How do dwarves defend their City-under-the-Mountain from a dragon?
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The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since the days that the first Dwarf-father awoke in the roots of the mountain. In the uncounted ages since he rose, the depths of the mountain have been carved into an intricate labyrinth of passages and palaces, workshops and dwellings, great halls and quiet chambers.
But, rumors of the golden treasure of the City-under-the-Mountain have reached the fire drakes of the north. Glori, the greatest of their kind, has set off to take this shining jewel of the Underworld for his own.
The Dwarven city is an expansive set of tunnels, great hall, and open spaces under the mountain. It is occupied by hundreds of thousands of Dwarves, and can field a large army of thousands. Dwarven warriors are sturdy, well armed and armored, and fire resistant. Dwarven axemen could damage or even kill a large fire drake, if given the opportunity to attack its vulnerable underside. Dwarven technology is equivalent to the high Middle Ages (~1300).
Fire drakes are long and thin, rather like snakes. They are winged and can fly, but they can also crawl through tunnels underground. Most passages carved wide and tall enough for dwarven pedestrian traffic can fit a drake through, even the great Glori. Drakes are as smart as humans, possibly smarter.
The drake's armor is largely impervious, although vulnerable in the face and underside. The face is not a good place to attack, because fire drakes, of course, breathe fire. If dwarves hid in a dwelling place with a door too small for the drake to fit through, the drake could cook the inhabitants of an average sized home with one breath.
Though there are few spaces large enough, Glori can fly inside the city in its biggest areas such the Muster Square and the Temple of the Stones.
The City-under-the-Mountain is ages old, older even than the drakes. But Glori himself is many thousands of years old. Though the dwarves might bar the great doors against him, there are many hidden and ancient passages under the mountain. Glori will eventually find a way in through a long lost tunnel; the dwarves must prepare to fight him inside their city.
Given the above information, what are the best tactics for the dwarves to assume to defend the City-under-the-Mountain against Glori?
magic dragons tactics underground
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The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since the days that the first Dwarf-father awoke in the roots of the mountain. In the uncounted ages since he rose, the depths of the mountain have been carved into an intricate labyrinth of passages and palaces, workshops and dwellings, great halls and quiet chambers.
But, rumors of the golden treasure of the City-under-the-Mountain have reached the fire drakes of the north. Glori, the greatest of their kind, has set off to take this shining jewel of the Underworld for his own.
The Dwarven city is an expansive set of tunnels, great hall, and open spaces under the mountain. It is occupied by hundreds of thousands of Dwarves, and can field a large army of thousands. Dwarven warriors are sturdy, well armed and armored, and fire resistant. Dwarven axemen could damage or even kill a large fire drake, if given the opportunity to attack its vulnerable underside. Dwarven technology is equivalent to the high Middle Ages (~1300).
Fire drakes are long and thin, rather like snakes. They are winged and can fly, but they can also crawl through tunnels underground. Most passages carved wide and tall enough for dwarven pedestrian traffic can fit a drake through, even the great Glori. Drakes are as smart as humans, possibly smarter.
The drake's armor is largely impervious, although vulnerable in the face and underside. The face is not a good place to attack, because fire drakes, of course, breathe fire. If dwarves hid in a dwelling place with a door too small for the drake to fit through, the drake could cook the inhabitants of an average sized home with one breath.
Though there are few spaces large enough, Glori can fly inside the city in its biggest areas such the Muster Square and the Temple of the Stones.
The City-under-the-Mountain is ages old, older even than the drakes. But Glori himself is many thousands of years old. Though the dwarves might bar the great doors against him, there are many hidden and ancient passages under the mountain. Glori will eventually find a way in through a long lost tunnel; the dwarves must prepare to fight him inside their city.
Given the above information, what are the best tactics for the dwarves to assume to defend the City-under-the-Mountain against Glori?
magic dragons tactics underground
1
Are we talking prevention or is the drake already inside the mountain? If preventive, what's the time scale? If the drake is already inside, what tools do we have? Gunpowder? Ballistae? Hopefully, some medieval artillery? Do the dwarves know the drake's weaknesses? Any natural predators?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:43
6
@chaslyfromUK: Probably Smaug-level. It is customary!
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:44
4
How would cities be designed that were threatened by dragons? How would a city with high defences fare against airborne creatures? How could Medieval cultures defend themselves against dragons?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:49
@nzaman - It's a long time since I read The Hobbit. I can't remember how bright Smaug was or if he was easily fooled.
– chasly from UK
Nov 14 at 11:57
3
@nzaman Medieval technology. The drake can get into the mountain, as mentioned. Also, the linked questions don't really deal with the underground aspect of the fight.
– kingledion
Nov 14 at 12:01
|
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up vote
20
down vote
favorite
The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since the days that the first Dwarf-father awoke in the roots of the mountain. In the uncounted ages since he rose, the depths of the mountain have been carved into an intricate labyrinth of passages and palaces, workshops and dwellings, great halls and quiet chambers.
But, rumors of the golden treasure of the City-under-the-Mountain have reached the fire drakes of the north. Glori, the greatest of their kind, has set off to take this shining jewel of the Underworld for his own.
The Dwarven city is an expansive set of tunnels, great hall, and open spaces under the mountain. It is occupied by hundreds of thousands of Dwarves, and can field a large army of thousands. Dwarven warriors are sturdy, well armed and armored, and fire resistant. Dwarven axemen could damage or even kill a large fire drake, if given the opportunity to attack its vulnerable underside. Dwarven technology is equivalent to the high Middle Ages (~1300).
Fire drakes are long and thin, rather like snakes. They are winged and can fly, but they can also crawl through tunnels underground. Most passages carved wide and tall enough for dwarven pedestrian traffic can fit a drake through, even the great Glori. Drakes are as smart as humans, possibly smarter.
The drake's armor is largely impervious, although vulnerable in the face and underside. The face is not a good place to attack, because fire drakes, of course, breathe fire. If dwarves hid in a dwelling place with a door too small for the drake to fit through, the drake could cook the inhabitants of an average sized home with one breath.
Though there are few spaces large enough, Glori can fly inside the city in its biggest areas such the Muster Square and the Temple of the Stones.
The City-under-the-Mountain is ages old, older even than the drakes. But Glori himself is many thousands of years old. Though the dwarves might bar the great doors against him, there are many hidden and ancient passages under the mountain. Glori will eventually find a way in through a long lost tunnel; the dwarves must prepare to fight him inside their city.
Given the above information, what are the best tactics for the dwarves to assume to defend the City-under-the-Mountain against Glori?
magic dragons tactics underground
The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since the days that the first Dwarf-father awoke in the roots of the mountain. In the uncounted ages since he rose, the depths of the mountain have been carved into an intricate labyrinth of passages and palaces, workshops and dwellings, great halls and quiet chambers.
But, rumors of the golden treasure of the City-under-the-Mountain have reached the fire drakes of the north. Glori, the greatest of their kind, has set off to take this shining jewel of the Underworld for his own.
The Dwarven city is an expansive set of tunnels, great hall, and open spaces under the mountain. It is occupied by hundreds of thousands of Dwarves, and can field a large army of thousands. Dwarven warriors are sturdy, well armed and armored, and fire resistant. Dwarven axemen could damage or even kill a large fire drake, if given the opportunity to attack its vulnerable underside. Dwarven technology is equivalent to the high Middle Ages (~1300).
Fire drakes are long and thin, rather like snakes. They are winged and can fly, but they can also crawl through tunnels underground. Most passages carved wide and tall enough for dwarven pedestrian traffic can fit a drake through, even the great Glori. Drakes are as smart as humans, possibly smarter.
The drake's armor is largely impervious, although vulnerable in the face and underside. The face is not a good place to attack, because fire drakes, of course, breathe fire. If dwarves hid in a dwelling place with a door too small for the drake to fit through, the drake could cook the inhabitants of an average sized home with one breath.
Though there are few spaces large enough, Glori can fly inside the city in its biggest areas such the Muster Square and the Temple of the Stones.
The City-under-the-Mountain is ages old, older even than the drakes. But Glori himself is many thousands of years old. Though the dwarves might bar the great doors against him, there are many hidden and ancient passages under the mountain. Glori will eventually find a way in through a long lost tunnel; the dwarves must prepare to fight him inside their city.
Given the above information, what are the best tactics for the dwarves to assume to defend the City-under-the-Mountain against Glori?
magic dragons tactics underground
magic dragons tactics underground
edited Nov 14 at 11:59
asked Nov 14 at 4:46
kingledion
69.7k24234404
69.7k24234404
1
Are we talking prevention or is the drake already inside the mountain? If preventive, what's the time scale? If the drake is already inside, what tools do we have? Gunpowder? Ballistae? Hopefully, some medieval artillery? Do the dwarves know the drake's weaknesses? Any natural predators?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:43
6
@chaslyfromUK: Probably Smaug-level. It is customary!
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:44
4
How would cities be designed that were threatened by dragons? How would a city with high defences fare against airborne creatures? How could Medieval cultures defend themselves against dragons?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:49
@nzaman - It's a long time since I read The Hobbit. I can't remember how bright Smaug was or if he was easily fooled.
– chasly from UK
Nov 14 at 11:57
3
@nzaman Medieval technology. The drake can get into the mountain, as mentioned. Also, the linked questions don't really deal with the underground aspect of the fight.
– kingledion
Nov 14 at 12:01
|
show 6 more comments
1
Are we talking prevention or is the drake already inside the mountain? If preventive, what's the time scale? If the drake is already inside, what tools do we have? Gunpowder? Ballistae? Hopefully, some medieval artillery? Do the dwarves know the drake's weaknesses? Any natural predators?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:43
6
@chaslyfromUK: Probably Smaug-level. It is customary!
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:44
4
How would cities be designed that were threatened by dragons? How would a city with high defences fare against airborne creatures? How could Medieval cultures defend themselves against dragons?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:49
@nzaman - It's a long time since I read The Hobbit. I can't remember how bright Smaug was or if he was easily fooled.
– chasly from UK
Nov 14 at 11:57
3
@nzaman Medieval technology. The drake can get into the mountain, as mentioned. Also, the linked questions don't really deal with the underground aspect of the fight.
– kingledion
Nov 14 at 12:01
1
1
Are we talking prevention or is the drake already inside the mountain? If preventive, what's the time scale? If the drake is already inside, what tools do we have? Gunpowder? Ballistae? Hopefully, some medieval artillery? Do the dwarves know the drake's weaknesses? Any natural predators?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:43
Are we talking prevention or is the drake already inside the mountain? If preventive, what's the time scale? If the drake is already inside, what tools do we have? Gunpowder? Ballistae? Hopefully, some medieval artillery? Do the dwarves know the drake's weaknesses? Any natural predators?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:43
6
6
@chaslyfromUK: Probably Smaug-level. It is customary!
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:44
@chaslyfromUK: Probably Smaug-level. It is customary!
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:44
4
4
How would cities be designed that were threatened by dragons? How would a city with high defences fare against airborne creatures? How could Medieval cultures defend themselves against dragons?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:49
How would cities be designed that were threatened by dragons? How would a city with high defences fare against airborne creatures? How could Medieval cultures defend themselves against dragons?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:49
@nzaman - It's a long time since I read The Hobbit. I can't remember how bright Smaug was or if he was easily fooled.
– chasly from UK
Nov 14 at 11:57
@nzaman - It's a long time since I read The Hobbit. I can't remember how bright Smaug was or if he was easily fooled.
– chasly from UK
Nov 14 at 11:57
3
3
@nzaman Medieval technology. The drake can get into the mountain, as mentioned. Also, the linked questions don't really deal with the underground aspect of the fight.
– kingledion
Nov 14 at 12:01
@nzaman Medieval technology. The drake can get into the mountain, as mentioned. Also, the linked questions don't really deal with the underground aspect of the fight.
– kingledion
Nov 14 at 12:01
|
show 6 more comments
15 Answers
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35
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From my experience with dwarf fortress, what you want to do is trap the dragon and use it as a source of FUN. Basically trap it and use it to terrorize prisoners and bad dwarfs.
Lava
The funnest way is to create a trap passage way. One roughly double the length of Glori and positioned so that if he wants to get access into the inner sanctum of your city, it is the easiest way through (aka block the other passages, or station them with a ton of guards to deter Glori from entering those ones). Once Glori enters the tunnel completely, you shut of both ends and open the trap holes in the ceiling. Pour some Molten Lava into the room, enough so that Glori will be left with just his head sticking out of the magma. Let it cool down and now take the dragon entrapped in solid stone out of the room and put it somewhere nice and view able. (If its really cold, you could do it with water and ice. But that would only temporarily contain Glori, which is more than enough time to deal with it).
Spike Traps
Another answer straight out of Dwarf Fortress, Spike traps. These are traps in the ground that when triggered cause up to 10 weapons to shoot up out of the ground (I say weapons because it let you throw in anything, but spears or pikes are what you realistically want). Force Glori to fly low by creating low tunnels or placing large metal pikes in the ceiling to force Glori closer to the ground. Once Glori passers over the spikes, he either triggers the spikes or your Dwarves trigger it, impaling his soft underside.
Build a Wall
As we all know, dwarves are master builders. Simple find the area Glori is in and seal it off. No one is as skilled as Dwarves in creating solid walls of rock and once they seal him off they can listen to the angry cries of Glori in peace.
Flood it all
Water is annoying and can be extremely powerful. Tap into an natural aquifer or water source and allow it to pour through your tunnels into the depths. Creating in it sealed off passage way which is sealed off from the main kingdom will allow you to quickly identify potential routes for Glori to get into your fortress. Find some water flowing in a tunnel? Seal it off. Of course, this might make Glori fly up even faster, but dwarven ingenuity is a double sided axe.
More traps
Okay, know these traps are big traps that take a long time to reset. Examples are the swinging blades from Game of Thrones. and The Boulder from Indiana Jones. Once you manage to lure Glori into the traps range, you activate it and pray to God it works. In this case, I suggest massive smithing hammers like those shown in The Hobbit, that the dwarves used to forge equipment. Put a dragon between those and they're dead. Otherwise, a convenient giant statue of a hammer or some massive stalactites should be enough to do the trick.
Standard Approach
There is no victory without sacrifice. Prepare your soldiers with shields and armor. Put spikes on them to deter Glori from biting them and hopefully focus on flames more. Pair your dwarves up, with one throwing bolas, nets, chains or spears (with chains) and the other with a large shield to block the flames. One blocks the flames, the other throws crap at Glori until he is weighed down and can no longer fly. Once he's on the ground, just keep hacking at him.
Note: I assume your dwarves are actually masters of architecture and mining. Sure there might be hundreds of unknown tunnels, but your dwarves should know exactly what they have mined and which passage ways lead to where. No dwarf wants to be the one who accidentally brings down the entire kingdom by mining through a support wall and no dwarf wants to go out searching for gems only to end up at someone else search site or even worse lost. It might be confusing to us humans, but dwarves know their stuff.
6
+1 for Dwarf Fortress reference.
– Ian Kemp
2 days ago
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Hit it in the voonerables
'Im sure a hero will turn up in time,' said Carrot. With some new sort weapon, or something. And strike at its voonerable spot.'
'What's one of them? Said Nobby
'A spot. Where it's voonerable. My grandad used to tell me stories. Hit a dragon in its voonerables, he said and you've killed it'
Lacking a hero with knowledge of the dragon's voonerables, you need to be a little more systematic about this.
First you need to stop Glori flying. The great advantage of dragons over dwarves is air superiority combined with ranged weaponry. Fill the space where a dragon could fly with obstacles. Ropes and chains, stacks of junk, anything to stop a dragon fully spreading its wings. Keep him uncomfortable.
Collapsing ceilings on corridors can act as traps or barriers, whether to keep a dragon in or out.
