The Dragon/Video Games


 * In Star Wars: The Force Unleashed, it is revealed that Darth Vader has been Palpatine's Dragon with an Agenda much earlier than the "I am Your Father" Scene in Episode V. Vader tries pulling off a similar speech to the young Starkiller, but proves unable to sway him.
 * In the "Dark Side" DLC available for some versions of the game, Starkiller actually becomes a Dragon with an Agenda appealing to Luke Skywalker.
 * Most Mortal Kombat games have a Dragon, although none are as iconic as Goro, who served as one for Shang Tsung in the very first game. MK2 had Kintaro, a Goro Expy. MK3 had a centaur named Motaro...
 * In addition, after being demoted from Big Bad after the first game, Shang Tsung is often the last opponent you'll fight before facing the Dragons, being in essence a combo of The Dragon and The Starscream to Shao Kahn.
 * Fallout has the Super Mutant Lieutenant being the Dragon to the Master. Also Morpheus is, more or less, the dragon to the Master, even though he is trying to imply they are partners.
 * Fallout 2 has Frank Horrigan, a secret service agent doped to the gills with FEV as the dragon for the president.
 * Oddly enough, none of the three dragons in Dragon Age are actually The Dragon. Though the High Dragon on the mountaintop has a Dragon in the form of the crazy axe-wielding cult leader, and Morrigan is arguably a Dragon with an Agenda to Flemeth.
 * Loghain has two Dragons, Arl Howe and Ser Cauthrien.
 * In Dragon Age II, Knight-Commander Meredith's is Knight-Captain Cullen. However.
 * In Fallout: New Vegas, there are lots of them. Most notably, Caesar's dragon is Legate Lanius. President of NCR Aaron Kimball has General Lee Oliver. The player could also become a dragon to either Mr. House, Caesar, or NCR command.
 * In Killzone 2, Mael Radec is this to Scolar Visari.
 * In the Street Fighter II series, Sagat was portrayed as M. Bison's right-hand man within Shadaloo. However, the later Street Fighter Alpha prequels established that Sagat wasn't really that close to Bison and only joined since Bison promised him he would fight Ryu again in a rematch. In Street Fighter Alpha 3, Balrog serves as M. Bison's main henchman, with Juni and Juli also fulfilling this role.
 * In Disgaea Hour of Darkness, the boss of the second chapter is Flonne, a little angel girl that can only heal the other enemies. However, she has a very strong enemy protecting her... and it's actually a dragon.
 * Aribeth is the Dragon for Maugrim, who is himself the Dragon for Morag in the original Neverwinter Nights campaign; and in Hordes of the Underdark Mephistopheles serves as the Dragon for the Valsharess (or maybe it is the other way around).
 * In League of Legends Talon is General Du Couteau's dragon, and though labeled a mercenary by the community, takes orders only from him.
 * Neverwinter Nights 2 has a couple. Lorne and Torio together serve as The Dragon to Garius, who is something of The Starscream, but then the King of Shadows uses Garius' plot to steal his power to turn the wizard into his own Dragon with the four Luskan mages serving with him being Garius' Dragons.
 * In Mask of the Betrayer, Kelemvor has his Voice, Myrkul sort of has you, and Akachi had/has three: the blue dragon, the demilich with delusions of grandeur, and the fallen angel.
 * serve as dragons for in Etrian Odyssey.
 * Also Colossus fits this role in Etrian Odyssey 2, since he's Overlord's guardian.
 * And in 3, Kujura serves as this to Armoroad's Princess Gutrune, while fills this role for the Deep City's King Seyfried.
 * In Knights of the Old Republic, Saul Karath is sort of the Dragon for Malak (and Malak used to be the Dragon for Revan). In the sequel, Traya has gone through three Dragons (Nihilus, Sion, and Atris), with Nihilus having his own Dragon (Visas).
 * However, Darth Bandon could actually be considered as a Dragon as he is is Malak's apperentice. Karath would than fit the role of The Evil Genius.
 * In Jade Empire, Oh, and there's also an actual dragon, but it's not The Dragon.
 * The Ravager serves as Kai Lan's dragon, being who is forced to do Kai Lan's bidding.
 * Tartarus is effectively The Dragon for the Prophet of Truth in Halo 2. However, Truth evades you for most of the next game until the Arbiter calls him an asshole and silences him.
 * Ahem... "And so, you must be silenced".
 * In the original Fatal Fury, the game would have you believe that Billy Kane, Geese Howard's right hand man, is the final fight, but not long after the game starts, it becomes fairly obvious that Billy is only The Dragon, and that Geese Howard, the Big Bad, is the true final boss. Subverted later on in Fatal Fury 3, where Billy is defeated in story but not in-game, Geese is apparently The Dragon, with Yamazaki seeming to be the Big Bad, until Yamazaki's defeat reveals the Jin Twins, the true Big Bads of the game.
 * Also in the Fatal Fury series: Lawrence Blood is Wolfgang Krauser's Dragon, and Grant is Kain R. Heinlein's.
 * Death in the Castlevania games almost always plays The Dragon for Dracula himself, and is occasionally referred to as Dracula's most loyal servant.
 * In the Castlevania games where Death was not the second-to-last boss, Rondo of Blood and Symphony Of The Night has Shaft, and Bloodlines has Drolta Tzuentes.
