Create your own roaring animal images. It's free and easy!


Created 2 years ago · 20 comments· 0 likes
SDXL 1.06.9x
This image shows a vibrant blue and orange dragon in vector art. The artwork features ethereal cloudscapes and Japanese-inspired elements, with naturalistic ocean waves.
Created by Mormookiee on Jan 20, 2024 using the SDXL 1.0 AI image generator model.
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Yooooo, sick dragon! This has to be made into a poster.
“There are a number of behaviours that show a chick is nearing maturity and will soon seek to leave the nest.
Hoarding: The chick collects precious objects from around the house, reluctant to return them.
Fire Play: The chick seeks out iron and flint objects and plays by making huge showers of sparks.
Language: Chicks repeat any words and phrases they hear repeatedly, in a parrotlike fashion.
Points To Remember:
–Keep iron and flint objects away from chicks, or live in a fireproof house.
–Do not release young dragons into the sewerage system of a large city.
–Mind your language around chicks—they may repeat what you say over and over in front of visitors.
–It is not recommended to leave children and hungry dragons alone.
–Hide all shiny and/or valuable objects.”
“If you can obtain the eggs, you might like to hatch your own dragon chicks. To keep the eggs warm, you need to make a “nest” of live coals, which must be kept burning over a gestation period of three years. A small sledgehammer may help them hatch, and, if you are present, the chicks may believe you are their parent dragon, usefully increasing your chances of surviving that all-important first encounter.
Keep an adequate food supply. A 40 to 50-acre farm with a head of 300 cows should be enough for one chick. Small treats such as turkeys, dogs, cats, mules, or geese may be used as rewards for all-important house training, as a chick learns that setting fire to your home is not acceptable behaviour.”
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