- How many tons of rubble can a dragon effectively push or dig through?
- How much of the mountain do you need to drop on its head to kill it?
After that it's all about small spaces that dwarves can attack from but a dragon can't attack into. Consider the length of the head for example:
- If you make a space in this shape, can the dragon insert its head in such a way as to attack this space effectively?
- If you make it this shape, does the dragon's jet of flame follow the corridor round and hit it in the side of its own head?
Remember dwarves are the great blacksmiths and miners of the world, there's nothing they don't know about both moving rock and handling fire. Creating traps such that if the dragon blows fire into the wrong place it ends up toasting its own ears will greatly limit its freedom of action.
Murder holes, but rather than murder holes in the ceiling as usual, put them in the floor so dwarves underneath are poking holes in the vulnerable underside of your dragon.
n.b. A dragon thousands of years old is likely to know that dragons don't get to live for thousands of years by flying into dwarven fortresses and taking them all on head on. I'd expect something much more subtle than a frontal assault from this old beast. Dragons are cunning and have the wisdom of age, people are foolish, beware infiltrators and traitors.
Where is that quote from?
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:17
6
@Scoots, Guards! Guards!, Pratchett.
– Separatrix
Nov 14 at 15:30
I knew I recognised it! Thanks for scratching that itch
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:47
14
Your last point is vitally important. Any dragon who leaves the safety of the skies and attempts a frontal assault against the Dwarves by wriggling down into their tunnels when they know he's coming is too stupid to live.
– DawnPaladin
Nov 14 at 18:39
1
Nevermind a flying dragon. Will a soldier crawl into a hole in the enemy trenches? That's just a quick way to get yourself killed.
– Nelson
2 days ago
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10
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Blow it up.
Dragons are big, but plenty of animals are big and still get killed. The distinguishing feature of a dragon is flame. A dragon doesn't win by being big, it wins by shock and awe, and because flamethrowers are spectacularly effective at room-clearing.
The problem for a dragon underground is that its opponents are in control of the air supply. And whilst it has a flame-proof mouth, it is not explosion-proof.
Firedamp is a major problem in mines. Usually you want to let the ventilation systems dissipate it cleanly. But if you know you've got a dragon coming, smart miners might store it. When you hit a pocket, you might simply seal up that part of the mine temporarily, with a gas-tight cover. Repeat until you have a whole bunch of sealed-up areas filled with firedamp, with ropes attached to the gas-tight covers. For bonus points you could leave open an access door around that area, kind of hidden but not very well, so you know where the dragon will be entering. Once the dragon's in there, shut the outer doors and use the ropes to open up all the pockets of firedamp. Then just wait for the bang.
For more technologically-advanced dwarves, this can be taken to new levels. Their mines will most likely have forced-air ventilation. If they have some knowledge of chemistry, they could easily pump methane or other explosive gases through the ventilation system. Again, wait for the bang.
And even more amusingly, you could have it burn itself up. Whilst a dragon's mouth and guts may be flame-proof, they're only proof against burning in atmospheric levels of oxygen. Pumping high levels of oxygen down the ventilation system will ensure that anything which burns will do so in spectacular fashion. The Fire Triangle means you don't need to supply extra fuel if the dragon's already supplied its own; all you need is extra oxygen.
2
Upvoted for pumping in high levels of oxygen. Under ludicrously high levels of oxygen (such as a partial pressure of 1 ATM), things burn that don't normally burn -- see the Apollo 1 fire. Any fire-breathing creature under such conditions would burn itself up.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
A grandiose solution, but it would wreck the underground kingdom if they are not very careful indeed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
If I remember correctly, firedamp exists only in coal mines. The Dwarven Fortresses I've seen are in mountains (real stone, building-quality). Coal has low compression strength, is flammable, coal mine fires tend to produce a lot of carbon monoxide which is much more dangerous than carbon dioxide, ... On the other hand, as dwarves would have ready access to coal, they could use it to create enclosed pockets of water gas (pre-mixed with air they would have the effect of a fuel-air bomb). The shockwave of an explosion would shatter the insides of a dragon/drake
– Calin Ceteras
yesterday
@CalinCeteras Not just coal mines. I've recently visited Blist Hill museum in Shropshire, and apparently it was a major problem in the clay mines there too. Clay is impermeable, so if there's a fossil fuel reserve somewhere underneath, the clay will trap the gas (which is exactly what gas drilling in places like the North Sea is looking for - firedamp is natural gas). You don't need to specifically be digging for fossil fuels; they just have to be around somewhere.
– Graham
yesterday
1
@RedSonja OTOH if you get the dragon into the mines then you've got free demolition on the next bit of mine shaft. And food for the whole tribe for the next week too, once you've cleared the rocks away. (Dragon probably tastes of chicken; everything else scaly seems to.)
– Graham
yesterday
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Greatest disadvantage for Glori is that he is alone. As such, multiple methods may be implemented against him.
- Any known straight tunnel may be closed from both ends trapping it effectively without chance for diversion.
Given the doors hold against it, the chamber's ventilation the may be sealed to kill Glori by suffocation. - Drapes of chain may be hung from open spaces to hinder flying, diverting its path as needed.
- Flying exposes the underside of Glori, giving dwarves chance to turn it to a pin cushion, given dwarves use bows or crossbows.
These methods may result in massive losses for the dwarves while attempting to manipulate the Drake, but the siege itself will ultimately fail.
New contributor
5
A dwarven bow has the shape, mechanism and weight of a throwing axe. So not exactly pin cushion.
– Oxy
Nov 14 at 9:16
@Oxy I was imagining the ceiling height to be beyond a thrown axe's range. But if it is, a rain of guts and bile...egh.
– optimisticOrca
Nov 14 at 10:37
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Why defend? By all means, make sure he comes, tell everybody about your treasures if nothing else helps. Having an endless source of fire in your city is what every dwarf dreams of. Never have to light coals and pull the bellow again if you feel like smithing. Cold winter? Fancy a hot bath? No need to collect fire wood.
Now the only tricky part about it all is keeping him. Dragons are not well-known for being amused by providing free fire or by their general courtesy, for that matter.
Thus, the bait treasure needs to be placed where there is only a single point of access, and the passage needs to be able to be barred with fireproof (sliding rock wall 2-3 meters thick?) doors. Something like the seal-off mechanism in pyramids as seen famously portrayed in the 1955 movie "Land of Pharaohs", only maybe closing the passage a tidbit faster.
You will likely want a couple of small (too small for a dragon) vents going to the smithy (or city warm water facilities) near the front so you can harvest the fire. And, of course, an opening somewhere at the rear so you can pull the dragon's tail or poke him with a pointy stick when you need fire and he doesn't feel like exhaling.
3
An excellent solution to the immediate problem. This answer needs to resolve the long term issue as described by Audrey II: "Feed me!" It takes a lot of protein and carbs to sustain the dragon.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
1
@CodeswithHammer: I wouldn't suggest to feed the dragon. Experience from human babies shows that what you fill in at one end comes out slightly modified at the other end. Who is going to clean that up! Not me! If the dragon starves, no problem, there's more where that one came from. Though seeing how dragons often sleep on their hoard for a couple of hundred years (without eating!) and still have a belly full of fire ready whenever an adventurer comes along, I'd not worry too much about it being an immediate problem. It'll be fine :-)
– Damon
yesterday
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The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since...
We all know where this trope goes.
The dwarven army will never defeat the dragon by itself. They may not be ninjas, but they are still affected by the inverse ninja law:
The inverse ninja law is a media trope regarding not only ninjas, but any character type that is shown to attack in massed numbers, such as soldiers, robots, daleks, or vampires (but not zombies). It states that the threat level of any number of ninjas or other whatsits is inversely proportionate to their numbers. Therefore, if you're attacked by a lone ninja, you're in trouble, but if you meet an army of ninjas, they're going down.
What they really need is an adventurer who will be more glad to defeat Trog Dor Glori just for glory, gold, fame, or a combination of these. In the very least the gold and magical items ar disposal of the dwarves should be plenty. It's just a matter of establishing compensatiom for the hero services.
If not a single hero, then a party of player characters adventurers can bring in a mix of talents that a bunch of nameless NPC's the dwarven forces lack, thus presenting a greater threat to the dragon.
1
Made me chuckle +1
– IT Alex
Nov 14 at 13:08
I almost downvoted due to a known exception to the inverse ninja law: An academic once faced a lone Dalek, and won. Still, the exception tests the general rule, so the answer remains valid. This time.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
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These dwarves have had warfare before as evidenced by the presence of a military. Unlike a castle where you fill open space with stone, dwarves fill stone with open space to build their fortifications. This means you control every entrance the enemy has and what the entrance looks like, and the dwarves will have made use of this. I am assuming the dwarves have very little time to prepare as the dragon will travel faster than the news of its possible destinations, so only ad-hoc defenses or defenses that would be expected against "normal" armies.
Entrances might be wide avenues for the trade and traffic to go through, but the surrounding area can be hewn any way you want.
The walls lined with arrow slits for (X)bowmen to Use? Check
"small" artillery like Ballista's to shoot any enemy siege engines like a rolling wood&metal arrow shelter? Check. Hey this would fit well against a dragon
Murder holes in the ceiling where things can be dropped from, like chlorine gas (heavier than air) to suffocate, boiling water, tar, burning oil or molten lava/metal if not normal darts, arrows, small rocks or boulders big enough to crush any siege engine (or dragon) driving through it? Check.
a tunnel below the entrance where fire can be lit and holes in the floors where the smoke can rise through to reduce vision and suffocate the enemy? Check. The tunnel could also be used for a bunch of spearmen to stand below and stab upwards of luckless enemies walking over.
A slightly slanted floor with giant metal balls at one end to crush anyone trying to move up the entrance? Check. Alternatively the entrance can be sloped downwards and the balls are released from the ceiling of the entrance, possibly rolling across the walls from the sides so the balls can more easily be collected and repositioned.
Large contraptions designed to kill. If these dwarves are the more technical kind that use massive contraptions to haul ore up, use elevators or similar tricks you can power killingtools with them as well. A giant blade that comes from a slit in the wall and cuts a squad through could be a boon against a dragon
Designed collapses to bury enemies.
The standard tricks of the trade from chokepoints to ambushes and whatnot.
Though we have all seen that molten gold does not kill a dragon. It makes it very annoyed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
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Here are some tactics:
Trap the dragon. Have chambers and tunnels that can be sealed so that the dragon cannot get out. Put murder-holes in the bottoms of the trap-tunnels, to attack the dragon's underbelly with spears.
The dwarves keep, or hire, large mongeese or ferrets to hunt down giant snakes in their tunnels.
The dwarves snuff out the dragon's flame. Perhaps they use giant bellows to pump out all the air from a portion of the city. Or perhaps they use backfires to use up the oxygen.
Flood the chamber that the dragon is in.
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Use a Guillotine
Move all the treasure to one dead-end cavern. Leave all doors open in the rest of the system.
Block the treasure cave entrance with an important-looking locked door, made of wood.
Behind the door is a huge raised guillotine blade that is triggered by an automatic mechanism or by a few volunteers.
Evacuate the rest of the cave system to a nearby forest where the dwarves can camp until Glori is dead.
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Mr Miyagi's best defense: No be there.
Fake city.
Inspiration: the antitheft trick where you have a wallet with $42, a photo of Zsa Zsa Gabor and some useless cards. When the robber demands your wallet or the pickpocket snakes it, that is the wallet they get. Your real wallet is deeper, in a fake interior front pocket.
Glori has heard rumors, but she has never been to the City Under the Mountain. The apparent entrance to the city leads to a City Under the Mountain, OK - a halfassed city but actually not even half - a great room with some 4th rate treasure, a couple of buildings and tunnels, and that is it. Glori will not be surprised that the dwarves all run away when she shows up. She might be disappointed that the city is not all it was cracked up to be, but she understands how legends work. She is content - it is nice enough, and she took it fair and square. She will curl up on the mound of gilded lead and brass (which is arranged in a surprisingly comfortable way!) and go to sleep.
Those with a discerning eye who explore the halfassed fake city will note that the sculptures decorating the interior lack the decorum one expects in actual civic artwork. Dwarven civic sculpture usually depicts individuals fully dressed and facing forward. Glori does not have a discerning eye for dwarven sculpture.
4
Dwarves are master's at crafting right, who is to say the "practice city" and "practice jewellery" while they are learning isn't already a high quality treasure for the rest of the world. Dwarves don't recycle, there is more mining to be done. so the dragons happily guarding their trash bin. ( "they even keep bringing me offerings")
– J.Doe
2 days ago
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One of the critical factors in defending against Glori and his ilk is going to be the presence and availability of weaponry that can hinder or injure him. While enough sturdy armoured Dwarves may be able able to swarm and crush him under sheer weight of numbers, doing so against a fire breathing foe in cramped tunnel conditions is going to get real ugly, real fast.
Small portable siege engines, such as the Ballista or Scorpio may be able to pack enough punch to penetrate the thick draken scales. These could be set up at choke points in the tunnels, as well as key locations in the city itself to provide cover against an airborne fore.
Fortifications could be designed to be more resistant against a fire-breathing enemy, with armoured hatches over arrow slits and doorways
Traps could be set at likely locations in the old tunnels. A skilled stonemason could even set a trap such as an ordinary dwarf could walk through unharmed, but any creature the size and weight of a drake would cause a cave-in, burying the beast under tonnes of rubble and stone.
2
Make a shortcut entrance tunnel with dodgy supports. The dwarves, being natural miners, will avoid the tunnel like the plague. When the dragon enters it will invariably knock out the supports and drop the mountain on itself. Dwarves can then mine the tunnel out again and wait for the next mobile gem vein to come to them.
– Joe Bloggs
Nov 14 at 7:58
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I find it wrong that this question assumes that Glori would implicitly have higher hand. To me, there are too many variables to determine who would win and what tactics would be superior.
The most important part is preparation. Both sides's level of praparedness can range from voefuly unpreprated to crazy prepared.
If Glori is not stupid, he would spend lot of time and resources to prepare for his assault. He could gather information on layout and traps of the fortress by either stealing or buying blueprints or capturing or bribing dwarves. He would hire adventurers or mercenaries to help him in the assault. He would have equipment made to protect his weak spots. He would send spies to sabotage traps or open gates at the right time. If he was really rich, he could bribe nearby (Elven) kingdom to declare war on the Dwarves and lure their army out of the fortress. If he was patient, the whole thing could be done over many years, as he has plenty of time.
If Glori was trully intelligent and patient, he wouldn't attack the fortress at all. He would go there not as and enemy, but as a friend. The dwarves would be suspicious of him at first. But over many years, he would make effort to be seen as friend and good thing for the fortress. He would get acquinted by the nobility of the dwarves. He would slowly influence the events of the fotress as to gain more influence and make dwarven nobility be seen as incompetent and corrupt. He would take control of the military and treasury. And in the end, it will be the dwarf peasants themselves who would rather have him as a King and not some corrupt, incompetent Dwarf.
tl;dr; Glori ran Palpatine on the dwarves.
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Rock is fireproof, if you get the right type. The dwarves don't know every way into their mining complex but they should know all the access ways into their active areas, where they live and process ore and other materials, and they certainly will know all the routes to their treasure vault(s). They should start by telling the drake exactly how to get to their treasure, then rig a "choke route" tunnel, one that the drake has to take no matter how they enter the complex, with a sheath of Mica, which is extremely fire resistant, and thick slabs of the same at each end that can be dropped in to block the tunnel off. Then they can trap Glori as she attempts to get to the vault and let her starve. They could also coat the mica in something that's toxic when burned to speed up the process if Glori tries to burn her way out.