 * Dmtrii Blinov and Dario Bossi served as Co-Dragons to Celia Fortner for Castlevania Dawn of Sorrow,
 * Final Fantasy IV's Golbez, who is very much a Darth Vader figure, turns out to be Dragon to
 * is The Dragoon to Golbez before pulls a Man Behind the Man.
 * Subverted in Final Fantasy VI, where Kefka, who had appeared as The Dragon up to that point, pulls a Starscream halfway through the game and becomes the Big Bad himself.
 * Jenova of Final Fantasy VII becomes one of these to Sephiroth, despite probably being more important to the plot (and a great deal creepier). Her fully reconstructed form Jenova Absolute is the last boss you battle before confronting Sephiroth himself.
 * In certain interpretations, Sephiroth was actually The Dragon for Jenova - with his body dead, it would have been Jenova's malevolence using him as the ultimate soldier. However, this theory has been disproven by Word of God. Sephiroth's appearances before his original body is found in the crater are in fact Sephiroth controlling and using Jenova's body to take his own form.
 * This paradigm becomes convoluted when we realize Sephiroth would not have become corrupted without Jenova's influence. Although he had the stronger will, it was a will twisted by an alien desire. And, that Word of God came years later, from a different God, and plenty of fans call Canon Dis Continuity and still go with the Jenova controlling Sephiroth interpretation. One compromise is Sephiroth mutated into Jenova's "Heir" and started to enact her instinct to eat the Planet on his OWN Will. Doing so allowed him to control Jenova but in turn he also lost all of his humanity. This explains why even if he kept his mind and ego, he's STILL doing exactly what Jenova would have done "anyway". His Soul has been tainted utterly, so it depends on what you think is the relationship between Mind, Body, and Soul.
 * It's more like Sephiroth became Jenova; by the time of the game and Advent Children, there's no difference between Sephiroth and Jenova.
 * In an odd role reversal, it's actually Sephiroth that is defeated first in Advent Children. The last thing to do is to remove all remaining Jenova Cells and in Dirge of Cerberus, the entire conflict against Sephiroth is actually called the Jenova Wars. Odd, assuming that Sephiroth was the Big Bad and Jenova was just The Dragon.
 * Final Fantasy VIII has a chain of dragons: Raijin and Fujin act as Dragons for Seifer, Seifer is Dragon to Sorceress Edea.
 * Arguably, you could say they were all Dragons for Ultimecia in the end too.
 * Final Fantasy IX shows Queen Brahne as the Big Bad, with Kuja as her dragon,  Towards the end, it is revealed that
 * Similarly,
 * Final Fantasy XII had Gabranth in the same role, including a nice Shout-Out to the Star Wars saga when at one point he starts breathing heavily in his black armor.
 * In its sequel Revenant Wings, it's assumed that is the main Big Bad, but when  appears, it's revealed that the former is The Dragon to the latter.
 * In Fallout 3, Colonel Augustus Autumn is the Dragon for President John Henry Eden, leader of the Enclave. However, Autumn actually turns against Eden towards the end of the game, and as he was the commander of the Enclave's military, his loyal soldiers defect with him. Awesome.
 * Okami has so many dragons it's not funny. You're led to believe that Orochi is Lord of Evil (Orochi is actually a dragon) but that's wrong. Ninetails claims to be Lord of Darkness, but he was exaggerating. Then it's said that Lechku and Nechku may be the source of all evil. Guess what?
 * And that's without including the portion of the fandom who thought Waka was going to turn out to be either The Dragon, or the Big Bad.
 * The Time Crisis series has mercenary terrorist Wild Dog. In every single game. And yes, you do get to kill him every time. Interestingly enough, the first game had you offing the Big Bad at the end of the second act, saving Wild Dog for the finale.
 * The first two titles in the main series have him forming close relations with each title's Big Bad. In the third and fourth games, however, he seems to serve no connection to the Big Bad of either respective game; he's just there to get his revenge on the VSSE.
 * Lord Recluse, Big Bad of the City of Heroes games, has four Dragons: Scirocco, Ghost Widow, Black Scorpion, and Captain Mako. (It may be more accurate to call them a Quirky Miniboss Squad, but they have far more independence and characterization then a true QMS.) Each of these lower ranking Arachnos members has a Dragon of his own, namely Ice Mistral, Wretch, Silver Mantis, and Barracuda, respectively.
 * The Black Knight serves as the Dragon for the Fire Emblem games Path of Radiance and Radiant Dawn. In the first, he serves the Big Bad Ashnard as a member of the Four Riders. He does this in conquering Crimea and searching for, and . This eventually leads to a Duel Boss fight between him and Ike. (Although Ike's sister Mist can help with healing Ike).
 * In Radiant Dawn, he turns to serve as the Dragon for his true master under his true identity of . There he has a true Duel Boss fight with Ike by creating a magical barrier that separates the two of them from their respective forces.  can be considered a Dragon as well, as he must be fought and defeated so the party can reach, whom he serves.
 * Every game in the series seems to have one of these. Particularly bizarre in the first game where a priest takes this role for a literal Dragon.
 * An even more bizarre example happens in Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade: Try to wrap your brain around that one.
