Some species of monsters are able to learn human language, and others are quite benevolent. If we took a dragon's baby for instance (Any color) and raised it like a human, would it have more humanity, or still be more like a dragon in terms of personality?
This pic might be better.
This is the last related image I have.
>>52335511
This is a nature/nurture question. We don't even know how that works for human beings, let alone fictional creatures.
My suggestion is just to pick the most interesting combination. For me it would be a dragon that has a mix of human and draconic personality traits, leaning heavily in one direction (draconic with a little bit of human appeals to me more than the other way around, but I'd be fine with that too).
>>52336916
That sounds like a good mix.
Would monsters be able to take class levels if they were raised like this? I imagine almost every GM would lay down the hammer on the idea, but would it be possible?
>A beholder who chose to be a Barbarian
>A giant who chose to be a rogue
>>52336605
This is my daughter, please be nice to her.
>If we took a dragon's baby
You have more important things to be worried about in that case.
>>52339909
You say that like we didn't already deal with the real parent(s).
>>52337219
Intelligent monsters can do that anyway in any system similar to DnD.
Fluff is find someone to train them.
Crunch is slap on some levels.
>>52335511
Literally depends on the monster.