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Crush it
The dwarves are masters of stonework and construction, it is likely they will have ways to strategically cut off enemy approach by collapsing tunnels.
Even if a cave in doesn't kill Glori, it could trap her giving the dwarves a change to attack the prone drake, or prepare larger weapons and defences.
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The entrance should be small and narrow, and in the entrance there should be a hoistable wall and after that wall, yet another hoistable wall that cannot be hoisted before mentioned the first wall has been unhoisted.
I hope that makes sense.
EDIT:
I was imagining an entrance to the mountain carved to fit the size of 3-4 dwarves standing shoulder to shoulder and maybe the height of two dwarves on top of each other. Now this solution would only be to keep the dragon out of the mountain and would require two iron/metal walls, standing about 3-4 meters from one another. The idea is simply put the same as the doors to secure research facilities (or so I imagine) where the second door will not be able to open, before the first door is properly shut. This would provide more entrance security for the dwarves, but would also eliminate the threat from the dragon, since they are, as OP explained, very long and would therefore not be able to fit in the gap between the walls.
With the enginuity of the dwarves this solution should be feasible.
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15 Answers
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15 Answers
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oldest
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active
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up vote
35
down vote
From my experience with dwarf fortress, what you want to do is trap the dragon and use it as a source of FUN. Basically trap it and use it to terrorize prisoners and bad dwarfs.
Lava
The funnest way is to create a trap passage way. One roughly double the length of Glori and positioned so that if he wants to get access into the inner sanctum of your city, it is the easiest way through (aka block the other passages, or station them with a ton of guards to deter Glori from entering those ones). Once Glori enters the tunnel completely, you shut of both ends and open the trap holes in the ceiling. Pour some Molten Lava into the room, enough so that Glori will be left with just his head sticking out of the magma. Let it cool down and now take the dragon entrapped in solid stone out of the room and put it somewhere nice and view able. (If its really cold, you could do it with water and ice. But that would only temporarily contain Glori, which is more than enough time to deal with it).
Spike Traps
Another answer straight out of Dwarf Fortress, Spike traps. These are traps in the ground that when triggered cause up to 10 weapons to shoot up out of the ground (I say weapons because it let you throw in anything, but spears or pikes are what you realistically want). Force Glori to fly low by creating low tunnels or placing large metal pikes in the ceiling to force Glori closer to the ground. Once Glori passers over the spikes, he either triggers the spikes or your Dwarves trigger it, impaling his soft underside.
Build a Wall
As we all know, dwarves are master builders. Simple find the area Glori is in and seal it off. No one is as skilled as Dwarves in creating solid walls of rock and once they seal him off they can listen to the angry cries of Glori in peace.
Flood it all
Water is annoying and can be extremely powerful. Tap into an natural aquifer or water source and allow it to pour through your tunnels into the depths. Creating in it sealed off passage way which is sealed off from the main kingdom will allow you to quickly identify potential routes for Glori to get into your fortress. Find some water flowing in a tunnel? Seal it off. Of course, this might make Glori fly up even faster, but dwarven ingenuity is a double sided axe.
More traps
Okay, know these traps are big traps that take a long time to reset. Examples are the swinging blades from Game of Thrones. and The Boulder from Indiana Jones. Once you manage to lure Glori into the traps range, you activate it and pray to God it works. In this case, I suggest massive smithing hammers like those shown in The Hobbit, that the dwarves used to forge equipment. Put a dragon between those and they're dead. Otherwise, a convenient giant statue of a hammer or some massive stalactites should be enough to do the trick.
Standard Approach
There is no victory without sacrifice. Prepare your soldiers with shields and armor. Put spikes on them to deter Glori from biting them and hopefully focus on flames more. Pair your dwarves up, with one throwing bolas, nets, chains or spears (with chains) and the other with a large shield to block the flames. One blocks the flames, the other throws crap at Glori until he is weighed down and can no longer fly. Once he's on the ground, just keep hacking at him.
Note: I assume your dwarves are actually masters of architecture and mining. Sure there might be hundreds of unknown tunnels, but your dwarves should know exactly what they have mined and which passage ways lead to where. No dwarf wants to be the one who accidentally brings down the entire kingdom by mining through a support wall and no dwarf wants to go out searching for gems only to end up at someone else search site or even worse lost. It might be confusing to us humans, but dwarves know their stuff.
6
+1 for Dwarf Fortress reference.
– Ian Kemp
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
35
down vote
From my experience with dwarf fortress, what you want to do is trap the dragon and use it as a source of FUN. Basically trap it and use it to terrorize prisoners and bad dwarfs.
Lava
The funnest way is to create a trap passage way. One roughly double the length of Glori and positioned so that if he wants to get access into the inner sanctum of your city, it is the easiest way through (aka block the other passages, or station them with a ton of guards to deter Glori from entering those ones). Once Glori enters the tunnel completely, you shut of both ends and open the trap holes in the ceiling. Pour some Molten Lava into the room, enough so that Glori will be left with just his head sticking out of the magma. Let it cool down and now take the dragon entrapped in solid stone out of the room and put it somewhere nice and view able. (If its really cold, you could do it with water and ice. But that would only temporarily contain Glori, which is more than enough time to deal with it).
Spike Traps
Another answer straight out of Dwarf Fortress, Spike traps. These are traps in the ground that when triggered cause up to 10 weapons to shoot up out of the ground (I say weapons because it let you throw in anything, but spears or pikes are what you realistically want). Force Glori to fly low by creating low tunnels or placing large metal pikes in the ceiling to force Glori closer to the ground. Once Glori passers over the spikes, he either triggers the spikes or your Dwarves trigger it, impaling his soft underside.
Build a Wall
As we all know, dwarves are master builders. Simple find the area Glori is in and seal it off. No one is as skilled as Dwarves in creating solid walls of rock and once they seal him off they can listen to the angry cries of Glori in peace.
Flood it all
Water is annoying and can be extremely powerful. Tap into an natural aquifer or water source and allow it to pour through your tunnels into the depths. Creating in it sealed off passage way which is sealed off from the main kingdom will allow you to quickly identify potential routes for Glori to get into your fortress. Find some water flowing in a tunnel? Seal it off. Of course, this might make Glori fly up even faster, but dwarven ingenuity is a double sided axe.
More traps
Okay, know these traps are big traps that take a long time to reset. Examples are the swinging blades from Game of Thrones. and The Boulder from Indiana Jones. Once you manage to lure Glori into the traps range, you activate it and pray to God it works. In this case, I suggest massive smithing hammers like those shown in The Hobbit, that the dwarves used to forge equipment. Put a dragon between those and they're dead. Otherwise, a convenient giant statue of a hammer or some massive stalactites should be enough to do the trick.
Standard Approach
There is no victory without sacrifice. Prepare your soldiers with shields and armor. Put spikes on them to deter Glori from biting them and hopefully focus on flames more. Pair your dwarves up, with one throwing bolas, nets, chains or spears (with chains) and the other with a large shield to block the flames. One blocks the flames, the other throws crap at Glori until he is weighed down and can no longer fly. Once he's on the ground, just keep hacking at him.
Note: I assume your dwarves are actually masters of architecture and mining. Sure there might be hundreds of unknown tunnels, but your dwarves should know exactly what they have mined and which passage ways lead to where. No dwarf wants to be the one who accidentally brings down the entire kingdom by mining through a support wall and no dwarf wants to go out searching for gems only to end up at someone else search site or even worse lost. It might be confusing to us humans, but dwarves know their stuff.
6
+1 for Dwarf Fortress reference.
– Ian Kemp
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
35
down vote
up vote
35
down vote
From my experience with dwarf fortress, what you want to do is trap the dragon and use it as a source of FUN. Basically trap it and use it to terrorize prisoners and bad dwarfs.
Lava
The funnest way is to create a trap passage way. One roughly double the length of Glori and positioned so that if he wants to get access into the inner sanctum of your city, it is the easiest way through (aka block the other passages, or station them with a ton of guards to deter Glori from entering those ones). Once Glori enters the tunnel completely, you shut of both ends and open the trap holes in the ceiling. Pour some Molten Lava into the room, enough so that Glori will be left with just his head sticking out of the magma. Let it cool down and now take the dragon entrapped in solid stone out of the room and put it somewhere nice and view able. (If its really cold, you could do it with water and ice. But that would only temporarily contain Glori, which is more than enough time to deal with it).
Spike Traps
Another answer straight out of Dwarf Fortress, Spike traps. These are traps in the ground that when triggered cause up to 10 weapons to shoot up out of the ground (I say weapons because it let you throw in anything, but spears or pikes are what you realistically want). Force Glori to fly low by creating low tunnels or placing large metal pikes in the ceiling to force Glori closer to the ground. Once Glori passers over the spikes, he either triggers the spikes or your Dwarves trigger it, impaling his soft underside.
Build a Wall
As we all know, dwarves are master builders. Simple find the area Glori is in and seal it off. No one is as skilled as Dwarves in creating solid walls of rock and once they seal him off they can listen to the angry cries of Glori in peace.
Flood it all
Water is annoying and can be extremely powerful. Tap into an natural aquifer or water source and allow it to pour through your tunnels into the depths. Creating in it sealed off passage way which is sealed off from the main kingdom will allow you to quickly identify potential routes for Glori to get into your fortress. Find some water flowing in a tunnel? Seal it off. Of course, this might make Glori fly up even faster, but dwarven ingenuity is a double sided axe.
More traps
Okay, know these traps are big traps that take a long time to reset. Examples are the swinging blades from Game of Thrones. and The Boulder from Indiana Jones. Once you manage to lure Glori into the traps range, you activate it and pray to God it works. In this case, I suggest massive smithing hammers like those shown in The Hobbit, that the dwarves used to forge equipment. Put a dragon between those and they're dead. Otherwise, a convenient giant statue of a hammer or some massive stalactites should be enough to do the trick.
Standard Approach
There is no victory without sacrifice. Prepare your soldiers with shields and armor. Put spikes on them to deter Glori from biting them and hopefully focus on flames more. Pair your dwarves up, with one throwing bolas, nets, chains or spears (with chains) and the other with a large shield to block the flames. One blocks the flames, the other throws crap at Glori until he is weighed down and can no longer fly. Once he's on the ground, just keep hacking at him.
Note: I assume your dwarves are actually masters of architecture and mining. Sure there might be hundreds of unknown tunnels, but your dwarves should know exactly what they have mined and which passage ways lead to where. No dwarf wants to be the one who accidentally brings down the entire kingdom by mining through a support wall and no dwarf wants to go out searching for gems only to end up at someone else search site or even worse lost. It might be confusing to us humans, but dwarves know their stuff.
From my experience with dwarf fortress, what you want to do is trap the dragon and use it as a source of FUN. Basically trap it and use it to terrorize prisoners and bad dwarfs.
Lava
The funnest way is to create a trap passage way. One roughly double the length of Glori and positioned so that if he wants to get access into the inner sanctum of your city, it is the easiest way through (aka block the other passages, or station them with a ton of guards to deter Glori from entering those ones). Once Glori enters the tunnel completely, you shut of both ends and open the trap holes in the ceiling. Pour some Molten Lava into the room, enough so that Glori will be left with just his head sticking out of the magma. Let it cool down and now take the dragon entrapped in solid stone out of the room and put it somewhere nice and view able. (If its really cold, you could do it with water and ice. But that would only temporarily contain Glori, which is more than enough time to deal with it).
Spike Traps
Another answer straight out of Dwarf Fortress, Spike traps. These are traps in the ground that when triggered cause up to 10 weapons to shoot up out of the ground (I say weapons because it let you throw in anything, but spears or pikes are what you realistically want). Force Glori to fly low by creating low tunnels or placing large metal pikes in the ceiling to force Glori closer to the ground. Once Glori passers over the spikes, he either triggers the spikes or your Dwarves trigger it, impaling his soft underside.
Build a Wall
As we all know, dwarves are master builders. Simple find the area Glori is in and seal it off. No one is as skilled as Dwarves in creating solid walls of rock and once they seal him off they can listen to the angry cries of Glori in peace.
Flood it all
Water is annoying and can be extremely powerful. Tap into an natural aquifer or water source and allow it to pour through your tunnels into the depths. Creating in it sealed off passage way which is sealed off from the main kingdom will allow you to quickly identify potential routes for Glori to get into your fortress. Find some water flowing in a tunnel? Seal it off. Of course, this might make Glori fly up even faster, but dwarven ingenuity is a double sided axe.
More traps
Okay, know these traps are big traps that take a long time to reset. Examples are the swinging blades from Game of Thrones. and The Boulder from Indiana Jones. Once you manage to lure Glori into the traps range, you activate it and pray to God it works. In this case, I suggest massive smithing hammers like those shown in The Hobbit, that the dwarves used to forge equipment. Put a dragon between those and they're dead. Otherwise, a convenient giant statue of a hammer or some massive stalactites should be enough to do the trick.
Standard Approach
There is no victory without sacrifice. Prepare your soldiers with shields and armor. Put spikes on them to deter Glori from biting them and hopefully focus on flames more. Pair your dwarves up, with one throwing bolas, nets, chains or spears (with chains) and the other with a large shield to block the flames. One blocks the flames, the other throws crap at Glori until he is weighed down and can no longer fly. Once he's on the ground, just keep hacking at him.
Note: I assume your dwarves are actually masters of architecture and mining. Sure there might be hundreds of unknown tunnels, but your dwarves should know exactly what they have mined and which passage ways lead to where. No dwarf wants to be the one who accidentally brings down the entire kingdom by mining through a support wall and no dwarf wants to go out searching for gems only to end up at someone else search site or even worse lost. It might be confusing to us humans, but dwarves know their stuff.
edited 2 days ago
Community♦
1
1
answered Nov 14 at 6:03
Shadowzee
6,324927
6,324927
6
+1 for Dwarf Fortress reference.
– Ian Kemp
2 days ago
add a comment |
6
+1 for Dwarf Fortress reference.
– Ian Kemp
2 days ago
6
6
+1 for Dwarf Fortress reference.
– Ian Kemp
2 days ago
+1 for Dwarf Fortress reference.
– Ian Kemp
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
Hit it in the voonerables
'Im sure a hero will turn up in time,' said Carrot. With some new sort weapon, or something. And strike at its voonerable spot.'
'What's one of them? Said Nobby
'A spot. Where it's voonerable. My grandad used to tell me stories. Hit a dragon in its voonerables, he said and you've killed it'
Lacking a hero with knowledge of the dragon's voonerables, you need to be a little more systematic about this.
First you need to stop Glori flying. The great advantage of dragons over dwarves is air superiority combined with ranged weaponry. Fill the space where a dragon could fly with obstacles. Ropes and chains, stacks of junk, anything to stop a dragon fully spreading its wings. Keep him uncomfortable.
Collapsing ceilings on corridors can act as traps or barriers, whether to keep a dragon in or out.
- How many tons of rubble can a dragon effectively push or dig through?
- How much of the mountain do you need to drop on its head to kill it?
After that it's all about small spaces that dwarves can attack from but a dragon can't attack into. Consider the length of the head for example:
- If you make a space in this shape, can the dragon insert its head in such a way as to attack this space effectively?
- If you make it this shape, does the dragon's jet of flame follow the corridor round and hit it in the side of its own head?
Remember dwarves are the great blacksmiths and miners of the world, there's nothing they don't know about both moving rock and handling fire. Creating traps such that if the dragon blows fire into the wrong place it ends up toasting its own ears will greatly limit its freedom of action.
Murder holes, but rather than murder holes in the ceiling as usual, put them in the floor so dwarves underneath are poking holes in the vulnerable underside of your dragon.
n.b. A dragon thousands of years old is likely to know that dragons don't get to live for thousands of years by flying into dwarven fortresses and taking them all on head on. I'd expect something much more subtle than a frontal assault from this old beast. Dragons are cunning and have the wisdom of age, people are foolish, beware infiltrators and traitors.