 * In Fire Emblem Limstella is The Dragon to Big bad Nergal and In The Sacred Stones Riev is the Dragon to who is in turn is the Dragon to
 * In the first Fire Emblem game (And likewise, the remake Shadow Dragon), The Dragon is Gharnef, apparent Big Bad early on in the game.
 * Inuart, after suffering from mind-bending torture, becomes The Dragon to the Big Bad in Drakengard.
 * The Chaos Lord in Digimon World 2 has three dragons known as the Chaos Generals
 * Barbatos Goetia from Tales of Destiny 2 exemplifies this trope, being The Dragon of "Holy Woman" Elraine.
 * The Dragon appears to be several people in Tales of the Abyss - While it's obvious that the Big Bad is, his dragon appears to be either Sync (who has the most battle prowess, rightfully so considering he's ) or Legretta, who always seems to be the most loyal to his cause.
 * Then that would obviously make them Co-Dragons.
 * Actually, most of the God-Generals could count as The Dragon at some point; making it more of a case of Dragon Duumvirate. Legretta is the most loyal, but not the strongest of them; Sync is stronger, but only follows the Big Bad because of a villainous Enemy Mine situation; Largo has both strength and loyalty, and the most combat experience; Asch did count once-upon-a-time, and it's clear that wants him back, but . The only ones who don't qualify for the role at some point are Dist, who has no interest in the Big Bad's goal, and Arietta, who fights not because of Van but because of her Bodyguard Crush.
 * Super Robot Wars Original Generation has a lot of these.
 * In the first OG, we had Ingram Prissken who acts like The Dragon for Levi Tolar (unwillingly, actually)
 * Shu Shirakawa also served as this role, to an extent, to Bian Zoldark in both Original Generation and the original Super Robot Wars 2.
 * In the second OG, we have lots of them:
 * Axel Almer acts like The Dragon for Vindel Mauser.
 * Alfimi is like The Dragon for (Stern) Neue Regisseur.
 * Strange that both The Dragons.
 * Oh, and Mekibos is actually The Dragon for Wendolo, as he seemed to lead the rest of the Quirky Miniboss Squad the Inspectors.
 * In OG Gaiden, Duminuss is The Dragon for Dark Brain. It's also arguable that Wilhelm von Juergen is unknowingly playing The Dragon part for Duminuss.
 * The Wing Commander series has an interesting variation of this trope - The Dragon is an ace pilot you must dogfight with before destroying the real bad guy (whose death is in a Cutscene, not directly killed by the player). Prince Thrakhath plays The Dragon to the Wing Commander III Big Bad, the Kilrathi emperor; Seether plays The Dragon to Big Bad in Wing Commander IV.
 * For extra value, Seether flies a fighter commonly called the Dragon, in the final flight mission.
 * Ramirez from Skies of Arcadia is The Dragon of Galcian.
 * In Vampire: The Masquerade Bloodlines, Prince LaCroix of Los Angeles has a gigantic, mute Nagloper vampire as his right-hand henchman and Sheriff (the one responsible for enforcing Camarilla law in the prince's territory).
 * In Kingdom Hearts II, who The Dragon is in Organization XIII (or if there even is one) has had some mild debate, even on this wiki. The general consensus seems to be between Xigbar, who actually is Number II, has a bit of a backstory, and arguably has the most battle prowess (Still debatable - Some may find other members to be harder), and Saix, who acts in a position of authority, gets more screentime, and is actually the boss fight before the final boss. If one were to nitpick, Saix as number VII is in the middle of XIII, and half of XIV. 358/2 Days points even further towards Saix, as he's the one who actually assigns missions to the other members. (As well as the only one besides Xemnas who never accompanies Roxas to missions)
 * Xigbar, or rather Braig, is more like the Dragon to Xehanort himself, and by extension Xemnas' past. However, as the Leader of the Organization, Saix is the Dragon to Xemnas as the Superior. Their Co-Dragons in all honesty, anyway.
 * Well as far as CoM goes, Larxene, despite being the group's only female, is more of The Dragon for Marluxia than The Dark Chick.
 * Maleficent, the Dragon to Ironic that when he did reveal himself, she turned herself into a Dragon. Before that, her Dragon was Captain Hook, then it was Riku. In KH2, she has to settle for Pete as her permanent Dragon.
 * There's also Vanitas, The Dragon to Master Xehanort and the only Boss in the game fought roughly seven times across all three stories. And to most people, he's That One Boss almost every single time.
 * While on the subject of Disney games, Epic Mickey has The Mad Doctor as the Shadow Blot's Dragon.
 * Each of the three Big Bads in Seiken Densetsu 3 has their own pair of Dragons: the Darkshine Knight and Koren, the Wizard of the Red Lotus; Jagan and Bigieu; Deathjester and Heath.
 * All of the Ratchet and Clank games except Secret Agent Clank have at least one Dragon, if not several.
 * to Chairman Drek in Ratchet & Clank.
 * The Thug Leader to both and  in Going Commando.
 * Courtney Gears, Klunk and Lawrence all play Dragon to Doctor Nefarious in Up Your Arsenal.
 * Ace Hardlight to Gleeman Vox in Deadlocked.
 * to Emperor Otto Destruct in Size Matters.
 * Rusty Pete to Captain Slag in both Tools of Destruction and Quest For Booty.
