Faerie DragonLooks like the 'Dragon' section isn't over after all. Why is the faerie dragon is listed under 'F' and not under 'D'. I don't know. What I do know is that the faerie dragon despite being Chaotic Good.
Faerie dragons are cat-sized dragon with butterfly wings. They don't have one definitive colour but have different colours depending on their age category. Newborn faerie dragon are red and then work their way through the rainbow until they are violet.Faerie dragons are CR 1 or 2 depending on their age. They have superior invisibility (invisible until concentration ends) and an euphoria breath. Anyone hit by the breath has to make a DC 11 WIS save or become.
In this case, the victim rolls 1d6 at the beginning of each turn. 1 - 4 and it wanders into a random direction (e.g.

Off a cliff). 5 - 6 ad it's permitted another save to end the effect.In addition to that, the faerie dragon has a bunch of spells, most of them illusion-related and colourful ( Dancing Lights, Minor Illusion, Colour Spray, Hallucinatory Terrain).


It gains more spells when it ages. Faeire dragon still have the hoarding and collecting instinct of dragons can be bribed with sweets and other gifts.Bottom line: The faerie dragon is pretty cool.
I wish they would stop putting a bunch of spells in so many stats blocks, but at least the spells are thematically fitting. To be extremely pedantic about it, I'd say less Norse Mythology than Norwegian/Scandinavian folktales, wherein multi-headed trolls are very commonplace (also they tend to figure in tales in wich the hero ambushes them after first drinking a Potion of Strength and then using a giant-sized greatsword (stolen from the troll itself, no less), wich basically cleaves the troll's heads right off!).
Of course, at least back in 2e and thereabouts, there were multi-headed trolls as well in D&D (troll/ettin half-breeds.ain't that a nice image???).