Where is that quote from?
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:17
6
@Scoots, Guards! Guards!, Pratchett.
– Separatrix
Nov 14 at 15:30
I knew I recognised it! Thanks for scratching that itch
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:47
14
Your last point is vitally important. Any dragon who leaves the safety of the skies and attempts a frontal assault against the Dwarves by wriggling down into their tunnels when they know he's coming is too stupid to live.
– DawnPaladin
Nov 14 at 18:39
1
Nevermind a flying dragon. Will a soldier crawl into a hole in the enemy trenches? That's just a quick way to get yourself killed.
– Nelson
2 days ago
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
17
down vote
Hit it in the voonerables
'Im sure a hero will turn up in time,' said Carrot. With some new sort weapon, or something. And strike at its voonerable spot.'
'What's one of them? Said Nobby
'A spot. Where it's voonerable. My grandad used to tell me stories. Hit a dragon in its voonerables, he said and you've killed it'
Lacking a hero with knowledge of the dragon's voonerables, you need to be a little more systematic about this.
First you need to stop Glori flying. The great advantage of dragons over dwarves is air superiority combined with ranged weaponry. Fill the space where a dragon could fly with obstacles. Ropes and chains, stacks of junk, anything to stop a dragon fully spreading its wings. Keep him uncomfortable.
Collapsing ceilings on corridors can act as traps or barriers, whether to keep a dragon in or out.
- How many tons of rubble can a dragon effectively push or dig through?
- How much of the mountain do you need to drop on its head to kill it?
After that it's all about small spaces that dwarves can attack from but a dragon can't attack into. Consider the length of the head for example:
- If you make a space in this shape, can the dragon insert its head in such a way as to attack this space effectively?
- If you make it this shape, does the dragon's jet of flame follow the corridor round and hit it in the side of its own head?
Remember dwarves are the great blacksmiths and miners of the world, there's nothing they don't know about both moving rock and handling fire. Creating traps such that if the dragon blows fire into the wrong place it ends up toasting its own ears will greatly limit its freedom of action.
Murder holes, but rather than murder holes in the ceiling as usual, put them in the floor so dwarves underneath are poking holes in the vulnerable underside of your dragon.
n.b. A dragon thousands of years old is likely to know that dragons don't get to live for thousands of years by flying into dwarven fortresses and taking them all on head on. I'd expect something much more subtle than a frontal assault from this old beast. Dragons are cunning and have the wisdom of age, people are foolish, beware infiltrators and traitors.
Where is that quote from?
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:17
6
@Scoots, Guards! Guards!, Pratchett.
– Separatrix
Nov 14 at 15:30
I knew I recognised it! Thanks for scratching that itch
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:47
14
Your last point is vitally important. Any dragon who leaves the safety of the skies and attempts a frontal assault against the Dwarves by wriggling down into their tunnels when they know he's coming is too stupid to live.
– DawnPaladin
Nov 14 at 18:39
1
Nevermind a flying dragon. Will a soldier crawl into a hole in the enemy trenches? That's just a quick way to get yourself killed.
– Nelson
2 days ago
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
17
down vote
up vote
17
down vote
Hit it in the voonerables
'Im sure a hero will turn up in time,' said Carrot. With some new sort weapon, or something. And strike at its voonerable spot.'
'What's one of them? Said Nobby
'A spot. Where it's voonerable. My grandad used to tell me stories. Hit a dragon in its voonerables, he said and you've killed it'
Lacking a hero with knowledge of the dragon's voonerables, you need to be a little more systematic about this.
First you need to stop Glori flying. The great advantage of dragons over dwarves is air superiority combined with ranged weaponry. Fill the space where a dragon could fly with obstacles. Ropes and chains, stacks of junk, anything to stop a dragon fully spreading its wings. Keep him uncomfortable.
Collapsing ceilings on corridors can act as traps or barriers, whether to keep a dragon in or out.
- How many tons of rubble can a dragon effectively push or dig through?
- How much of the mountain do you need to drop on its head to kill it?
After that it's all about small spaces that dwarves can attack from but a dragon can't attack into. Consider the length of the head for example:
- If you make a space in this shape, can the dragon insert its head in such a way as to attack this space effectively?
- If you make it this shape, does the dragon's jet of flame follow the corridor round and hit it in the side of its own head?
Remember dwarves are the great blacksmiths and miners of the world, there's nothing they don't know about both moving rock and handling fire. Creating traps such that if the dragon blows fire into the wrong place it ends up toasting its own ears will greatly limit its freedom of action.
Murder holes, but rather than murder holes in the ceiling as usual, put them in the floor so dwarves underneath are poking holes in the vulnerable underside of your dragon.
n.b. A dragon thousands of years old is likely to know that dragons don't get to live for thousands of years by flying into dwarven fortresses and taking them all on head on. I'd expect something much more subtle than a frontal assault from this old beast. Dragons are cunning and have the wisdom of age, people are foolish, beware infiltrators and traitors.
Hit it in the voonerables
'Im sure a hero will turn up in time,' said Carrot. With some new sort weapon, or something. And strike at its voonerable spot.'
'What's one of them? Said Nobby
'A spot. Where it's voonerable. My grandad used to tell me stories. Hit a dragon in its voonerables, he said and you've killed it'
Lacking a hero with knowledge of the dragon's voonerables, you need to be a little more systematic about this.
First you need to stop Glori flying. The great advantage of dragons over dwarves is air superiority combined with ranged weaponry. Fill the space where a dragon could fly with obstacles. Ropes and chains, stacks of junk, anything to stop a dragon fully spreading its wings. Keep him uncomfortable.
Collapsing ceilings on corridors can act as traps or barriers, whether to keep a dragon in or out.
- How many tons of rubble can a dragon effectively push or dig through?
- How much of the mountain do you need to drop on its head to kill it?
After that it's all about small spaces that dwarves can attack from but a dragon can't attack into. Consider the length of the head for example:
- If you make a space in this shape, can the dragon insert its head in such a way as to attack this space effectively?
- If you make it this shape, does the dragon's jet of flame follow the corridor round and hit it in the side of its own head?
Remember dwarves are the great blacksmiths and miners of the world, there's nothing they don't know about both moving rock and handling fire. Creating traps such that if the dragon blows fire into the wrong place it ends up toasting its own ears will greatly limit its freedom of action.
Murder holes, but rather than murder holes in the ceiling as usual, put them in the floor so dwarves underneath are poking holes in the vulnerable underside of your dragon.
n.b. A dragon thousands of years old is likely to know that dragons don't get to live for thousands of years by flying into dwarven fortresses and taking them all on head on. I'd expect something much more subtle than a frontal assault from this old beast. Dragons are cunning and have the wisdom of age, people are foolish, beware infiltrators and traitors.
edited Nov 14 at 12:36
answered Nov 14 at 10:45
Separatrix
72.6k30170286
72.6k30170286
Where is that quote from?
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:17
6
@Scoots, Guards! Guards!, Pratchett.
– Separatrix
Nov 14 at 15:30
I knew I recognised it! Thanks for scratching that itch
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:47
14
Your last point is vitally important. Any dragon who leaves the safety of the skies and attempts a frontal assault against the Dwarves by wriggling down into their tunnels when they know he's coming is too stupid to live.
– DawnPaladin
Nov 14 at 18:39
1
Nevermind a flying dragon. Will a soldier crawl into a hole in the enemy trenches? That's just a quick way to get yourself killed.
– Nelson
2 days ago
|
show 3 more comments
Where is that quote from?
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:17
6
@Scoots, Guards! Guards!, Pratchett.
– Separatrix
Nov 14 at 15:30
I knew I recognised it! Thanks for scratching that itch
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:47
14
Your last point is vitally important. Any dragon who leaves the safety of the skies and attempts a frontal assault against the Dwarves by wriggling down into their tunnels when they know he's coming is too stupid to live.
– DawnPaladin
Nov 14 at 18:39
1
Nevermind a flying dragon. Will a soldier crawl into a hole in the enemy trenches? That's just a quick way to get yourself killed.
– Nelson
2 days ago
Where is that quote from?
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:17
Where is that quote from?
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:17
6
6
@Scoots, Guards! Guards!, Pratchett.
– Separatrix
Nov 14 at 15:30
@Scoots, Guards! Guards!, Pratchett.
– Separatrix
Nov 14 at 15:30
I knew I recognised it! Thanks for scratching that itch
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:47
I knew I recognised it! Thanks for scratching that itch
– Scoots
Nov 14 at 15:47
14
14
Your last point is vitally important. Any dragon who leaves the safety of the skies and attempts a frontal assault against the Dwarves by wriggling down into their tunnels when they know he's coming is too stupid to live.
– DawnPaladin
Nov 14 at 18:39
Your last point is vitally important. Any dragon who leaves the safety of the skies and attempts a frontal assault against the Dwarves by wriggling down into their tunnels when they know he's coming is too stupid to live.
– DawnPaladin
Nov 14 at 18:39
1
1
Nevermind a flying dragon. Will a soldier crawl into a hole in the enemy trenches? That's just a quick way to get yourself killed.
– Nelson
2 days ago
Nevermind a flying dragon. Will a soldier crawl into a hole in the enemy trenches? That's just a quick way to get yourself killed.
– Nelson
2 days ago
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
10
down vote
Blow it up.
Dragons are big, but plenty of animals are big and still get killed. The distinguishing feature of a dragon is flame. A dragon doesn't win by being big, it wins by shock and awe, and because flamethrowers are spectacularly effective at room-clearing.
The problem for a dragon underground is that its opponents are in control of the air supply. And whilst it has a flame-proof mouth, it is not explosion-proof.
Firedamp is a major problem in mines. Usually you want to let the ventilation systems dissipate it cleanly. But if you know you've got a dragon coming, smart miners might store it. When you hit a pocket, you might simply seal up that part of the mine temporarily, with a gas-tight cover. Repeat until you have a whole bunch of sealed-up areas filled with firedamp, with ropes attached to the gas-tight covers. For bonus points you could leave open an access door around that area, kind of hidden but not very well, so you know where the dragon will be entering. Once the dragon's in there, shut the outer doors and use the ropes to open up all the pockets of firedamp. Then just wait for the bang.
For more technologically-advanced dwarves, this can be taken to new levels. Their mines will most likely have forced-air ventilation. If they have some knowledge of chemistry, they could easily pump methane or other explosive gases through the ventilation system. Again, wait for the bang.
And even more amusingly, you could have it burn itself up. Whilst a dragon's mouth and guts may be flame-proof, they're only proof against burning in atmospheric levels of oxygen. Pumping high levels of oxygen down the ventilation system will ensure that anything which burns will do so in spectacular fashion. The Fire Triangle means you don't need to supply extra fuel if the dragon's already supplied its own; all you need is extra oxygen.
2
Upvoted for pumping in high levels of oxygen. Under ludicrously high levels of oxygen (such as a partial pressure of 1 ATM), things burn that don't normally burn -- see the Apollo 1 fire. Any fire-breathing creature under such conditions would burn itself up.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
A grandiose solution, but it would wreck the underground kingdom if they are not very careful indeed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
If I remember correctly, firedamp exists only in coal mines. The Dwarven Fortresses I've seen are in mountains (real stone, building-quality). Coal has low compression strength, is flammable, coal mine fires tend to produce a lot of carbon monoxide which is much more dangerous than carbon dioxide, ... On the other hand, as dwarves would have ready access to coal, they could use it to create enclosed pockets of water gas (pre-mixed with air they would have the effect of a fuel-air bomb). The shockwave of an explosion would shatter the insides of a dragon/drake
– Calin Ceteras
yesterday
@CalinCeteras Not just coal mines. I've recently visited Blist Hill museum in Shropshire, and apparently it was a major problem in the clay mines there too. Clay is impermeable, so if there's a fossil fuel reserve somewhere underneath, the clay will trap the gas (which is exactly what gas drilling in places like the North Sea is looking for - firedamp is natural gas). You don't need to specifically be digging for fossil fuels; they just have to be around somewhere.
– Graham
yesterday
1
@RedSonja OTOH if you get the dragon into the mines then you've got free demolition on the next bit of mine shaft. And food for the whole tribe for the next week too, once you've cleared the rocks away. (Dragon probably tastes of chicken; everything else scaly seems to.)
– Graham
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
10
down vote
Blow it up.
Dragons are big, but plenty of animals are big and still get killed. The distinguishing feature of a dragon is flame. A dragon doesn't win by being big, it wins by shock and awe, and because flamethrowers are spectacularly effective at room-clearing.
The problem for a dragon underground is that its opponents are in control of the air supply. And whilst it has a flame-proof mouth, it is not explosion-proof.
Firedamp is a major problem in mines. Usually you want to let the ventilation systems dissipate it cleanly. But if you know you've got a dragon coming, smart miners might store it. When you hit a pocket, you might simply seal up that part of the mine temporarily, with a gas-tight cover. Repeat until you have a whole bunch of sealed-up areas filled with firedamp, with ropes attached to the gas-tight covers. For bonus points you could leave open an access door around that area, kind of hidden but not very well, so you know where the dragon will be entering. Once the dragon's in there, shut the outer doors and use the ropes to open up all the pockets of firedamp. Then just wait for the bang.
For more technologically-advanced dwarves, this can be taken to new levels. Their mines will most likely have forced-air ventilation. If they have some knowledge of chemistry, they could easily pump methane or other explosive gases through the ventilation system. Again, wait for the bang.
And even more amusingly, you could have it burn itself up. Whilst a dragon's mouth and guts may be flame-proof, they're only proof against burning in atmospheric levels of oxygen. Pumping high levels of oxygen down the ventilation system will ensure that anything which burns will do so in spectacular fashion. The Fire Triangle means you don't need to supply extra fuel if the dragon's already supplied its own; all you need is extra oxygen.
2
Upvoted for pumping in high levels of oxygen. Under ludicrously high levels of oxygen (such as a partial pressure of 1 ATM), things burn that don't normally burn -- see the Apollo 1 fire. Any fire-breathing creature under such conditions would burn itself up.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
A grandiose solution, but it would wreck the underground kingdom if they are not very careful indeed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
If I remember correctly, firedamp exists only in coal mines. The Dwarven Fortresses I've seen are in mountains (real stone, building-quality). Coal has low compression strength, is flammable, coal mine fires tend to produce a lot of carbon monoxide which is much more dangerous than carbon dioxide, ... On the other hand, as dwarves would have ready access to coal, they could use it to create enclosed pockets of water gas (pre-mixed with air they would have the effect of a fuel-air bomb). The shockwave of an explosion would shatter the insides of a dragon/drake
– Calin Ceteras
yesterday
@CalinCeteras Not just coal mines. I've recently visited Blist Hill museum in Shropshire, and apparently it was a major problem in the clay mines there too. Clay is impermeable, so if there's a fossil fuel reserve somewhere underneath, the clay will trap the gas (which is exactly what gas drilling in places like the North Sea is looking for - firedamp is natural gas). You don't need to specifically be digging for fossil fuels; they just have to be around somewhere.
– Graham
yesterday
1
@RedSonja OTOH if you get the dragon into the mines then you've got free demolition on the next bit of mine shaft. And food for the whole tribe for the next week too, once you've cleared the rocks away. (Dragon probably tastes of chicken; everything else scaly seems to.)
– Graham
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
10
down vote
up vote
10
down vote
Blow it up.
Dragons are big, but plenty of animals are big and still get killed. The distinguishing feature of a dragon is flame. A dragon doesn't win by being big, it wins by shock and awe, and because flamethrowers are spectacularly effective at room-clearing.
The problem for a dragon underground is that its opponents are in control of the air supply. And whilst it has a flame-proof mouth, it is not explosion-proof.