 * Vorselon, Cassiopeia and Lawrence to Doctor Nefarious in A Crack in Time.
 * Sonic the Hedgehog's Metal Sonic, in all his myriad versions, names and incarnations, has often wound up playing this role to Robotnik.
 * Except in Sonic Heroes where he Took a Level In Badass, locked up Eggman, and masqueraded as him in order to actually see to the end of Sonic by his own hands as that game's Big Bad. He failed and Eggman had to wipe his mind clean as a result.
 * Sonic and The Black Knight features a literal dragon to be slain before the final boss. Which itself is actually just a dragon to the real Big Bad,.
 * Axel Gear, the Evil Counterpart from the Rocket Knight Adventures series, serves as the Dragon in all three games. Despite the fact that each of them involves a different invading empire, of a different species to boot, Axle Gear is the Dragon to each successive Evil Overlord. It seems that repeatedly losing to the hero has not damaged his resume.
 * In Chrono Trigger, takes this role next to Lavos. What's interesting is that the game seems to suggest that
 * On a smaller scale, many of the local main antagonists of individual eras have a distinct Dragon of their own. Azala had the hulking brute Nizbel for a bodyguard, never mind that his pet Black Tyrano was practically a literal dragon. Dalton plays this role for Queen Zeal Ozzie is an odd variation in that while he is indisputably Magus' right-hand man and field general, he is also a coward who flees and hides behind his goons whenever there is real danger.
 * Several Quest for Glory villains have one Dragon or another on their side, using both the "intelligent sidekick" variety and dumb, physically powerful monsters.
 * In the first game, So You Want to Be a Hero, the Brigand Leader is guarded by the Brigand Warlock. As it later turns out, though, there's a funny twist to the setup...
 * Trial By Fire gives us Khaveen, captain of the guard in the decaying city of Raseir and right hand to the maniacal Ad Avis. Come the endgame, while the Fighter faces him in a straight-up duel and the Magic User doesn't interact with him much at all, the Thief engages in a more creative "showdown" with the corrupt captain by breaking into his house.
 * In a twisty kind of twist in the third installment has the Big Bad being a Sealed Evil in a Can so you face The Dragon only in the final battle.
 * The fourth, Shadows of Darkness, has made The Dragon The Starscream to Dark Master, in their quest to unleash an Eldritch Abomination.
 * Ironically enough, the villain of the fifth game, Dragon Fire, is actually trying to summon a dragon. In the meantime, he has to settle for The Assassin. His identity is a mystery for much of the game, and ultimately turns out to be a throwback to the series' first installment.
 * The Dungeons & Dragons game Demon Stone is worth a mention here, as the game's Dragon is an actual dragon... and it's frickin' huge to boot.
 * Mr. Big posed as the Big Bad in the first Art of Fighting, but took his rightful place in the second game when Geese Howard came back to Southtown. In Art of Fighting 3, Sinclair was Wyler's dragon.
 * The Legend of Zelda is filled with these, mostly serving as pawns for Ganon/Ganondorf. Most of the time, the plots end up Hijacked by Ganon.
 * Agahnim in A Link To the Past, although he actually
 * Brainwashed and Crazy Nabooru to Twinrova in Ocarina of Time.
 * Twinrova themselves serve as The Dragon to Ganondorf, as they are implied to actually have raised him, are exceeding loyal to him, and are the last boss before reaching The Very Definitely Final Dungeon.
 * Onox in Oracle of Seasons (whose second form is an actual dragon) and Veran in Oracle of Ages are The Dragon to Twinrova, who are The Dragon to Ganon again this time.
 * Vaati in The Legend of Zelda Four Swords Adventures.
 * Zant in Twilight Princess.
 * The demonically possessed Skull Kid, to the titular mask in Majora's Mask.
 * Chancellor Cole to Malladus in Spirit Tracks, and Byrne to Cole.
 * Demon Lord Ghirahim in Skyward Sword is this to.
 * Imperishable Night particularly has this subverted with a touch in gameplay. Kaguya Houraisan is a powerful Lunarian and has a powerful Battle Butler Eirin Yagokoro. Canon-wise, Kaguya is definitely more powerful (she is immortal after all), but gameplay-wise Eirin is more difficult to defeat than her boss. Thus Eirin is somehow Kaguya's Dragon and this leads to a Stupid Statement Dance Mix: "HELP ME, EIRIIIIN!!!!"
 * Kaguya being more powerful than Eirin is actually a debated topic. Some argue Eirin, others argue Kaguya. The reasoning being that Eirin herself may also be immortal (she implies this, while Yuyuko implies otherwise, but neither Eirin nor ZUN have ever outright confirmed or denied it). Regardless, Eirin is definitely Kaguya's Dragon.
 * Except for the fact that Eirin's official profile states she's stronger than Kaguya, and only holds back out of respect for the latter.
 * Many Stage 5 bosses in Touhou games are The Dragon to the Stage 6 Big Bad, with Sakuya of Embodiment of Scarlet Devil and Youmu of Perfect Cherry Blossom being just two of many. Sanae of Mountain of Faith and Shou of Undefined Fantastic Object also count. A case could be made of Yuyuko and Ran being Yukari's Co-Dragons.
 * Secondary protagonist Marisa Kirisame was The Dragon in her first appearence.
