hi im draconithere im a dragon and you can come back tomorrow for another obvious observation. it/he (heavy on the it) (if you only ever he/him me i will take your he/him privileges away). come up with names to use for me! i prefer it to picking my own name :-)
made this blog to talk about being a dragon because ive been repeatedly denying and re-realising it for like 3 - 4 years and maybe this'll keep me from doing that. im not a mythical dragon with anything special going on that a goat couldn't do if it was really evolutionarily determined to do it, im just an animal of type flying and big. specific terms im just a dragon :shrug:. dragon therian is best but i just call myself a dragon because ive had experiences in the past with the word 'therian' or 'kin' being leveraged to put some distance between the individual and what they are and i don't fw that. calling myself dragonkin would feel weird because im just a dragon, end-of. i do experience some level of delusional thinking (though not really complete delusions) related to my draconity. if you're an asshole about people who experience any form of altered reality i will kill you with a big rock
"are you mental or spiritual or physical" idk idc leave me alone
we r a system. pro endo idc about syscourse or any discourse for that matter. fuck off and stop trying to tell people what can or can't be happening in their head. it's not entirely one individual who uses this blog though, many of us share this identity. if they feel that the post is specific to their individual experience with our draconity they'll tag it as such.
i'm TRANSGENDER and INTERSEX and AROMANTIC and will hit you with my beams if you let me. Come closer i promise i don't have aromantic rabies :)
you can always always dm even if we've never talked before. if you want to talk but don't know what to say just send me an image. any of them. send me asks reblog my shit comment on it i love interactions. interests include umm those evil games i hate (military fps) (genuinely can't be normal while talking about them though because one of our cohosts is fictkin from like so many of them) (sorry), paleontology (megaraptora enjoyers rise up), planes, fiction writing, a lot of other things idk this is scary you gotta ask for specifics
specific biology under the cut because i like talking about it but it's really long so. woe. information be upon ye
hi i can't believe you clicked the big blue button ur so cool.
my species (or more likely, genera) are four-limbed with a wyvernous body plan. body size is roughly ~17ft length with a ~40ft wingspan and a shoulder height when standing on the ground of ~5ft. the greatest majority of that length is not in massive / heavy areas; our torsos are only 5ish feet long and the rest of that length is tail and neck, plus a 2ish foot skull. most of our weight is muscular; we have extensively pneumatised bones as well as an efficient avian-style respiratory system. fun fact, feeling like i can never take a full enough breath is a source of mild dysphoria for me.
we have extremely extensive flight musculature, as one would expect when you're lugging around wings that total 20ft each. we have five digits on each limb. our metacarpals are quite broad and reinforced, and arranged in such a way that the fourth digit is somewhat stacked on top of the third digit. the first three digits are terrestrial locomotive talons, the claws of which are heavily hooked and powerful to support cliff latching. the final two digits act as wing supports; the fourth digit supports the final part of the leading edge and the fifth digit helps distribute the weight and improve maneuverability. a segment of membrane connects the first digit to the humerus, creating a large section of leading edge across the gap left by the bend of the elbow. the wing membranes terminate partway down the body of the tail. over half of the length of the wings is in the digits rather than the humerus and ulna/radius.
the hindlimbs are arranged in a similar configuration to the forelimbs; three wicked grasping talons used in prey pins and two flight surface supports. here, the flight digits are significantly stiffer and less elongated. i sometimes refer to these rear flight control surfaces as 'canards'. they help to regulate stability, pull brakes, and make microcorrections. in flight, these are arranged under part of the trailing edge of the wing where the membrane comes in towards its point of termination. there's a lot of hindlimb-first action during landing and hunting, so the hindtalons end up taking the brunt of a lot of impacts.
the tail is, akin to the hindlimbs, largely used for stability and course correction. it is proximally relatively stiff and gets progressively more flexible in the distal regions. it's lined in a flat, flexible membrane supported by multiple small ray bones that assist in maneuvering.
