![]() Dragonlance draconians (since 5e, a type of dragonborn) hatched from corrupted metallic dragon eggs So in this original conception of dragonborn, there would be no naturally-occuring dragonborn eggs. After awakening inside the sealed egg, she breaks out of it as a glorious, draconic child of Bahamut. When the next dawn arrives, she is transformed into a dragonborn. This symbolic act represents her acceptance of the transformation. in order to sleep for the last time in her original form. When dawn comes, the prospective dragonborn crawls inside an egg-shaped structure that she has built. Bahamut beckons to his would-be followers, and those few who might choose to serve him. Each one enters the world as a halfling, an elf, a human, or a member of some other humanoid race with all that race’s propensities and traits. The dragonborn children of Bahamut are a unique race in that they are not born they are reborn. Here Dragonborn are not born, but reborn from another race, and a symbolic egg is used as part of this process of rebirth: The Dragonborn as such (as opposed to Dragonlance Draconians) were first introduced in the D&D 3.5 Races of the Dragon Book. As first imagined, dragonborn were reborn, and their "eggs" were symbolic However, as the 5e books are evidently trying to be inclusive of all past D&D settings (via the "multiverse" approach), I think reference to past editions is on topic. Vanilla 5e - they hatchĪs fabio has now pointed out, 5e dragonborn hatch from eggs. Tl dr - In 'vanilla' 5e, they hatch from eggs, though 5e is open to different kinds of dragonborn from across the multiverse. ![]() They hatch from eggs, though not everywhere in the multiverse
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