 * In Saints Row and its sequel each rival gang has a Dragon.
 * In Saints Row 1:
 * The Dragon to Benjamin King; Leader of the Vice kings is Anthony "Big Tony" Green.
 * The Dragon to Hector Lopez of Los Carnales is Victor Rodriquez.
 * The Dragon to William Sharp, the secret leader of the Westside Rollerz is his Nephew Joseph Price.
 * In Saints Row 2:
 * Mr.Sunshine is The Dragon to The General.
 * Jyunichi is The Dragon to Shogo Akuji and later to Shogo's father Kazuo once he comes to Stilwater
 * The closest thing Maero has to a Dragon is Matt, his best friend and right hand. But since Maero is a 7-foot tall musclebound thug he never actually uses Matt to do anything except tattoo him.
 * For that matter, Johnny Gat is your dragon.
 * In the freeware game Cave Story, Misery serves as the Dragon to the Big Bad, the Doctor, and she and Balrog form a Quirky Miniboss Squad of sorts, most of the quirkiness coming from Balrog. Misery, however, doesn't have any real loyalty towards the Doctor, and she and Balrog
 * In Kingdom of Loathing, there appear to be a number of dragons to the final boss . The most obvious would be the fight with your shadow. Although, the Sorceress' tower could be seen as a dragon in and of itself. Then there are a number of required minibosses, such as the Goblin King, the Boss Bat, and either the Man, the Big Wisniewski, or both.
 * In The Witcher, Azar Javed is a Dragon to the big bad
 * And, in turn, The Professor is the Dragon to Azar Javed.
 * At the end of Overlord you discover that the Villain Protagonist Player Character
 * Abaddon of Guild Wars Nightfall has two Dragons, . Also, Varesh.
 * Meanwhile, Mallyx, the boss of the elite area accessible after downing Abaddon, has four dragons, known collectively as the Lords of Anguish. As the Lords are bosses in their own right, some of them even have their own dragons.
 * In Guild Wars Prophecies, good ol'  is forced to play the role of dragon for the Lich.
 * In Silent Scope, Monica (a heavily armored fighter) is the terrorist leader's Dragon.
 * Typically, in Metal Gear, the titular Metal Gears serve as this; the players apparent ultimate challenge before they can have a climactic showdown with a final boss.
 * Most games don't have a human and plot-based dragon, but Gray Fox is a very clear-cut one in Metal Gear 2, piloting the Metal Gear before fighting Snake on foot. After his death, Snake gets the final encounter with Big Boss.
 * Ocelot serves this role in the first three Metal Gear Solid games. Sort of.
 * Subverted in Strong Bads Cool Game for Attractive People Episode 5: 8-Bit is Enough, where Robo-King of Town is the penultimate boss and bodyguard of Trogdor the dragon.
 * In Iji, Annihilator Iosa the Invincible could be considered the Dragon to General Tor, though the latter IS more powerful when you face him,.
 * Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time/Darkness/Sky has Dusknoir, a figurative Dragon, and
 * Then in Pokémon Black and White, you have Ghetsis serving as N's Dragon. Ghetsis and N also both use a literal Dragon type Pokemon as the strongest member of their respective teams during their final battles against the player, with N's dragon  filling an important story role and essentially serving as his main weapon/companion/form of tranport.
 * Most of the villains in the series have Dragons. In 3rd Gen, Maxie has Tabitha and Archie has Shelly and Matt, and in 4th Gen, Cyrus has Saturn. 5th Gen has already been mentioned. Arguably even 2nd Gen has the Rocket Executive Archer as Big Bad and the female Rocket Executive Ariana as his Dragon--and one or both of them could be considered the Dragon for 1st Gen's Giovanni.
 * In the Streets of Rage series, Shiva usually takes the role of The Dragon, most notably in the final showdown as Mr. X's bodyguard in the second game, and again in Streets of Rage III.
 * Shiva also fits the brawn role. But only because Mr. X is one of the few people smart enough to use a gun.
 * In Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga, Fawful was The Dragon to Cackletta.
 * And in Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story, Fawful's Dragon is Midbus.
 * Kammy Koopa, Lord Crump and Nastasia in the Paper Mario games. Though in the case of Lord Crump, Grodus doesn't seem to value him, even at one point. The closest thing that game has to a dragon is Quirky Miniboss Squad leader Beldam, who may be thought of as a Dragon by Grodus but definitely is by the Shadow Queen.
 * Another Super Mario Bros. example would be Kamek, a figurative Dragon to Bowser, and Bowser Jr. (Bowser's youngest son), a literal Dragon.
 * In even earlier games there were the Koopa Kids. Ludwig is definitely the Dragon in Super Mario 3. Larry is faced last in World, but none of the kids seems to have clear superiority in that game.
 * In Devil May Cry 3, Arkham appears, at first, to be Vergil's Dragon.
 * In the first game, Phantom and Griffon is this to Mundus.
 * Resident Evil 5:
 * Wesker also makes many people believe that he's acting as the dragon for Oswell E. Spencer, but he was really a cause for his Villain Decay,
 * Subverted in Rumble Roses, as you meet the actual evil mastermind before fighting her cyborg (unless you're playing as her). Though in some stories, you fight the girl she brainwashed before her, so kinda counts.