our bodies are lined with electrically charged organs we'll refer to as charge points. these charge points are identifiable as circular spots in the center of a patch of raised flesh. they line the sides of the neck and the dorsal sides of the wings. there are multiple smaller charge points lining the horns, as well. the horns themselves largely act as pressure detection organs, used to sense oncoming storm fronts. partway up the length of the horn (size and placement being individual-dependent) is an abrupt upwards hook. the rest of the body of the horn is relatively flat and straight, depending on the individual. the 'main' body of the horn is not covered in a keratinous sheath; only the hooks are. these feature heavily in specific competition and display. they are additionally extremely effective at accumulating charge.
the charge points are used, as one may guess, in electrogenesis. the exact mechanics of this are beyond me idk im not a chemist. i do know that supplemental ambient charge plays a large role in our use of electricity; we get our actual charge through our environment rather than directly generating it ourselves (which is a not-small part of our draw towards thunderstorms), we only conduct and amplify that charge. discharge occurs through specific heavily insulated channels that greatly include the wings, with discharge displays occurring on both their ventrals and dorsals. there are also discharge glands within the mouth behind the canines and on the undersides of the rear talons, where brief electrical discharge is used to stun and/or minorly paralyse prey. the electricity is not ranged and cannot travel long distances. it's more a display and assistive weapon than a primary weapon.
because of our electrogenesis, we require a very high mineral intake, seemingly as a result of high presence of conductive metals within our charge points and/or discharge channels. rock gnawing and the swallowing of stones then becomes a relatively common behavior, and our highly acidic gut biomes break the minerals down. stone collecting is therefore a common behavior, and a robust personal collection is seen as a sign of vitality. along that train of thought, we do experience some level of hoarding behaviors but it is highly specific. rather than collecting just anything that catches our eye, it's typically specifically trophies. ritual collection of prey remains such as bones, horns, feathers, etc, happens often and is a part of social signaling.
we're carnivorous aerial ambush predators who largely hunt through gravity-assisted talon-first dives. we have extremely sensitive eyesight to compensate for this, assisted by thermosensory pit organs lining both the upper and lower sides of our snouts. our senses of smell are relatively limited and don't come into play much at all. we hear in very high definition but not from large distances. much of our hearing is dedicated to sensing when we're being approached rather than as a prey detector. you may see me refer to (part of) my snout as a 'beak'; this is not exactly accurate, given we do have dentition, but our snouts end in hard, pointy keratinous bits, so 'beak' is a quick way to communicate that. our heads are slender and our jaws are not particularly robust; our dentition is built for slicing and tearing off meat from prey and carcasses pinned by our claws.
other physical traits include protective facial spikes under the eyes and at the backs of the jaws, flexible external ears (these spend a lot of time tucked in flight, but are often moving around a lot when perched), display frills behind the ears following the jaw, a sail of varying height and shape starting at the head and following the spine, and a fleshy 'fan' / loose crest along the throat. behavioral quirks include that active time of day varies between populations and seasons, we are flocking but not entirely gregarious (it's more of a toleration thing than a true pack mentality), and we are highly competitive amongst ourselves. we spend a lot of time at high altitudes and are mostly cliffside soarers capable of brief bursts of high speed.
no, i'm not actually monochrome grey, but i don't retain a lot of color/pattern information in my head, so it's hard to say what i actually look like. probably something sandy-toned because i remember spending a lot of time on desert cliffs.
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We call ourselves the Freemen or the Freesystem. We're a sidesystem consisting entirely of Gordon Freeman introjects. Collectively, we use he/they pronouns and go by Gordon.
We don't have a DNI, but we block freely. This is a safe space, so discrimination and hate will not be tolerated.
Our hosts:
Gordon - he/him. Introject from the Half-Life games. Doesn't speak out loud, instead opting for alternative communication methods, such as writing.
Mind - he/him. Introject from the Freeman's Mind series. Tries not to be an asshole to people online.
hello! this is miscedefined, a miscecanis / omegaverse blog run by @mawchine. (it/its.)
inspired by blogs such as @omegai and @omegarchive , this blog is meant to "define" niche misceverses and help provide clarification on what certain omegaverse terms might mean! this is not meant as some unequivocal definition on what a 'verse is, just some suggestions on what it might mean.
i also hope to make a carrd to catalogue terms, but that's a project for much later. i'll try to post once or twice a week, at least.