Firedamp is a major problem in mines. Usually you want to let the ventilation systems dissipate it cleanly. But if you know you've got a dragon coming, smart miners might store it. When you hit a pocket, you might simply seal up that part of the mine temporarily, with a gas-tight cover. Repeat until you have a whole bunch of sealed-up areas filled with firedamp, with ropes attached to the gas-tight covers. For bonus points you could leave open an access door around that area, kind of hidden but not very well, so you know where the dragon will be entering. Once the dragon's in there, shut the outer doors and use the ropes to open up all the pockets of firedamp. Then just wait for the bang.
For more technologically-advanced dwarves, this can be taken to new levels. Their mines will most likely have forced-air ventilation. If they have some knowledge of chemistry, they could easily pump methane or other explosive gases through the ventilation system. Again, wait for the bang.
And even more amusingly, you could have it burn itself up. Whilst a dragon's mouth and guts may be flame-proof, they're only proof against burning in atmospheric levels of oxygen. Pumping high levels of oxygen down the ventilation system will ensure that anything which burns will do so in spectacular fashion. The Fire Triangle means you don't need to supply extra fuel if the dragon's already supplied its own; all you need is extra oxygen.
Blow it up.
Dragons are big, but plenty of animals are big and still get killed. The distinguishing feature of a dragon is flame. A dragon doesn't win by being big, it wins by shock and awe, and because flamethrowers are spectacularly effective at room-clearing.
The problem for a dragon underground is that its opponents are in control of the air supply. And whilst it has a flame-proof mouth, it is not explosion-proof.
Firedamp is a major problem in mines. Usually you want to let the ventilation systems dissipate it cleanly. But if you know you've got a dragon coming, smart miners might store it. When you hit a pocket, you might simply seal up that part of the mine temporarily, with a gas-tight cover. Repeat until you have a whole bunch of sealed-up areas filled with firedamp, with ropes attached to the gas-tight covers. For bonus points you could leave open an access door around that area, kind of hidden but not very well, so you know where the dragon will be entering. Once the dragon's in there, shut the outer doors and use the ropes to open up all the pockets of firedamp. Then just wait for the bang.
For more technologically-advanced dwarves, this can be taken to new levels. Their mines will most likely have forced-air ventilation. If they have some knowledge of chemistry, they could easily pump methane or other explosive gases through the ventilation system. Again, wait for the bang.
And even more amusingly, you could have it burn itself up. Whilst a dragon's mouth and guts may be flame-proof, they're only proof against burning in atmospheric levels of oxygen. Pumping high levels of oxygen down the ventilation system will ensure that anything which burns will do so in spectacular fashion. The Fire Triangle means you don't need to supply extra fuel if the dragon's already supplied its own; all you need is extra oxygen.
edited Nov 14 at 16:40
answered Nov 14 at 14:50
Graham
10.2k1252
10.2k1252
2
Upvoted for pumping in high levels of oxygen. Under ludicrously high levels of oxygen (such as a partial pressure of 1 ATM), things burn that don't normally burn -- see the Apollo 1 fire. Any fire-breathing creature under such conditions would burn itself up.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
A grandiose solution, but it would wreck the underground kingdom if they are not very careful indeed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
If I remember correctly, firedamp exists only in coal mines. The Dwarven Fortresses I've seen are in mountains (real stone, building-quality). Coal has low compression strength, is flammable, coal mine fires tend to produce a lot of carbon monoxide which is much more dangerous than carbon dioxide, ... On the other hand, as dwarves would have ready access to coal, they could use it to create enclosed pockets of water gas (pre-mixed with air they would have the effect of a fuel-air bomb). The shockwave of an explosion would shatter the insides of a dragon/drake
– Calin Ceteras
yesterday
@CalinCeteras Not just coal mines. I've recently visited Blist Hill museum in Shropshire, and apparently it was a major problem in the clay mines there too. Clay is impermeable, so if there's a fossil fuel reserve somewhere underneath, the clay will trap the gas (which is exactly what gas drilling in places like the North Sea is looking for - firedamp is natural gas). You don't need to specifically be digging for fossil fuels; they just have to be around somewhere.
– Graham
yesterday
1
@RedSonja OTOH if you get the dragon into the mines then you've got free demolition on the next bit of mine shaft. And food for the whole tribe for the next week too, once you've cleared the rocks away. (Dragon probably tastes of chicken; everything else scaly seems to.)
– Graham
yesterday
add a comment |
2
Upvoted for pumping in high levels of oxygen. Under ludicrously high levels of oxygen (such as a partial pressure of 1 ATM), things burn that don't normally burn -- see the Apollo 1 fire. Any fire-breathing creature under such conditions would burn itself up.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
A grandiose solution, but it would wreck the underground kingdom if they are not very careful indeed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
If I remember correctly, firedamp exists only in coal mines. The Dwarven Fortresses I've seen are in mountains (real stone, building-quality). Coal has low compression strength, is flammable, coal mine fires tend to produce a lot of carbon monoxide which is much more dangerous than carbon dioxide, ... On the other hand, as dwarves would have ready access to coal, they could use it to create enclosed pockets of water gas (pre-mixed with air they would have the effect of a fuel-air bomb). The shockwave of an explosion would shatter the insides of a dragon/drake
– Calin Ceteras
yesterday
@CalinCeteras Not just coal mines. I've recently visited Blist Hill museum in Shropshire, and apparently it was a major problem in the clay mines there too. Clay is impermeable, so if there's a fossil fuel reserve somewhere underneath, the clay will trap the gas (which is exactly what gas drilling in places like the North Sea is looking for - firedamp is natural gas). You don't need to specifically be digging for fossil fuels; they just have to be around somewhere.
– Graham
yesterday
1
@RedSonja OTOH if you get the dragon into the mines then you've got free demolition on the next bit of mine shaft. And food for the whole tribe for the next week too, once you've cleared the rocks away. (Dragon probably tastes of chicken; everything else scaly seems to.)
– Graham
yesterday
2
2
Upvoted for pumping in high levels of oxygen. Under ludicrously high levels of oxygen (such as a partial pressure of 1 ATM), things burn that don't normally burn -- see the Apollo 1 fire. Any fire-breathing creature under such conditions would burn itself up.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
Upvoted for pumping in high levels of oxygen. Under ludicrously high levels of oxygen (such as a partial pressure of 1 ATM), things burn that don't normally burn -- see the Apollo 1 fire. Any fire-breathing creature under such conditions would burn itself up.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
A grandiose solution, but it would wreck the underground kingdom if they are not very careful indeed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
A grandiose solution, but it would wreck the underground kingdom if they are not very careful indeed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
If I remember correctly, firedamp exists only in coal mines. The Dwarven Fortresses I've seen are in mountains (real stone, building-quality). Coal has low compression strength, is flammable, coal mine fires tend to produce a lot of carbon monoxide which is much more dangerous than carbon dioxide, ... On the other hand, as dwarves would have ready access to coal, they could use it to create enclosed pockets of water gas (pre-mixed with air they would have the effect of a fuel-air bomb). The shockwave of an explosion would shatter the insides of a dragon/drake
– Calin Ceteras
yesterday
If I remember correctly, firedamp exists only in coal mines. The Dwarven Fortresses I've seen are in mountains (real stone, building-quality). Coal has low compression strength, is flammable, coal mine fires tend to produce a lot of carbon monoxide which is much more dangerous than carbon dioxide, ... On the other hand, as dwarves would have ready access to coal, they could use it to create enclosed pockets of water gas (pre-mixed with air they would have the effect of a fuel-air bomb). The shockwave of an explosion would shatter the insides of a dragon/drake
– Calin Ceteras
yesterday
@CalinCeteras Not just coal mines. I've recently visited Blist Hill museum in Shropshire, and apparently it was a major problem in the clay mines there too. Clay is impermeable, so if there's a fossil fuel reserve somewhere underneath, the clay will trap the gas (which is exactly what gas drilling in places like the North Sea is looking for - firedamp is natural gas). You don't need to specifically be digging for fossil fuels; they just have to be around somewhere.
– Graham
yesterday
@CalinCeteras Not just coal mines. I've recently visited Blist Hill museum in Shropshire, and apparently it was a major problem in the clay mines there too. Clay is impermeable, so if there's a fossil fuel reserve somewhere underneath, the clay will trap the gas (which is exactly what gas drilling in places like the North Sea is looking for - firedamp is natural gas). You don't need to specifically be digging for fossil fuels; they just have to be around somewhere.
– Graham
yesterday
1
1
@RedSonja OTOH if you get the dragon into the mines then you've got free demolition on the next bit of mine shaft. And food for the whole tribe for the next week too, once you've cleared the rocks away. (Dragon probably tastes of chicken; everything else scaly seems to.)
– Graham
yesterday
@RedSonja OTOH if you get the dragon into the mines then you've got free demolition on the next bit of mine shaft. And food for the whole tribe for the next week too, once you've cleared the rocks away. (Dragon probably tastes of chicken; everything else scaly seems to.)
– Graham
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
Greatest disadvantage for Glori is that he is alone. As such, multiple methods may be implemented against him.
- Any known straight tunnel may be closed from both ends trapping it effectively without chance for diversion.
Given the doors hold against it, the chamber's ventilation the may be sealed to kill Glori by suffocation. - Drapes of chain may be hung from open spaces to hinder flying, diverting its path as needed.
- Flying exposes the underside of Glori, giving dwarves chance to turn it to a pin cushion, given dwarves use bows or crossbows.
These methods may result in massive losses for the dwarves while attempting to manipulate the Drake, but the siege itself will ultimately fail.
New contributor
5
A dwarven bow has the shape, mechanism and weight of a throwing axe. So not exactly pin cushion.
– Oxy
Nov 14 at 9:16
@Oxy I was imagining the ceiling height to be beyond a thrown axe's range. But if it is, a rain of guts and bile...egh.
– optimisticOrca
Nov 14 at 10:37
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
Greatest disadvantage for Glori is that he is alone. As such, multiple methods may be implemented against him.
- Any known straight tunnel may be closed from both ends trapping it effectively without chance for diversion.
Given the doors hold against it, the chamber's ventilation the may be sealed to kill Glori by suffocation. - Drapes of chain may be hung from open spaces to hinder flying, diverting its path as needed.
- Flying exposes the underside of Glori, giving dwarves chance to turn it to a pin cushion, given dwarves use bows or crossbows.
These methods may result in massive losses for the dwarves while attempting to manipulate the Drake, but the siege itself will ultimately fail.
New contributor
5
A dwarven bow has the shape, mechanism and weight of a throwing axe. So not exactly pin cushion.
– Oxy
Nov 14 at 9:16
@Oxy I was imagining the ceiling height to be beyond a thrown axe's range. But if it is, a rain of guts and bile...egh.
– optimisticOrca
Nov 14 at 10:37
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
up vote
9
down vote
Greatest disadvantage for Glori is that he is alone. As such, multiple methods may be implemented against him.
- Any known straight tunnel may be closed from both ends trapping it effectively without chance for diversion.
Given the doors hold against it, the chamber's ventilation the may be sealed to kill Glori by suffocation. - Drapes of chain may be hung from open spaces to hinder flying, diverting its path as needed.
- Flying exposes the underside of Glori, giving dwarves chance to turn it to a pin cushion, given dwarves use bows or crossbows.
These methods may result in massive losses for the dwarves while attempting to manipulate the Drake, but the siege itself will ultimately fail.
New contributor
Greatest disadvantage for Glori is that he is alone. As such, multiple methods may be implemented against him.
- Any known straight tunnel may be closed from both ends trapping it effectively without chance for diversion.
Given the doors hold against it, the chamber's ventilation the may be sealed to kill Glori by suffocation. - Drapes of chain may be hung from open spaces to hinder flying, diverting its path as needed.
- Flying exposes the underside of Glori, giving dwarves chance to turn it to a pin cushion, given dwarves use bows or crossbows.
These methods may result in massive losses for the dwarves while attempting to manipulate the Drake, but the siege itself will ultimately fail.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Nov 14 at 5:25
optimisticOrca
4016
4016
New contributor
New contributor
5
A dwarven bow has the shape, mechanism and weight of a throwing axe. So not exactly pin cushion.
– Oxy
Nov 14 at 9:16
@Oxy I was imagining the ceiling height to be beyond a thrown axe's range. But if it is, a rain of guts and bile...egh.
– optimisticOrca
Nov 14 at 10:37
add a comment |
5
A dwarven bow has the shape, mechanism and weight of a throwing axe. So not exactly pin cushion.
– Oxy
Nov 14 at 9:16
@Oxy I was imagining the ceiling height to be beyond a thrown axe's range. But if it is, a rain of guts and bile...egh.
– optimisticOrca
Nov 14 at 10:37
5
5
A dwarven bow has the shape, mechanism and weight of a throwing axe. So not exactly pin cushion.
– Oxy
Nov 14 at 9:16
A dwarven bow has the shape, mechanism and weight of a throwing axe. So not exactly pin cushion.
– Oxy
Nov 14 at 9:16
@Oxy I was imagining the ceiling height to be beyond a thrown axe's range. But if it is, a rain of guts and bile...egh.
– optimisticOrca
Nov 14 at 10:37
@Oxy I was imagining the ceiling height to be beyond a thrown axe's range. But if it is, a rain of guts and bile...egh.
– optimisticOrca
Nov 14 at 10:37
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
Why defend? By all means, make sure he comes, tell everybody about your treasures if nothing else helps. Having an endless source of fire in your city is what every dwarf dreams of. Never have to light coals and pull the bellow again if you feel like smithing. Cold winter? Fancy a hot bath? No need to collect fire wood.
Now the only tricky part about it all is keeping him. Dragons are not well-known for being amused by providing free fire or by their general courtesy, for that matter.
Thus, the bait treasure needs to be placed where there is only a single point of access, and the passage needs to be able to be barred with fireproof (sliding rock wall 2-3 meters thick?) doors. Something like the seal-off mechanism in pyramids as seen famously portrayed in the 1955 movie "Land of Pharaohs", only maybe closing the passage a tidbit faster.
You will likely want a couple of small (too small for a dragon) vents going to the smithy (or city warm water facilities) near the front so you can harvest the fire. And, of course, an opening somewhere at the rear so you can pull the dragon's tail or poke him with a pointy stick when you need fire and he doesn't feel like exhaling.
3
An excellent solution to the immediate problem. This answer needs to resolve the long term issue as described by Audrey II: "Feed me!" It takes a lot of protein and carbs to sustain the dragon.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
1
@CodeswithHammer: I wouldn't suggest to feed the dragon. Experience from human babies shows that what you fill in at one end comes out slightly modified at the other end. Who is going to clean that up! Not me! If the dragon starves, no problem, there's more where that one came from. Though seeing how dragons often sleep on their hoard for a couple of hundred years (without eating!) and still have a belly full of fire ready whenever an adventurer comes along, I'd not worry too much about it being an immediate problem. It'll be fine :-)
– Damon
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
Why defend? By all means, make sure he comes, tell everybody about your treasures if nothing else helps. Having an endless source of fire in your city is what every dwarf dreams of. Never have to light coals and pull the bellow again if you feel like smithing. Cold winter? Fancy a hot bath? No need to collect fire wood.
Now the only tricky part about it all is keeping him. Dragons are not well-known for being amused by providing free fire or by their general courtesy, for that matter.
Thus, the bait treasure needs to be placed where there is only a single point of access, and the passage needs to be able to be barred with fireproof (sliding rock wall 2-3 meters thick?) doors. Something like the seal-off mechanism in pyramids as seen famously portrayed in the 1955 movie "Land of Pharaohs", only maybe closing the passage a tidbit faster.