 * Sensory Overload: The Mastermind, a female cyborg who you fight shortly after offing Big Bad Dr. Craven. Somewhat of an Anticlimax Boss, with only slightly more HP than the higher Elite Mooks and the same attack as the cyborg mooks, albeit a bit faster.
 * Bodhi to Irenicus in Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn. Once you've got past her and get to follow Irenicus to the almost-final area, he also pulls out a literal dragon in his service you have to deal with before getting to him.
 * In the sequel Baldur's Gate II: Throne of Bhaal, Draconis is Abazigal's dragon. Odd in that, as Draconis is also Abazigal's son, Abazigal is himself a dragon. (And it may be argued that all five of the mini bosses of the expansion are dragons to the expansion's Big Bad,
 * And in the original Baldur's Gate, the ultimate Big Bad, Sarevok, spends most of the game serving as the The Dragon for his father Rieltar while using Rieltar's resources to pursue his own goal, before . He has his own dragons in the bandit leader Tazok and later the puppet replacement head of the local law enforcement, Angelo Dosan.
 * Sarevok is resurrected in Baldur's Gate II: Throne of Bhaal and available as a party member. If the player chooses him as a party member, he'll offer to become The Dragon to the player character upon
 * Subverted slightly in Tales of Symphonia: the battle -- which looks like a boss battle -- just before going to attack and kill the Final Boss actually is a real dragon. It also turns out to be one of the easiest fights in the game -- not even on the level of some normal, random fights.
 * Played more straight though, in several instances in the game. Botta to Yuan, and Pronyma to Yggdrasil.
 * Reflux in Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc, to Big Bad André.
 * In System Shock, Edward Diego became SHODAN's dragon after he forced the hacker to remove her ethical constraints.
 * And in System Shock 2, Xerxes, the Von Braun's guardian A.I became the dragon for the Many,
 * Dr. N. Gin, from the Crash Bandicoot series serves as one in Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back and, arguably, Crash Bandicoot: Warped. In both games, you have to fight him when he's in a giant robot suit and you require projectiles to hurt him. In addition, he also has a lot more health than any other Boss you fight in either of those games.
 * Also, in both games he's the last Boss you fight before Dr. Cortex himself.
 * In Crash 1, it's N. Brio who's The Dragon, who's got more health, and is also smarter than Cortex too. He just doesn't have enough of a spine to become the big bad, and then has a Heel Face Turn in the sequel.
 * Technically, Dr. Cortex has always been the The Dragon to Uka Uka, although this isn't revealed until the third game.
 * In the Dynasty Warriors series; Lu Bu is Dong Zhuo's dragon...until Lu Bu turns on him and puts a pike through his head.
 * Zhuge Liang could be seen as Liu Bei's dragon, as he orchestrates a lot of Liu Bei's victories...plus his nickname is "The Sleeping Dragon."
 * This trope does get played with a lot. In Wu, Sun Jian appears to have Huang Gai as his dragon, in lose terms, first, with Sun Ce relying on Zhou Yu second, and after that Sun Quan gets Zhou Tai as his bodyguard, and you will generally end up facing him before Quan. In Wei, Cao Cao has the Xiaou family protecting him, each holding some form of power over when you face Cao Cao, with Dian Wei and Xu Zhu acting as tough as steel bodygaurds, and Simi Yi holding only slight dragon status unless he if the focus. In Shu, While Zhuge Liang is the main strategist, Guan Yu seems to act as the battle dragon, and his weapon is called the "blue dragon".
 * Viking: Battle for Asgard: You serve as Freya's dragon while Rakan is Hel's dragon.
 * In Mega Man ZX Advent, Albert plays the role of the big bad, and when you fight him as the final boss takes on the form a three headed mechanical dragon.
 * The true Dragons as defined by the Trope are probably Prometheus and Pandora, though they turn on Albert as well as plot to kill him.
 * On the subject of Mega Man, Bass becomes the Dragon for his creator Dr. Wily after he was eventually built in Mega Man 7. Adaptations of the story covering earlier times usually show Protoman as Wily's first dragon, but in the games he was just a deluded pawn who turned good by the end of his debut appearance.
 * The Mega Man X series seems to make a point of featuring a Dragon, usually as cover for Sigma.
 * VAVA/Vile serves as the dragon for Sigma in the first X installment, although the Updated Rerelease seems to show him as more of an independent troublemaker.
 * X5 establishes Dynamo as Sigma's Dragon, although he runs away after a few fights.
 * Then, in X6, the minor character Isoc becomes the Dragon to Gate, although it's hinted that he's really another old villain in disguise.
 * Sigma himself is The Dragon for Lumine in X8.
 * Harpuia is Copy X's dragon in the first Mega Man Zero game.
 * Finally, Ax Crazy Omega, Final Boss of Zero 3, serves as The Dragon to series Big Bad, Dr. Weil, who is The Unfought in said installment. Zero 4 has Weil employ a new Dragon in Craft, who This time however, Weil is also fought as the standard Final Boss of the series Grand Finale.
 * While Shadow Man's multiple appearances in Rock Man 4 Minus Infinity could be chalked up to Author Appeal, there is a reason for it. In the official materials, Shadow Man is described as Wily's bodyguard/right-hand man. It would make sense if Shadow Man himself does the field job. One encounter even has him maintaining Pharaoh Man's level.
