Thank you so far everyone!
I am not putting anyone down, just talking as politly as I can with each of you and understanding more of what each of you mean. This is helping me see what others want, and I am going to listen, but also expressing my opinions as well while I listen to you. I have a lot of info in the spoiler post above in the first post.Seems interesting, I wouldn't mind maybe writing and providing my unprofessional critique.
So lets start with some inquires to see what the hell your talking about. Are there religion/gods and how prevalent are they in each dragon (Culture/ Breed/Race?). It seems there is a form of "magic" in this world, mind a few thoughts on it? Is this a D&D type of magic, perhaps to how powerful and common? Or more of a Game of Thrones type of magic?
I had thought it would be based on each species, as I imagine the western types (whatever their name is in this world) would not be into that as much, being very independent, but more likely in the smaller species like wyverns and knuckers.
Magic, I had thought that beings like the Easterners and Westerners being the most magical compared to others, but expressed in different ways. Do not know how yet though. Magic could either be very similar among them all, or different based on biology and culture.
THe settings idea is relatively cool but it has in my eyes one major flaw: Dragons are not sociable. In all the stories, fantasies etc. Dragons at worst live completely alone or at best in "Flights", im figuring the offspring of one particular ancient dragon living in his territory.
As such a Dragon Society would be very decentralized especially if we assume that each of them is too proud to submit to somebody else. In effect that makes any kind of Dragon Society very low-tech since they never get together in societies to even have need for more complex things. I mean what is the need to industrialize if you only need to provide for yourself and your closest family?
Now if you add a subservient species into this, one that is per nature more sociable than dragons things change radically - and propably also turn darker.
Lets say you add in humans or some dragonkin/serpentkin/lizardmen species to serve as the subservient species.
That would turn your Dragon Societies more believable, since the Dragons form a kind of upper caste with the subservients as slaves or lower castes. Industrialization would make more sense since the huge masses the dragons lord over need food, clothing etc.pp.
That is if you had such a setting in mind, it would immediately turn darker and issues like slavery and the right to rule would turn up.
However if you go with purebred dragon societies you would propably end up with a more naturalistic approach, one without cities, towns or even villages as dragons live at best in small family clans.
In any case thats my two cents.
I am not trying to dismiss you, but saying what I also had seen for this world.
Before I say anything, I was trying to think outside of fully European or Tolkienesque fantasy, as I want the story to be the story that it is, not the next Lord of the Rings or Witcher, I mean that politely in the sense that each is their own work.
Not trying to paint one group as more "evil" than the rest, but that does not mean there would not be any killing or conflict, as you can have that without black/white morality.
Are you refering to all dragons or dragon-like things in general? or just the western ones? I had thought to take a species like wyverns, inverting them from being big to being much more smaller and bat-like or similar to pteranadons in the sense of community. And inverse from game of thrones and skyrim counterparts.
I see slaves as a possibility, but not wanting another world of "dragon-overlords." Such as more likely, the beings like wyverns ending up as slaves due to being able to work together and make smaller, more delicate things. Or ending up as food for the most unscrupulous.
Basically, the most "dragon-like" I see being the Western and Eastern ideas, with sort-of out-groups being Knuckers and Wyverns, as I rarely see anyone mention either by name, and could be both unique and be vehicles for readers to understand the world by sharing realistic human qualities and such, or at least that of familiar beings.
I do not see any species as "that" advanced, you are right, but I was trying to think in a non-human view of how we see dragons.
I like the idea, do you plan to delve Into some of the dragons like in How To Train Your Dragon, the Toothlesses and Mega Dragons? Seems like your planning to essentially make dragons just as humans are to this Earth, do you plan to use an evolutionistic past, or a Christian Creation past?
That had got me thinking a little bit for this, not much, I think I want to make something with httyd on here that is separate from this actually.
Yes, I am trying to think about a world that can share things with Earth, but is not really "our" earth. i had thought of a mix, where there could be spirits or deities, but are more a product of evolution like the dragons themselves. I was trying to think of the environments that would produce the different types, how they would be different on this world from our idea while still similar, and how they would adapt to changes.
I have been writing and planning out a world to get published in novels
Then you have to design your world with the expressed purpose of telling stories in it. This means structuring the world so you can have characters and plot. Setting details to immerse the reader can come later, when you are actually writing the novel in question.
And since we need plot, we need some sort of conflict. We can write stories with no conflict whatsoever, a "slice of life" tale, but I do not really think such a format would sustain novels. Maybe a single novel.
For that reason, I back Ghazkull's ideas about dragons being solitary and having a slave caste of sociable people. We have two potential sources of conflict: slave versus master, and dragon versus dragon (as dragons would distrust each other and try to fight for valuable resources, like sociable slaves).
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On a tangent: can all these dragons fly long-distance? If so, then we have globalization taking place as these dragons do end up interacting on a regular basis. This can lead to cultures inter-mixing and blending together into one "hegemonic" culture, which at least a few "purist" dragons would oppose. They want to defend their "unique and proud" culture from "alien influences". There we go, conflict #3.
I am trying not to be embarrassed sharing ideas with everyone, so this is just new for me to be opening up this much, but am glad for criticism and hearing how others see this.
Slavery is fine, but I was trying to re-imagine things in a way that is not human-biased. In the sense of a non-human world and not in an anti-human protest I actually am NOT a misanthropist, surprisingly, but want something other than typical dragon overlords. This is not Earth and these dragons would not of evolved or been created in the same manner, so there is a wiggle room.
Eastern dragons: Would be the best at "very, very" long distance flying, the Old World Mainland covered in mountains ranging from European to Tibetan, so it is a large land with lots of flying and isolation. But since each is a long-lived individual, there is a potential for shape-shifting beings to end up hybridizing, and being purposeful agents of change.
Knuckers: I sort of wonder if they'd be flightless, taking up the least land area of the others, but having a spread similar to how early humans would of moved about.
Western dragons: I see wanting to have enough space to themselves, but tolerating as close as they can bear to be near others for any vanities they feel they need. Cultural influence being a tool to manipulate, and depending on how new or old they are to being "civilized" in a draconic sense, could change how they will react to new ideas or hybridization.
Wyverns: Yes, there is flight among them, but for ones living in canyons, cliffs, or "cities" if there are any, dong much more walking and climbing as well. So a medium spread around the world, so there wold be many predominantly wyvern areas in the south and central parts of the New World, and a big enough push could send them out further, if it does not wipe them out.