You will likely want a couple of small (too small for a dragon) vents going to the smithy (or city warm water facilities) near the front so you can harvest the fire. And, of course, an opening somewhere at the rear so you can pull the dragon's tail or poke him with a pointy stick when you need fire and he doesn't feel like exhaling.
3
An excellent solution to the immediate problem. This answer needs to resolve the long term issue as described by Audrey II: "Feed me!" It takes a lot of protein and carbs to sustain the dragon.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
1
@CodeswithHammer: I wouldn't suggest to feed the dragon. Experience from human babies shows that what you fill in at one end comes out slightly modified at the other end. Who is going to clean that up! Not me! If the dragon starves, no problem, there's more where that one came from. Though seeing how dragons often sleep on their hoard for a couple of hundred years (without eating!) and still have a belly full of fire ready whenever an adventurer comes along, I'd not worry too much about it being an immediate problem. It'll be fine :-)
– Damon
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
up vote
9
down vote
Why defend? By all means, make sure he comes, tell everybody about your treasures if nothing else helps. Having an endless source of fire in your city is what every dwarf dreams of. Never have to light coals and pull the bellow again if you feel like smithing. Cold winter? Fancy a hot bath? No need to collect fire wood.
Now the only tricky part about it all is keeping him. Dragons are not well-known for being amused by providing free fire or by their general courtesy, for that matter.
Thus, the bait treasure needs to be placed where there is only a single point of access, and the passage needs to be able to be barred with fireproof (sliding rock wall 2-3 meters thick?) doors. Something like the seal-off mechanism in pyramids as seen famously portrayed in the 1955 movie "Land of Pharaohs", only maybe closing the passage a tidbit faster.
You will likely want a couple of small (too small for a dragon) vents going to the smithy (or city warm water facilities) near the front so you can harvest the fire. And, of course, an opening somewhere at the rear so you can pull the dragon's tail or poke him with a pointy stick when you need fire and he doesn't feel like exhaling.
Why defend? By all means, make sure he comes, tell everybody about your treasures if nothing else helps. Having an endless source of fire in your city is what every dwarf dreams of. Never have to light coals and pull the bellow again if you feel like smithing. Cold winter? Fancy a hot bath? No need to collect fire wood.
Now the only tricky part about it all is keeping him. Dragons are not well-known for being amused by providing free fire or by their general courtesy, for that matter.
Thus, the bait treasure needs to be placed where there is only a single point of access, and the passage needs to be able to be barred with fireproof (sliding rock wall 2-3 meters thick?) doors. Something like the seal-off mechanism in pyramids as seen famously portrayed in the 1955 movie "Land of Pharaohs", only maybe closing the passage a tidbit faster.
You will likely want a couple of small (too small for a dragon) vents going to the smithy (or city warm water facilities) near the front so you can harvest the fire. And, of course, an opening somewhere at the rear so you can pull the dragon's tail or poke him with a pointy stick when you need fire and he doesn't feel like exhaling.
answered Nov 14 at 15:41
Damon
2,13248
2,13248
3
An excellent solution to the immediate problem. This answer needs to resolve the long term issue as described by Audrey II: "Feed me!" It takes a lot of protein and carbs to sustain the dragon.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
1
@CodeswithHammer: I wouldn't suggest to feed the dragon. Experience from human babies shows that what you fill in at one end comes out slightly modified at the other end. Who is going to clean that up! Not me! If the dragon starves, no problem, there's more where that one came from. Though seeing how dragons often sleep on their hoard for a couple of hundred years (without eating!) and still have a belly full of fire ready whenever an adventurer comes along, I'd not worry too much about it being an immediate problem. It'll be fine :-)
– Damon
yesterday
add a comment |
3
An excellent solution to the immediate problem. This answer needs to resolve the long term issue as described by Audrey II: "Feed me!" It takes a lot of protein and carbs to sustain the dragon.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
1
@CodeswithHammer: I wouldn't suggest to feed the dragon. Experience from human babies shows that what you fill in at one end comes out slightly modified at the other end. Who is going to clean that up! Not me! If the dragon starves, no problem, there's more where that one came from. Though seeing how dragons often sleep on their hoard for a couple of hundred years (without eating!) and still have a belly full of fire ready whenever an adventurer comes along, I'd not worry too much about it being an immediate problem. It'll be fine :-)
– Damon
yesterday
3
3
An excellent solution to the immediate problem. This answer needs to resolve the long term issue as described by Audrey II: "Feed me!" It takes a lot of protein and carbs to sustain the dragon.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
An excellent solution to the immediate problem. This answer needs to resolve the long term issue as described by Audrey II: "Feed me!" It takes a lot of protein and carbs to sustain the dragon.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
1
1
@CodeswithHammer: I wouldn't suggest to feed the dragon. Experience from human babies shows that what you fill in at one end comes out slightly modified at the other end. Who is going to clean that up! Not me! If the dragon starves, no problem, there's more where that one came from. Though seeing how dragons often sleep on their hoard for a couple of hundred years (without eating!) and still have a belly full of fire ready whenever an adventurer comes along, I'd not worry too much about it being an immediate problem. It'll be fine :-)
– Damon
yesterday
@CodeswithHammer: I wouldn't suggest to feed the dragon. Experience from human babies shows that what you fill in at one end comes out slightly modified at the other end. Who is going to clean that up! Not me! If the dragon starves, no problem, there's more where that one came from. Though seeing how dragons often sleep on their hoard for a couple of hundred years (without eating!) and still have a belly full of fire ready whenever an adventurer comes along, I'd not worry too much about it being an immediate problem. It'll be fine :-)
– Damon
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since...
We all know where this trope goes.
The dwarven army will never defeat the dragon by itself. They may not be ninjas, but they are still affected by the inverse ninja law:
The inverse ninja law is a media trope regarding not only ninjas, but any character type that is shown to attack in massed numbers, such as soldiers, robots, daleks, or vampires (but not zombies). It states that the threat level of any number of ninjas or other whatsits is inversely proportionate to their numbers. Therefore, if you're attacked by a lone ninja, you're in trouble, but if you meet an army of ninjas, they're going down.
What they really need is an adventurer who will be more glad to defeat Trog Dor Glori just for glory, gold, fame, or a combination of these. In the very least the gold and magical items ar disposal of the dwarves should be plenty. It's just a matter of establishing compensatiom for the hero services.
If not a single hero, then a party of player characters adventurers can bring in a mix of talents that a bunch of nameless NPC's the dwarven forces lack, thus presenting a greater threat to the dragon.
1
Made me chuckle +1
– IT Alex
Nov 14 at 13:08
I almost downvoted due to a known exception to the inverse ninja law: An academic once faced a lone Dalek, and won. Still, the exception tests the general rule, so the answer remains valid. This time.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since...
We all know where this trope goes.
The dwarven army will never defeat the dragon by itself. They may not be ninjas, but they are still affected by the inverse ninja law:
The inverse ninja law is a media trope regarding not only ninjas, but any character type that is shown to attack in massed numbers, such as soldiers, robots, daleks, or vampires (but not zombies). It states that the threat level of any number of ninjas or other whatsits is inversely proportionate to their numbers. Therefore, if you're attacked by a lone ninja, you're in trouble, but if you meet an army of ninjas, they're going down.
What they really need is an adventurer who will be more glad to defeat Trog Dor Glori just for glory, gold, fame, or a combination of these. In the very least the gold and magical items ar disposal of the dwarves should be plenty. It's just a matter of establishing compensatiom for the hero services.
If not a single hero, then a party of player characters adventurers can bring in a mix of talents that a bunch of nameless NPC's the dwarven forces lack, thus presenting a greater threat to the dragon.
1
Made me chuckle +1
– IT Alex
Nov 14 at 13:08
I almost downvoted due to a known exception to the inverse ninja law: An academic once faced a lone Dalek, and won. Still, the exception tests the general rule, so the answer remains valid. This time.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
up vote
7
down vote
The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since...
We all know where this trope goes.
The dwarven army will never defeat the dragon by itself. They may not be ninjas, but they are still affected by the inverse ninja law:
The inverse ninja law is a media trope regarding not only ninjas, but any character type that is shown to attack in massed numbers, such as soldiers, robots, daleks, or vampires (but not zombies). It states that the threat level of any number of ninjas or other whatsits is inversely proportionate to their numbers. Therefore, if you're attacked by a lone ninja, you're in trouble, but if you meet an army of ninjas, they're going down.
What they really need is an adventurer who will be more glad to defeat Trog Dor Glori just for glory, gold, fame, or a combination of these. In the very least the gold and magical items ar disposal of the dwarves should be plenty. It's just a matter of establishing compensatiom for the hero services.
If not a single hero, then a party of player characters adventurers can bring in a mix of talents that a bunch of nameless NPC's the dwarven forces lack, thus presenting a greater threat to the dragon.
The Kingdom of the Dwarves has been rich and prosperous since...
We all know where this trope goes.
The dwarven army will never defeat the dragon by itself. They may not be ninjas, but they are still affected by the inverse ninja law:
The inverse ninja law is a media trope regarding not only ninjas, but any character type that is shown to attack in massed numbers, such as soldiers, robots, daleks, or vampires (but not zombies). It states that the threat level of any number of ninjas or other whatsits is inversely proportionate to their numbers. Therefore, if you're attacked by a lone ninja, you're in trouble, but if you meet an army of ninjas, they're going down.
What they really need is an adventurer who will be more glad to defeat Trog Dor Glori just for glory, gold, fame, or a combination of these. In the very least the gold and magical items ar disposal of the dwarves should be plenty. It's just a matter of establishing compensatiom for the hero services.
If not a single hero, then a party of player characters adventurers can bring in a mix of talents that a bunch of nameless NPC's the dwarven forces lack, thus presenting a greater threat to the dragon.
answered Nov 14 at 10:22
Renan
38.8k1188195
38.8k1188195
1
Made me chuckle +1
– IT Alex
Nov 14 at 13:08
I almost downvoted due to a known exception to the inverse ninja law: An academic once faced a lone Dalek, and won. Still, the exception tests the general rule, so the answer remains valid. This time.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
add a comment |
1
Made me chuckle +1
– IT Alex
Nov 14 at 13:08
I almost downvoted due to a known exception to the inverse ninja law: An academic once faced a lone Dalek, and won. Still, the exception tests the general rule, so the answer remains valid. This time.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
1
1
Made me chuckle +1
– IT Alex
Nov 14 at 13:08
Made me chuckle +1
– IT Alex
Nov 14 at 13:08
I almost downvoted due to a known exception to the inverse ninja law: An academic once faced a lone Dalek, and won. Still, the exception tests the general rule, so the answer remains valid. This time.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
I almost downvoted due to a known exception to the inverse ninja law: An academic once faced a lone Dalek, and won. Still, the exception tests the general rule, so the answer remains valid. This time.
– Codes with Hammer
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
These dwarves have had warfare before as evidenced by the presence of a military. Unlike a castle where you fill open space with stone, dwarves fill stone with open space to build their fortifications. This means you control every entrance the enemy has and what the entrance looks like, and the dwarves will have made use of this. I am assuming the dwarves have very little time to prepare as the dragon will travel faster than the news of its possible destinations, so only ad-hoc defenses or defenses that would be expected against "normal" armies.
Entrances might be wide avenues for the trade and traffic to go through, but the surrounding area can be hewn any way you want.
The walls lined with arrow slits for (X)bowmen to Use? Check
"small" artillery like Ballista's to shoot any enemy siege engines like a rolling wood&metal arrow shelter? Check. Hey this would fit well against a dragon
Murder holes in the ceiling where things can be dropped from, like chlorine gas (heavier than air) to suffocate, boiling water, tar, burning oil or molten lava/metal if not normal darts, arrows, small rocks or boulders big enough to crush any siege engine (or dragon) driving through it? Check.
a tunnel below the entrance where fire can be lit and holes in the floors where the smoke can rise through to reduce vision and suffocate the enemy? Check. The tunnel could also be used for a bunch of spearmen to stand below and stab upwards of luckless enemies walking over.
A slightly slanted floor with giant metal balls at one end to crush anyone trying to move up the entrance? Check. Alternatively the entrance can be sloped downwards and the balls are released from the ceiling of the entrance, possibly rolling across the walls from the sides so the balls can more easily be collected and repositioned.
Large contraptions designed to kill. If these dwarves are the more technical kind that use massive contraptions to haul ore up, use elevators or similar tricks you can power killingtools with them as well. A giant blade that comes from a slit in the wall and cuts a squad through could be a boon against a dragon
Designed collapses to bury enemies.
The standard tricks of the trade from chokepoints to ambushes and whatnot.
Though we have all seen that molten gold does not kill a dragon. It makes it very annoyed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
These dwarves have had warfare before as evidenced by the presence of a military. Unlike a castle where you fill open space with stone, dwarves fill stone with open space to build their fortifications. This means you control every entrance the enemy has and what the entrance looks like, and the dwarves will have made use of this. I am assuming the dwarves have very little time to prepare as the dragon will travel faster than the news of its possible destinations, so only ad-hoc defenses or defenses that would be expected against "normal" armies.
Entrances might be wide avenues for the trade and traffic to go through, but the surrounding area can be hewn any way you want.
The walls lined with arrow slits for (X)bowmen to Use? Check
"small" artillery like Ballista's to shoot any enemy siege engines like a rolling wood&metal arrow shelter? Check. Hey this would fit well against a dragon
Murder holes in the ceiling where things can be dropped from, like chlorine gas (heavier than air) to suffocate, boiling water, tar, burning oil or molten lava/metal if not normal darts, arrows, small rocks or boulders big enough to crush any siege engine (or dragon) driving through it? Check.
a tunnel below the entrance where fire can be lit and holes in the floors where the smoke can rise through to reduce vision and suffocate the enemy? Check. The tunnel could also be used for a bunch of spearmen to stand below and stab upwards of luckless enemies walking over.
A slightly slanted floor with giant metal balls at one end to crush anyone trying to move up the entrance? Check. Alternatively the entrance can be sloped downwards and the balls are released from the ceiling of the entrance, possibly rolling across the walls from the sides so the balls can more easily be collected and repositioned.
Large contraptions designed to kill. If these dwarves are the more technical kind that use massive contraptions to haul ore up, use elevators or similar tricks you can power killingtools with them as well. A giant blade that comes from a slit in the wall and cuts a squad through could be a boon against a dragon
Designed collapses to bury enemies.
The standard tricks of the trade from chokepoints to ambushes and whatnot.
Though we have all seen that molten gold does not kill a dragon. It makes it very annoyed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
These dwarves have had warfare before as evidenced by the presence of a military. Unlike a castle where you fill open space with stone, dwarves fill stone with open space to build their fortifications. This means you control every entrance the enemy has and what the entrance looks like, and the dwarves will have made use of this. I am assuming the dwarves have very little time to prepare as the dragon will travel faster than the news of its possible destinations, so only ad-hoc defenses or defenses that would be expected against "normal" armies.
Entrances might be wide avenues for the trade and traffic to go through, but the surrounding area can be hewn any way you want.
The walls lined with arrow slits for (X)bowmen to Use? Check
"small" artillery like Ballista's to shoot any enemy siege engines like a rolling wood&metal arrow shelter? Check. Hey this would fit well against a dragon
Murder holes in the ceiling where things can be dropped from, like chlorine gas (heavier than air) to suffocate, boiling water, tar, burning oil or molten lava/metal if not normal darts, arrows, small rocks or boulders big enough to crush any siege engine (or dragon) driving through it? Check.
a tunnel below the entrance where fire can be lit and holes in the floors where the smoke can rise through to reduce vision and suffocate the enemy? Check. The tunnel could also be used for a bunch of spearmen to stand below and stab upwards of luckless enemies walking over.
