Hi, there! I love kobolds (especially the ones from D&D 3.5). So your name is Akko? I like to use a table to form names with dice rolls that I found in the role-playing supplement Advanced Races: Kobolds. I love that table because it makes all the names that come out of it seem to have a coherence, it makes it feel like there is a kobold culture. With this table I can name the 40 kobolds which is usually the size of a typical tribe. One of the kobold characters that I most enjoyed having was a kobold Sorcerer, although quite focused on Strength and Constitution, quite proud of his kobold race, his name (Ano) came out of that table... which I find very funny, and I played that despite the meaning of that word in human languages, in the kobold language it is simply a name. Here I upload that table: https://www.deviantart.com/catmonkey1992/art/Tabla-ofic...
Hi, there! I love kobolds (especially the ones from D&D 3.5). So your name is Akko? I like to use a
I really recommend you look into the Advanced Races supplement. But I correct myself, DO NOT look for the one that is just for Kobolds, Advanced Races first published small magazines of 30 pages each with each race separately but later they made a compendium: Advanced Races: Compendium. I recommend that last one because it is in that one that they expanded more on the information for the kobolds, a lot of data such as the tables that the so-called main races have in the core manuals of D&D 3.5 and Pathfinder 1e: tables that define the minimum and maximum weight according to the gender, starting ages (Kobolds mature at 10 years old), aging effect (marking when the stages of maturation begin: average age: 20 years, old: 30 years, venerable: 40... and the longest a kobold can live if it is not killed first by a external factor is 60 years), even tables to define the coloration with which the kobold was born and the relationship between the color of the body and the eyes (with enough luck you can get a "mutant" kobold with heterochromia). The 30-page Advanced Races: Kobolds supplement has none of that really nice stuff I mentioned.
For all this, this supplement along with Races of the Dragon from D&D 3.5 are my favorite books ever and I consider them the most important, essential, for every kobold lover who really wants to get into kobolds, to understand what they are like, their culture and other characteristics (Races of the Dragon focuses more on lore and general culture and mentality, things about how tribes are organized (small tribes of up to 40 or 50 individuals are clans or colonies led by good warriors chosen as leaders or kobolds sorcerers but the truly special ones are winged kobolds which are the most important in kobold society and are designated as the "leaders of leaders" having under their command several tribes in a region, about 200 individuals)).
I really recommend you look into the Advanced Races supplement. But I correct myself, DO NOT look fo