thing has been forgotten. The plot culminates in the final episode, where two armies wage war as the cult tries to bring Tiamat through a portal. The heroes may only have to shut the portal off as she comes through, or they may have to battle her for the fate of the Forgotten Realms. People online have complained that no party of 15th level PCs could kill her. I have no idea if this is true. I should find out in a few months when my party plays through this. She has a lot of hit points but her AC isn't too high. My level 8 party fighter can hit her right now, though he has to roll pretty high. She can cast Divine Word, which kills anyone with 20 hit points or less instantly! Her legendary actions involve her 5 heads and the breath weapons. She can breathe twice per round, more or less. I wish they'd given her a combined breath weapon attack. Baldur's Gate: Descent Into Avernus Once the group gets to Avernus, they may interact with Tiamat, depending on what their plan is. Tiamat's servant, Arkhan the Cruel, will most likely speak on her behalf. It is possible that ultimately, Tiamat will help the group free the chained city of Elturel. Tiamat's Stolen Treasure: A Dead Three cultist and a Duke of Baldur's Gate named Thalanna Vanthampur has possession of stolen money from the hoard of Tiamat (it was originally stolen by agents of Zariel, the archduke of Avernus). In the Baldur's Gate section of this adventure, the heroes can find the stolen treasure, which is contained in 4 chests, and more is found in another area. Here's the total hoard: 6,900 cp 1,750 sp 10 eye agates (10 gp each) 20 azurite gemstones (10 gp each). A delicate porcelain dragon mask (25 gp). Each spire is shaped and painted to resemble one of the five kinds of chromatic dragons. A bronze crown with five spires (250 gp) A broken ivory dagger called "Fang" worth 250 gp if repaired. 2 potions of fire breath 4 cultists of Tiamat have been sent to Baldur's Gate by Arkhan the Cruel to find the stolen treasure. Uldrak: An Empyrean who served Surtur. He tried to kill Tiamat, but failed, and was transformed into a spined devil (he needs some of Tiamat's blood to regain his former form). Krull by David Sladek Krull: A tortle death-priest of Tiamat. His shell is carved with runes that spell out prayers to Tiamat. He has 4 ghoul assistants. He can cast up to 7th-level spells, including anti-life shell, create undead, and regenerate. Arkhan the Cruel by David Sladek Arkhan the Cruel: A dragonborn who serves Tiamat and wields the Hand of Vecna. He lives in a tower on Avernus, and commands 50 skeletons, 30 zombies as well as 5 dragons: Obtala: An adult white dragon Slarkas: A young black dragon Vistalancer: A young blue dragon Vermilius: A young green dragon Flash: A red dragon wyrmling The Hand of Vecna is slowly decomposing Arkhan's body on one side. He needs to use the Hand to snuff the life out of good-aligned creatures to stave off this effect. Arkhan wears a vial of Tiamat's blood around his neck. One possibility in this adventure is that the group deposes Zariel with Tiamat's aid, and Arkhan takes her place as archduke. Torogar Steelfist: Arkhan's bodyguard, Torogar is a minotaur with gauntlets of flaming fury. Chango: Arkhan's minotaur companion. Monument to Tiamat: This locale protects a tunnel that leads to Tiamat's lair. "A colossal dragon’s skull leans against a mountainside, surrounded by bones the size of houses. Acrid smoke rises from the skull’s maw." A tunnel at the back of the skull leads to Tiamat's lair. Abishai of all colors nest in the caves behind the skull. Burney: Burney appears to be a barber working at the Wandering Emporium of Avernus, but she is actually an ancient copper dragon in disguise. She is a spy who serves Bahamut. She is keeping an eye on Tiamat and her followers. Fizban's Treasury of Dragons by Tyler Jacobson This book contains an ancient poem called the Elegy of the First World. It describes the origins of Tiamat and Bahamut. "...before the myriad worlds of the Material Plane came into being, before Oerth and Toril and Eberron and Krynn existed, the primordial dragons—Bahamut and Tiamat—worked together to create the Material Plane in the form of a single First World. All the worlds that now constitute the plane are, in the words of the poem, “seedling realities” formed when the First World was sundered in some unexplained catastrophe." Sardior: Bahamut and Tiamat also created the first dragon: Sardior, a ruby dragon. "Sardior then joined with Bahamut to craft the metallic dragons and with Tiamat to craft the chromatic dragons. Some dragons who have studied the poem believe that Sardior was destroyed and shattered along with the First World and that the Ruby Dragon’s splintered consciousness became the gem dragons on the new worlds of the Material Plane." Tiamat is known as "Tchazzar" in the Forgotten Realms. Tiamat is known as "Takhisis" in the Dragonlance Setting. Flail of Tiamat: A magic flail +3 that has five jagged heads shaped like the heads of five different chromatic dragons. The heads can breathe multicolored flames (you pick acid/cold/fire/lightning/poison) that do 14d6 damage. by Chris Rahn Tiamat is a God: "Bahamut and Tiamat, the primordial dragons and the purported creators of the First World, are the closest things to gods among dragonkind. Since they share the same fundamental connection to the Material Plane as their dragon offspring, Bahamut and Tiamat are ontologically distinct from the gods that hail from the Outer Planes. But for practical purposes, they are divine—worshiped by mortal creatures, able to grant cleric spells to their followers, and both ageless and immortal. Since the destruction of the First World, both primordial dragons now dwell in the Outer Planes—Bahamut on Mount Celestia and Tiamat in the Nine Hells." Aspect of Tiamat: We learn a bit about Tiamat's current predicament: "Since the destruction of the First World, she has dwelled in the Nine Hells—some say by choice. But others claim that she is imprisoned there to punish her for the evils she perpetrated when the gods sought to colonize the First World with their followers." She remains in the Nine Hells, but Tiamat can send her aspect to manifest in the Material Plane. Dragonborn of Tiamat: Also known as "Talons of Tiamat," these dragonborn struggle to free Tiamat from the Nine Hells. They often work with the Cult of the Dragon, and their breath weapon is shadowy fire (it does necrotic damage and frightens those hit by it. That's what we have so far! Thanks for reading.
I Am Dragon (trailer) is a Russian fantasy/drama film that came out in 2015 and yes I know it's technically a wyvern. When I showed clips of it to dragon furries, that's the first thing they said, in a tone of voice like I'd gotten their hopes up and then betrayed them.
Conqueror of the skies, Bahamut has known many names; the Dragon King, the Hallowed Father, the First Sire. Bahamut (バハムート, Bahamūto?), sometimes known by his epithet The Dragon King, is one of the most prominent summons in the Final Fantasy series. Bahamut has appeared in several installments, as well as his own game, Bahamut Lagoon. He also appeared as an enemy in Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars with the name of Bahamutt, in addition to being the namesake for the Sky Fortress Bahamu