A slightly slanted floor with giant metal balls at one end to crush anyone trying to move up the entrance? Check. Alternatively the entrance can be sloped downwards and the balls are released from the ceiling of the entrance, possibly rolling across the walls from the sides so the balls can more easily be collected and repositioned.
Large contraptions designed to kill. If these dwarves are the more technical kind that use massive contraptions to haul ore up, use elevators or similar tricks you can power killingtools with them as well. A giant blade that comes from a slit in the wall and cuts a squad through could be a boon against a dragon
Designed collapses to bury enemies.
The standard tricks of the trade from chokepoints to ambushes and whatnot.
These dwarves have had warfare before as evidenced by the presence of a military. Unlike a castle where you fill open space with stone, dwarves fill stone with open space to build their fortifications. This means you control every entrance the enemy has and what the entrance looks like, and the dwarves will have made use of this. I am assuming the dwarves have very little time to prepare as the dragon will travel faster than the news of its possible destinations, so only ad-hoc defenses or defenses that would be expected against "normal" armies.
Entrances might be wide avenues for the trade and traffic to go through, but the surrounding area can be hewn any way you want.
The walls lined with arrow slits for (X)bowmen to Use? Check
"small" artillery like Ballista's to shoot any enemy siege engines like a rolling wood&metal arrow shelter? Check. Hey this would fit well against a dragon
Murder holes in the ceiling where things can be dropped from, like chlorine gas (heavier than air) to suffocate, boiling water, tar, burning oil or molten lava/metal if not normal darts, arrows, small rocks or boulders big enough to crush any siege engine (or dragon) driving through it? Check.
a tunnel below the entrance where fire can be lit and holes in the floors where the smoke can rise through to reduce vision and suffocate the enemy? Check. The tunnel could also be used for a bunch of spearmen to stand below and stab upwards of luckless enemies walking over.
A slightly slanted floor with giant metal balls at one end to crush anyone trying to move up the entrance? Check. Alternatively the entrance can be sloped downwards and the balls are released from the ceiling of the entrance, possibly rolling across the walls from the sides so the balls can more easily be collected and repositioned.
Large contraptions designed to kill. If these dwarves are the more technical kind that use massive contraptions to haul ore up, use elevators or similar tricks you can power killingtools with them as well. A giant blade that comes from a slit in the wall and cuts a squad through could be a boon against a dragon
Designed collapses to bury enemies.
The standard tricks of the trade from chokepoints to ambushes and whatnot.
edited Nov 14 at 19:59
answered Nov 14 at 6:53
Demigan
6,1591432
6,1591432
Though we have all seen that molten gold does not kill a dragon. It makes it very annoyed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
add a comment |
Though we have all seen that molten gold does not kill a dragon. It makes it very annoyed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
Though we have all seen that molten gold does not kill a dragon. It makes it very annoyed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
Though we have all seen that molten gold does not kill a dragon. It makes it very annoyed.
– RedSonja
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Here are some tactics:
Trap the dragon. Have chambers and tunnels that can be sealed so that the dragon cannot get out. Put murder-holes in the bottoms of the trap-tunnels, to attack the dragon's underbelly with spears.
The dwarves keep, or hire, large mongeese or ferrets to hunt down giant snakes in their tunnels.
The dwarves snuff out the dragon's flame. Perhaps they use giant bellows to pump out all the air from a portion of the city. Or perhaps they use backfires to use up the oxygen.
Flood the chamber that the dragon is in.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Here are some tactics:
Trap the dragon. Have chambers and tunnels that can be sealed so that the dragon cannot get out. Put murder-holes in the bottoms of the trap-tunnels, to attack the dragon's underbelly with spears.
The dwarves keep, or hire, large mongeese or ferrets to hunt down giant snakes in their tunnels.
The dwarves snuff out the dragon's flame. Perhaps they use giant bellows to pump out all the air from a portion of the city. Or perhaps they use backfires to use up the oxygen.
Flood the chamber that the dragon is in.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
Here are some tactics:
Trap the dragon. Have chambers and tunnels that can be sealed so that the dragon cannot get out. Put murder-holes in the bottoms of the trap-tunnels, to attack the dragon's underbelly with spears.
The dwarves keep, or hire, large mongeese or ferrets to hunt down giant snakes in their tunnels.
The dwarves snuff out the dragon's flame. Perhaps they use giant bellows to pump out all the air from a portion of the city. Or perhaps they use backfires to use up the oxygen.
Flood the chamber that the dragon is in.
Here are some tactics:
Trap the dragon. Have chambers and tunnels that can be sealed so that the dragon cannot get out. Put murder-holes in the bottoms of the trap-tunnels, to attack the dragon's underbelly with spears.
The dwarves keep, or hire, large mongeese or ferrets to hunt down giant snakes in their tunnels.
The dwarves snuff out the dragon's flame. Perhaps they use giant bellows to pump out all the air from a portion of the city. Or perhaps they use backfires to use up the oxygen.
Flood the chamber that the dragon is in.
edited Nov 14 at 5:34
answered Nov 14 at 5:25
Jasper
2,7291024
2,7291024
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Use a Guillotine
Move all the treasure to one dead-end cavern. Leave all doors open in the rest of the system.
Block the treasure cave entrance with an important-looking locked door, made of wood.
Behind the door is a huge raised guillotine blade that is triggered by an automatic mechanism or by a few volunteers.
Evacuate the rest of the cave system to a nearby forest where the dwarves can camp until Glori is dead.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Use a Guillotine
Move all the treasure to one dead-end cavern. Leave all doors open in the rest of the system.
Block the treasure cave entrance with an important-looking locked door, made of wood.
Behind the door is a huge raised guillotine blade that is triggered by an automatic mechanism or by a few volunteers.
Evacuate the rest of the cave system to a nearby forest where the dwarves can camp until Glori is dead.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
Use a Guillotine
Move all the treasure to one dead-end cavern. Leave all doors open in the rest of the system.
Block the treasure cave entrance with an important-looking locked door, made of wood.
Behind the door is a huge raised guillotine blade that is triggered by an automatic mechanism or by a few volunteers.
Evacuate the rest of the cave system to a nearby forest where the dwarves can camp until Glori is dead.
Use a Guillotine
Move all the treasure to one dead-end cavern. Leave all doors open in the rest of the system.
Block the treasure cave entrance with an important-looking locked door, made of wood.
Behind the door is a huge raised guillotine blade that is triggered by an automatic mechanism or by a few volunteers.
Evacuate the rest of the cave system to a nearby forest where the dwarves can camp until Glori is dead.
answered Nov 14 at 13:53
chasly from UK
6,15022862
6,15022862
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Mr Miyagi's best defense: No be there.
Fake city.
Inspiration: the antitheft trick where you have a wallet with $42, a photo of Zsa Zsa Gabor and some useless cards. When the robber demands your wallet or the pickpocket snakes it, that is the wallet they get. Your real wallet is deeper, in a fake interior front pocket.
Glori has heard rumors, but she has never been to the City Under the Mountain. The apparent entrance to the city leads to a City Under the Mountain, OK - a halfassed city but actually not even half - a great room with some 4th rate treasure, a couple of buildings and tunnels, and that is it. Glori will not be surprised that the dwarves all run away when she shows up. She might be disappointed that the city is not all it was cracked up to be, but she understands how legends work. She is content - it is nice enough, and she took it fair and square. She will curl up on the mound of gilded lead and brass (which is arranged in a surprisingly comfortable way!) and go to sleep.
Those with a discerning eye who explore the halfassed fake city will note that the sculptures decorating the interior lack the decorum one expects in actual civic artwork. Dwarven civic sculpture usually depicts individuals fully dressed and facing forward. Glori does not have a discerning eye for dwarven sculpture.
4
Dwarves are master's at crafting right, who is to say the "practice city" and "practice jewellery" while they are learning isn't already a high quality treasure for the rest of the world. Dwarves don't recycle, there is more mining to be done. so the dragons happily guarding their trash bin. ( "they even keep bringing me offerings")
– J.Doe
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Mr Miyagi's best defense: No be there.
Fake city.
Inspiration: the antitheft trick where you have a wallet with $42, a photo of Zsa Zsa Gabor and some useless cards. When the robber demands your wallet or the pickpocket snakes it, that is the wallet they get. Your real wallet is deeper, in a fake interior front pocket.
Glori has heard rumors, but she has never been to the City Under the Mountain. The apparent entrance to the city leads to a City Under the Mountain, OK - a halfassed city but actually not even half - a great room with some 4th rate treasure, a couple of buildings and tunnels, and that is it. Glori will not be surprised that the dwarves all run away when she shows up. She might be disappointed that the city is not all it was cracked up to be, but she understands how legends work. She is content - it is nice enough, and she took it fair and square. She will curl up on the mound of gilded lead and brass (which is arranged in a surprisingly comfortable way!) and go to sleep.
Those with a discerning eye who explore the halfassed fake city will note that the sculptures decorating the interior lack the decorum one expects in actual civic artwork. Dwarven civic sculpture usually depicts individuals fully dressed and facing forward. Glori does not have a discerning eye for dwarven sculpture.
4
Dwarves are master's at crafting right, who is to say the "practice city" and "practice jewellery" while they are learning isn't already a high quality treasure for the rest of the world. Dwarves don't recycle, there is more mining to be done. so the dragons happily guarding their trash bin. ( "they even keep bringing me offerings")
– J.Doe
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
Mr Miyagi's best defense: No be there.
Fake city.
Inspiration: the antitheft trick where you have a wallet with $42, a photo of Zsa Zsa Gabor and some useless cards. When the robber demands your wallet or the pickpocket snakes it, that is the wallet they get. Your real wallet is deeper, in a fake interior front pocket.
Glori has heard rumors, but she has never been to the City Under the Mountain. The apparent entrance to the city leads to a City Under the Mountain, OK - a halfassed city but actually not even half - a great room with some 4th rate treasure, a couple of buildings and tunnels, and that is it. Glori will not be surprised that the dwarves all run away when she shows up. She might be disappointed that the city is not all it was cracked up to be, but she understands how legends work. She is content - it is nice enough, and she took it fair and square. She will curl up on the mound of gilded lead and brass (which is arranged in a surprisingly comfortable way!) and go to sleep.
Those with a discerning eye who explore the halfassed fake city will note that the sculptures decorating the interior lack the decorum one expects in actual civic artwork. Dwarven civic sculpture usually depicts individuals fully dressed and facing forward. Glori does not have a discerning eye for dwarven sculpture.
Mr Miyagi's best defense: No be there.
Fake city.
Inspiration: the antitheft trick where you have a wallet with $42, a photo of Zsa Zsa Gabor and some useless cards. When the robber demands your wallet or the pickpocket snakes it, that is the wallet they get. Your real wallet is deeper, in a fake interior front pocket.
Glori has heard rumors, but she has never been to the City Under the Mountain. The apparent entrance to the city leads to a City Under the Mountain, OK - a halfassed city but actually not even half - a great room with some 4th rate treasure, a couple of buildings and tunnels, and that is it. Glori will not be surprised that the dwarves all run away when she shows up. She might be disappointed that the city is not all it was cracked up to be, but she understands how legends work. She is content - it is nice enough, and she took it fair and square. She will curl up on the mound of gilded lead and brass (which is arranged in a surprisingly comfortable way!) and go to sleep.
Those with a discerning eye who explore the halfassed fake city will note that the sculptures decorating the interior lack the decorum one expects in actual civic artwork. Dwarven civic sculpture usually depicts individuals fully dressed and facing forward. Glori does not have a discerning eye for dwarven sculpture.
answered Nov 14 at 18:54
Willk
96.7k25187409
96.7k25187409
4
Dwarves are master's at crafting right, who is to say the "practice city" and "practice jewellery" while they are learning isn't already a high quality treasure for the rest of the world. Dwarves don't recycle, there is more mining to be done. so the dragons happily guarding their trash bin. ( "they even keep bringing me offerings")
– J.Doe
2 days ago
add a comment |
4
Dwarves are master's at crafting right, who is to say the "practice city" and "practice jewellery" while they are learning isn't already a high quality treasure for the rest of the world. Dwarves don't recycle, there is more mining to be done. so the dragons happily guarding their trash bin. ( "they even keep bringing me offerings")
– J.Doe
2 days ago
4
4
Dwarves are master's at crafting right, who is to say the "practice city" and "practice jewellery" while they are learning isn't already a high quality treasure for the rest of the world. Dwarves don't recycle, there is more mining to be done. so the dragons happily guarding their trash bin. ( "they even keep bringing me offerings")
– J.Doe
2 days ago
Dwarves are master's at crafting right, who is to say the "practice city" and "practice jewellery" while they are learning isn't already a high quality treasure for the rest of the world. Dwarves don't recycle, there is more mining to be done. so the dragons happily guarding their trash bin. ( "they even keep bringing me offerings")
– J.Doe
2 days ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
One of the critical factors in defending against Glori and his ilk is going to be the presence and availability of weaponry that can hinder or injure him. While enough sturdy armoured Dwarves may be able able to swarm and crush him under sheer weight of numbers, doing so against a fire breathing foe in cramped tunnel conditions is going to get real ugly, real fast.
Small portable siege engines, such as the Ballista or Scorpio may be able to pack enough punch to penetrate the thick draken scales. These could be set up at choke points in the tunnels, as well as key locations in the city itself to provide cover against an airborne fore.
Fortifications could be designed to be more resistant against a fire-breathing enemy, with armoured hatches over arrow slits and doorways
Traps could be set at likely locations in the old tunnels. A skilled stonemason could even set a trap such as an ordinary dwarf could walk through unharmed, but any creature the size and weight of a drake would cause a cave-in, burying the beast under tonnes of rubble and stone.
2
Make a shortcut entrance tunnel with dodgy supports. The dwarves, being natural miners, will avoid the tunnel like the plague. When the dragon enters it will invariably knock out the supports and drop the mountain on itself. Dwarves can then mine the tunnel out again and wait for the next mobile gem vein to come to them.
– Joe Bloggs
Nov 14 at 7:58
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
One of the critical factors in defending against Glori and his ilk is going to be the presence and availability of weaponry that can hinder or injure him. While enough sturdy armoured Dwarves may be able able to swarm and crush him under sheer weight of numbers, doing so against a fire breathing foe in cramped tunnel conditions is going to get real ugly, real fast.
Small portable siege engines, such as the Ballista or Scorpio may be able to pack enough punch to penetrate the thick draken scales. These could be set up at choke points in the tunnels, as well as key locations in the city itself to provide cover against an airborne fore.
Fortifications could be designed to be more resistant against a fire-breathing enemy, with armoured hatches over arrow slits and doorways
Traps could be set at likely locations in the old tunnels. A skilled stonemason could even set a trap such as an ordinary dwarf could walk through unharmed, but any creature the size and weight of a drake would cause a cave-in, burying the beast under tonnes of rubble and stone.
2
Make a shortcut entrance tunnel with dodgy supports. The dwarves, being natural miners, will avoid the tunnel like the plague. When the dragon enters it will invariably knock out the supports and drop the mountain on itself. Dwarves can then mine the tunnel out again and wait for the next mobile gem vein to come to them.
– Joe Bloggs
Nov 14 at 7:58
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
One of the critical factors in defending against Glori and his ilk is going to be the presence and availability of weaponry that can hinder or injure him. While enough sturdy armoured Dwarves may be able able to swarm and crush him under sheer weight of numbers, doing so against a fire breathing foe in cramped tunnel conditions is going to get real ugly, real fast.
Small portable siege engines, such as the Ballista or Scorpio may be able to pack enough punch to penetrate the thick draken scales. These could be set up at choke points in the tunnels, as well as key locations in the city itself to provide cover against an airborne fore.