 * Azel, the evil equivalent of protagonist Gene in God Hand, is seen as a Dragon to Belze, leader of the Four Devas, but
 * In Brave Fencer Musashi, Colonel Cappriciola is The Dragon to Fuhrer Flatski, ruler of the Thirstquencher Empire. However, near the very end of the game, you find out that
 * In, Musashi: Samurai Legend, Rothschild is The Dragon to Gandrake.
 * Interestingly, in ADOM, the normal Final Boss is arguably the Dragon. To close the Chaos Gate, you first have to defeat a random immensely powerful demon called Fistanarius, the Greater Balor. If you actually went through the gate, which has quite difficult prerequisites and isn't required for the normal ending, you would face Andor Drakon, the ElDeR cHaOs GoD.
 * In Dungeon Siege 2, you actually get to fight a massive dragon, but it isn't The Dragon. Valdis' actual The Dragon is his Dark Wizard Archmage. But in a twist at the very end, it is revealed that.
 * The same is true in Dungeon Siege 1. The literal dragon is the second most powerful boss, but Gom's actual Dragon is Gresh.
 * In the third game, Rajani served as this to Jeyne Kassynder though you fight her early on in the game. After defeating her you're given the choice of either killing her, imprisoning her or setting her free. The latter choice will result in.
 * Star Control 3 has the K'Tang, a race of tiny creatures walking around in Humongous Mecha suits and terrorizing everyone else. They like to claim that they are the leaders of the Crux Hegemony, but in fact they are simply The Dragon to the cunning but weak Ploxis. The Ploxis go to great lengths to hide their own status as the Big Bad.
 * In addition, the "Eternal Ones" have their own powerful race of "Heralds", who would've been another Dragon if not for the fact that the Eternal Ones are infinitely strong to begin with.
 * In the Warcraft universe, Archimonde and Kil'Jaeden split the role of The Dragon to Sargeras (at least they did until Archimonde's death), while each can be said to have their own Dragon in the form of Mannoroth and Tichondrius, respectively. Also, the original Lich King's Dragon was Arthas, and after the two merged into the New Lich King, either Kel'Thuzad or Anub'arak (or both) could be said to take over the role.
 * Majordomo for Ragnaros
 * A more literal example in World of Warcraft would be Sindragosa for Arthas. You have to defeat the honking big dragon before you can proceed to kill the Lich King.
 * In Luminous Arc 2, Fatima can be seen as, but later in the game,
 * While the non-linear nature of Sid Mier's 2004 Pirates makes any boss optional, the two "big" ones are the evil Marquis who imprisoned your family and Baron Reymundo, who knows where the family members are hiding.
 * In Donkey Kong Country/Land 3, the evil KAOS (a laser beam firing/circular saw using) robot plays this to King K Rool, who's secretly controlling him as Baron K Roolenstein. Although in the Land game, he fights independantly like most other cases on the page.
 * Kazuma Kiryu, the protagonist of the Yakuza games is an interesting take on the trope. He is a former Dragon for the Dojima Family- albeit one who sought to carry out his duties compassionately as possible- and his honorary title The Dragon of Dojima reflects that. Unlike the expected fate of most Dragons he was removed from that position not by dying, but by going to prison due to extremely personal and complicated situations that mark the beginning of the first game.
 * In the "main" Shin Megami Tensei games, Metatron and Beelzebub serve as the Dragon for YHVH and Lucifer, respectively.
 * In Nocturne you the player character can become The Dragon for either Hikawa, Isamu, or Lucifer himself depending on which faction you side with. If you join Hikawa or Lucifer their current Dragons Samael and Beelzebub will be demoted to serving under you instead.
 * In Strange Journey, Mastema is the Dragon for The Three Wise Men. You can become his Dragon along with Zelenin in the Law Path, or join forces with Jimenez to collectively beome the Dragons to Mother Mem Aleph.
 * In Hitman: Blood Money, the initial Big Bad appears to be Mark Parchezzi III. After 47 puts a Silverballer round right between his eyes, however, the real Big Bad reveals himself in the form of.
 * In The World Ends With You, Konishi is The Dragon to Kitaniji, who is in turn The Dragon to the Composer, although.
 * In the arcade game Dungeons & Dragons: Tower of Doom, near the end you have the option of taking one of two paths in order to get to the tower of the final boss. The first path leads to a fight with a beholder. The second leads to a fight with a massive red dragon. Funnily enough this dragon is arguably harder than the final boss and his "dragon" who is a drow elf.
 * Metroid. Ridley. He's usually close to the end in some form in each Metroid game, and is usually That One Boss. He even looks kind of like a dragon.
 * He is, actually. Apparently the last Space Dragon.
 * Bishop Ladja in Dragon Quest V is a particularly good example. In this case the Dragon is even more evil, as he's personally responsible for He would go on to dish out even more Player Punches over the course of the game. In fact, he's such a Complete Monster that he could make a damn good Big Bad in his own right if he wasn't completely loyal to Grandmaster Nimzo.
 * Benezia to Saren in the first Mass Effect.
 * The main villain in Mass Effect 2 is the Collector General, which also goes by the name Harbinger.
 * Harbinger has a second dragon too,  from the Arrival DLC.