Fortifications could be designed to be more resistant against a fire-breathing enemy, with armoured hatches over arrow slits and doorways
Traps could be set at likely locations in the old tunnels. A skilled stonemason could even set a trap such as an ordinary dwarf could walk through unharmed, but any creature the size and weight of a drake would cause a cave-in, burying the beast under tonnes of rubble and stone.
One of the critical factors in defending against Glori and his ilk is going to be the presence and availability of weaponry that can hinder or injure him. While enough sturdy armoured Dwarves may be able able to swarm and crush him under sheer weight of numbers, doing so against a fire breathing foe in cramped tunnel conditions is going to get real ugly, real fast.
Small portable siege engines, such as the Ballista or Scorpio may be able to pack enough punch to penetrate the thick draken scales. These could be set up at choke points in the tunnels, as well as key locations in the city itself to provide cover against an airborne fore.
Fortifications could be designed to be more resistant against a fire-breathing enemy, with armoured hatches over arrow slits and doorways
Traps could be set at likely locations in the old tunnels. A skilled stonemason could even set a trap such as an ordinary dwarf could walk through unharmed, but any creature the size and weight of a drake would cause a cave-in, burying the beast under tonnes of rubble and stone.
answered Nov 14 at 6:06
Chromane
3,189425
3,189425
2
Make a shortcut entrance tunnel with dodgy supports. The dwarves, being natural miners, will avoid the tunnel like the plague. When the dragon enters it will invariably knock out the supports and drop the mountain on itself. Dwarves can then mine the tunnel out again and wait for the next mobile gem vein to come to them.
– Joe Bloggs
Nov 14 at 7:58
add a comment |
2
Make a shortcut entrance tunnel with dodgy supports. The dwarves, being natural miners, will avoid the tunnel like the plague. When the dragon enters it will invariably knock out the supports and drop the mountain on itself. Dwarves can then mine the tunnel out again and wait for the next mobile gem vein to come to them.
– Joe Bloggs
Nov 14 at 7:58
2
2
Make a shortcut entrance tunnel with dodgy supports. The dwarves, being natural miners, will avoid the tunnel like the plague. When the dragon enters it will invariably knock out the supports and drop the mountain on itself. Dwarves can then mine the tunnel out again and wait for the next mobile gem vein to come to them.
– Joe Bloggs
Nov 14 at 7:58
Make a shortcut entrance tunnel with dodgy supports. The dwarves, being natural miners, will avoid the tunnel like the plague. When the dragon enters it will invariably knock out the supports and drop the mountain on itself. Dwarves can then mine the tunnel out again and wait for the next mobile gem vein to come to them.
– Joe Bloggs
Nov 14 at 7:58
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
I find it wrong that this question assumes that Glori would implicitly have higher hand. To me, there are too many variables to determine who would win and what tactics would be superior.
The most important part is preparation. Both sides's level of praparedness can range from voefuly unpreprated to crazy prepared.
If Glori is not stupid, he would spend lot of time and resources to prepare for his assault. He could gather information on layout and traps of the fortress by either stealing or buying blueprints or capturing or bribing dwarves. He would hire adventurers or mercenaries to help him in the assault. He would have equipment made to protect his weak spots. He would send spies to sabotage traps or open gates at the right time. If he was really rich, he could bribe nearby (Elven) kingdom to declare war on the Dwarves and lure their army out of the fortress. If he was patient, the whole thing could be done over many years, as he has plenty of time.
If Glori was trully intelligent and patient, he wouldn't attack the fortress at all. He would go there not as and enemy, but as a friend. The dwarves would be suspicious of him at first. But over many years, he would make effort to be seen as friend and good thing for the fortress. He would get acquinted by the nobility of the dwarves. He would slowly influence the events of the fotress as to gain more influence and make dwarven nobility be seen as incompetent and corrupt. He would take control of the military and treasury. And in the end, it will be the dwarf peasants themselves who would rather have him as a King and not some corrupt, incompetent Dwarf.
tl;dr; Glori ran Palpatine on the dwarves.
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
I find it wrong that this question assumes that Glori would implicitly have higher hand. To me, there are too many variables to determine who would win and what tactics would be superior.
The most important part is preparation. Both sides's level of praparedness can range from voefuly unpreprated to crazy prepared.
If Glori is not stupid, he would spend lot of time and resources to prepare for his assault. He could gather information on layout and traps of the fortress by either stealing or buying blueprints or capturing or bribing dwarves. He would hire adventurers or mercenaries to help him in the assault. He would have equipment made to protect his weak spots. He would send spies to sabotage traps or open gates at the right time. If he was really rich, he could bribe nearby (Elven) kingdom to declare war on the Dwarves and lure their army out of the fortress. If he was patient, the whole thing could be done over many years, as he has plenty of time.
If Glori was trully intelligent and patient, he wouldn't attack the fortress at all. He would go there not as and enemy, but as a friend. The dwarves would be suspicious of him at first. But over many years, he would make effort to be seen as friend and good thing for the fortress. He would get acquinted by the nobility of the dwarves. He would slowly influence the events of the fotress as to gain more influence and make dwarven nobility be seen as incompetent and corrupt. He would take control of the military and treasury. And in the end, it will be the dwarf peasants themselves who would rather have him as a King and not some corrupt, incompetent Dwarf.
tl;dr; Glori ran Palpatine on the dwarves.
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
I find it wrong that this question assumes that Glori would implicitly have higher hand. To me, there are too many variables to determine who would win and what tactics would be superior.
The most important part is preparation. Both sides's level of praparedness can range from voefuly unpreprated to crazy prepared.
If Glori is not stupid, he would spend lot of time and resources to prepare for his assault. He could gather information on layout and traps of the fortress by either stealing or buying blueprints or capturing or bribing dwarves. He would hire adventurers or mercenaries to help him in the assault. He would have equipment made to protect his weak spots. He would send spies to sabotage traps or open gates at the right time. If he was really rich, he could bribe nearby (Elven) kingdom to declare war on the Dwarves and lure their army out of the fortress. If he was patient, the whole thing could be done over many years, as he has plenty of time.
If Glori was trully intelligent and patient, he wouldn't attack the fortress at all. He would go there not as and enemy, but as a friend. The dwarves would be suspicious of him at first. But over many years, he would make effort to be seen as friend and good thing for the fortress. He would get acquinted by the nobility of the dwarves. He would slowly influence the events of the fotress as to gain more influence and make dwarven nobility be seen as incompetent and corrupt. He would take control of the military and treasury. And in the end, it will be the dwarf peasants themselves who would rather have him as a King and not some corrupt, incompetent Dwarf.
tl;dr; Glori ran Palpatine on the dwarves.
I find it wrong that this question assumes that Glori would implicitly have higher hand. To me, there are too many variables to determine who would win and what tactics would be superior.
The most important part is preparation. Both sides's level of praparedness can range from voefuly unpreprated to crazy prepared.
If Glori is not stupid, he would spend lot of time and resources to prepare for his assault. He could gather information on layout and traps of the fortress by either stealing or buying blueprints or capturing or bribing dwarves. He would hire adventurers or mercenaries to help him in the assault. He would have equipment made to protect his weak spots. He would send spies to sabotage traps or open gates at the right time. If he was really rich, he could bribe nearby (Elven) kingdom to declare war on the Dwarves and lure their army out of the fortress. If he was patient, the whole thing could be done over many years, as he has plenty of time.
If Glori was trully intelligent and patient, he wouldn't attack the fortress at all. He would go there not as and enemy, but as a friend. The dwarves would be suspicious of him at first. But over many years, he would make effort to be seen as friend and good thing for the fortress. He would get acquinted by the nobility of the dwarves. He would slowly influence the events of the fotress as to gain more influence and make dwarven nobility be seen as incompetent and corrupt. He would take control of the military and treasury. And in the end, it will be the dwarf peasants themselves who would rather have him as a King and not some corrupt, incompetent Dwarf.
tl;dr; Glori ran Palpatine on the dwarves.
answered 2 days ago
Euphoric
2,191816
2,191816
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Rock is fireproof, if you get the right type. The dwarves don't know every way into their mining complex but they should know all the access ways into their active areas, where they live and process ore and other materials, and they certainly will know all the routes to their treasure vault(s). They should start by telling the drake exactly how to get to their treasure, then rig a "choke route" tunnel, one that the drake has to take no matter how they enter the complex, with a sheath of Mica, which is extremely fire resistant, and thick slabs of the same at each end that can be dropped in to block the tunnel off. Then they can trap Glori as she attempts to get to the vault and let her starve. They could also coat the mica in something that's toxic when burned to speed up the process if Glori tries to burn her way out.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Rock is fireproof, if you get the right type. The dwarves don't know every way into their mining complex but they should know all the access ways into their active areas, where they live and process ore and other materials, and they certainly will know all the routes to their treasure vault(s). They should start by telling the drake exactly how to get to their treasure, then rig a "choke route" tunnel, one that the drake has to take no matter how they enter the complex, with a sheath of Mica, which is extremely fire resistant, and thick slabs of the same at each end that can be dropped in to block the tunnel off. Then they can trap Glori as she attempts to get to the vault and let her starve. They could also coat the mica in something that's toxic when burned to speed up the process if Glori tries to burn her way out.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
Rock is fireproof, if you get the right type. The dwarves don't know every way into their mining complex but they should know all the access ways into their active areas, where they live and process ore and other materials, and they certainly will know all the routes to their treasure vault(s). They should start by telling the drake exactly how to get to their treasure, then rig a "choke route" tunnel, one that the drake has to take no matter how they enter the complex, with a sheath of Mica, which is extremely fire resistant, and thick slabs of the same at each end that can be dropped in to block the tunnel off. Then they can trap Glori as she attempts to get to the vault and let her starve. They could also coat the mica in something that's toxic when burned to speed up the process if Glori tries to burn her way out.
Rock is fireproof, if you get the right type. The dwarves don't know every way into their mining complex but they should know all the access ways into their active areas, where they live and process ore and other materials, and they certainly will know all the routes to their treasure vault(s). They should start by telling the drake exactly how to get to their treasure, then rig a "choke route" tunnel, one that the drake has to take no matter how they enter the complex, with a sheath of Mica, which is extremely fire resistant, and thick slabs of the same at each end that can be dropped in to block the tunnel off. Then they can trap Glori as she attempts to get to the vault and let her starve. They could also coat the mica in something that's toxic when burned to speed up the process if Glori tries to burn her way out.
answered Nov 14 at 10:45
Ash
25.6k465142
25.6k465142
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Crush it
The dwarves are masters of stonework and construction, it is likely they will have ways to strategically cut off enemy approach by collapsing tunnels.
Even if a cave in doesn't kill Glori, it could trap her giving the dwarves a change to attack the prone drake, or prepare larger weapons and defences.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Crush it
The dwarves are masters of stonework and construction, it is likely they will have ways to strategically cut off enemy approach by collapsing tunnels.
Even if a cave in doesn't kill Glori, it could trap her giving the dwarves a change to attack the prone drake, or prepare larger weapons and defences.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
Crush it
The dwarves are masters of stonework and construction, it is likely they will have ways to strategically cut off enemy approach by collapsing tunnels.
Even if a cave in doesn't kill Glori, it could trap her giving the dwarves a change to attack the prone drake, or prepare larger weapons and defences.
Crush it
The dwarves are masters of stonework and construction, it is likely they will have ways to strategically cut off enemy approach by collapsing tunnels.
Even if a cave in doesn't kill Glori, it could trap her giving the dwarves a change to attack the prone drake, or prepare larger weapons and defences.
answered Nov 14 at 14:59
John Palpatine
1315
1315
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The entrance should be small and narrow, and in the entrance there should be a hoistable wall and after that wall, yet another hoistable wall that cannot be hoisted before mentioned the first wall has been unhoisted.
I hope that makes sense.
EDIT:
I was imagining an entrance to the mountain carved to fit the size of 3-4 dwarves standing shoulder to shoulder and maybe the height of two dwarves on top of each other. Now this solution would only be to keep the dragon out of the mountain and would require two iron/metal walls, standing about 3-4 meters from one another. The idea is simply put the same as the doors to secure research facilities (or so I imagine) where the second door will not be able to open, before the first door is properly shut. This would provide more entrance security for the dwarves, but would also eliminate the threat from the dragon, since they are, as OP explained, very long and would therefore not be able to fit in the gap between the walls.
With the enginuity of the dwarves this solution should be feasible.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The entrance should be small and narrow, and in the entrance there should be a hoistable wall and after that wall, yet another hoistable wall that cannot be hoisted before mentioned the first wall has been unhoisted.
I hope that makes sense.
EDIT:
I was imagining an entrance to the mountain carved to fit the size of 3-4 dwarves standing shoulder to shoulder and maybe the height of two dwarves on top of each other. Now this solution would only be to keep the dragon out of the mountain and would require two iron/metal walls, standing about 3-4 meters from one another. The idea is simply put the same as the doors to secure research facilities (or so I imagine) where the second door will not be able to open, before the first door is properly shut. This would provide more entrance security for the dwarves, but would also eliminate the threat from the dragon, since they are, as OP explained, very long and would therefore not be able to fit in the gap between the walls.
With the enginuity of the dwarves this solution should be feasible.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
The entrance should be small and narrow, and in the entrance there should be a hoistable wall and after that wall, yet another hoistable wall that cannot be hoisted before mentioned the first wall has been unhoisted.
I hope that makes sense.
EDIT:
I was imagining an entrance to the mountain carved to fit the size of 3-4 dwarves standing shoulder to shoulder and maybe the height of two dwarves on top of each other. Now this solution would only be to keep the dragon out of the mountain and would require two iron/metal walls, standing about 3-4 meters from one another. The idea is simply put the same as the doors to secure research facilities (or so I imagine) where the second door will not be able to open, before the first door is properly shut. This would provide more entrance security for the dwarves, but would also eliminate the threat from the dragon, since they are, as OP explained, very long and would therefore not be able to fit in the gap between the walls.
With the enginuity of the dwarves this solution should be feasible.
New contributor
The entrance should be small and narrow, and in the entrance there should be a hoistable wall and after that wall, yet another hoistable wall that cannot be hoisted before mentioned the first wall has been unhoisted.
I hope that makes sense.
EDIT:
I was imagining an entrance to the mountain carved to fit the size of 3-4 dwarves standing shoulder to shoulder and maybe the height of two dwarves on top of each other. Now this solution would only be to keep the dragon out of the mountain and would require two iron/metal walls, standing about 3-4 meters from one another. The idea is simply put the same as the doors to secure research facilities (or so I imagine) where the second door will not be able to open, before the first door is properly shut. This would provide more entrance security for the dwarves, but would also eliminate the threat from the dragon, since they are, as OP explained, very long and would therefore not be able to fit in the gap between the walls.
With the enginuity of the dwarves this solution should be feasible.
New contributor
edited 2 days ago
New contributor
answered 2 days ago
SirTaphos
12
12
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
Are we talking prevention or is the drake already inside the mountain? If preventive, what's the time scale? If the drake is already inside, what tools do we have? Gunpowder? Ballistae? Hopefully, some medieval artillery? Do the dwarves know the drake's weaknesses? Any natural predators?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:43
6
@chaslyfromUK: Probably Smaug-level. It is customary!
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:44
4
How would cities be designed that were threatened by dragons? How would a city with high defences fare against airborne creatures? How could Medieval cultures defend themselves against dragons?
– nzaman
Nov 14 at 11:49
@nzaman - It's a long time since I read The Hobbit. I can't remember how bright Smaug was or if he was easily fooled.
– chasly from UK
Nov 14 at 11:57
3
@nzaman Medieval technology. The drake can get into the mountain, as mentioned. Also, the linked questions don't really deal with the underground aspect of the fight.
– kingledion
Nov 14 at 12:01