 * Miranda may be the Illusive Man's Dragon, though given his credentials she could be nothing more than a useful pawn.
 * As of Mass Effect 3,
 * In Lair of the Shadow Broker,  is The Dragon to the Shadow Broker.
 * Walton Simons serves as Dragon to in Deus Ex.
 * If you end up against The British Empire in the VIP:R mod Victoria India will do a good deal of their dirty work, including a lot of the more out and out conquering of uncivs. And will tear you apart.
 * Played with in Crackdown:.
 * The Agent and the Director have some sort of altercation in the decade between the first game and its sequel. The details of the event are Lost in Transmission, but it's significant that the Director no longer has as much faith in his Agents.
 * In Earthbound, Pokey Minch is the Dragon to the Big Bad, Giygas.
 * Then in Mother 3, when, he has Yokuba, or Fassad going by the fan translation.
 * The Masked Man likely fulfills this purpose to Porky, as well.
 * In the Ultima series, the Guardian has Batlin and Mors Gotha. Each is the final boss of the game they're in (VII and Underworld 2, respectively).
 * Subverted in Final Fantasy Adventure. The opening makes it look very much like Julius is the dragon to Dark Lord, but
 * Crypto plays this role for Orthopox in Destroy All Humans!.
 * In the ''The Legend of Spyro Trilogy, there are several levels of Dragons. Cynder and Gaul are Malefor's Dragons (Cynder being a real dragon), despite being Big Bad in their first games, they're directly stated to be Malefor's minions. Gaul has the Assassin as his Dragon and it was possible by some of the pictures show that Cynder was actually Gaul's Dragon.
 * In the first Bioshock is revealed to actually be the Dragon for
 * Takios serves this role for in Eien no Aselia. He also has some sort of connection to Yuuto's sword which is never elaborated on. They're even voiced by the same person but it's unclear if this means anything.
 * In the fantasy-themed combat-chess game Archon: The Light and the Dark, the Dark forces have a literal Dragon, who is more powerful in every way than any of the other Dark pieces, including their leader, the Sorceress. The equivalent for the Light forces is the Valkyrie. The Shapeshifter for Dark and the Phoenix for Light could also qualify as their respective side's Dragons, but the Phoenix's lack of attack range and the fact that the Shapeshifter is only ever as strong as its opponent made them just a little too quirky to be real mobile slaughterhouses.
 * In God of War III, Poseidon acts as The Dragon to Zeus, even though he is defeated in the very beginning of the game. One could argue that Helios took over this role after that.
 * Also, Theseus is The Dragon to the Sisters Of Fate.
 * Atlas has served as a Dragon to both Cronos in the Titanomachy and to Persephone in Chains of Olympus.
 * In Dungeons and Dragons: Shadow over Mystara there are plenty of dragons, including the Big Bad, but none of them is actually The Dragon. The Dragon is a wizard that looks like a chicken.
 * The Necromancer in Castle Crashers.
 * In Deus Ex Human Revolution, the Tyrants serve in this role to the rest of the conspiracy, and supply three of the game's four boss battles.
 * The Tower of Druaga has a literal dragon named Quox, who has to be defeated on Floor 59 before you get to fight Druaga himself.
 * In Fate Stay Night  and   both act as The Dragon when the other is taking his turn in being the Big Bad. In Fate,   is the Big Bad, facing off against Shirou while   fights Saber. In Unlimited Blade Works, Shirou duels   and Rin...interacts with  . In Heaven's Feel, , making it seem that   is the Big Bad with   or True Assassin as their respective Dragons. Which leads to a surpise when the ending is Hijacked By.
 * The Castellan is Dragon to the Warlord in Anvil of Dawn. Since you don't fight the Warlord, the Castellan is more or less the Final Boss, despite being one dungeon early.
 * In the Gears of War series both Raam and Skorge act as Dragons for Queen Myrrah.
 * Mankar Camoran serves as Mehrunes Dagon's Dragon in The Elder Scrolls IV Oblivion. Dagon is the real threat to Tamriel, but Camoran serves as his enforcer/mouthpiece in the mortal plane, and must be defeated before there is any hope at all of stopping Dagon.
 * In 9 Persons, 9 Hours, 9 Doors, Zero's Dragon is . does almost all of the dirty work, mainly because.
 * In the Streets of Rage series, Shiva is Mr. X's Dragon, serving as his personal bodyguard and chief assassin.
 * One Must Fall 2097: Raven is the Dragon to the game's Big Bad, Hans Kreissack. However, he's also a Dragon with an Agenda, as his biography in the game's manual states that he wants the position of successor to the WAR company for his own purposes (instead of as a representative of Kreissack, as the other man intends) and is always looking for an opportunity to allow one of Kreissack's would-be killers to "slip through" the company's security system.
 * Final Fight: Dumb Muscle wrestler Abigail is touted as the Dragon to the Big Bad Belger, since he's the last boss you fight before facing Belger. It's also possible that Rolento (the boss before Abigail in the Industrial Stage, which was cut from the SNES port of the game) is in fact the Dragon, since he's the one in charge of Mad Gear's military power and connections.
 * One Must Fall 2097: Raven is the Dragon to the game's Big Bad, Hans Kreissack. However, he's also a Dragon with an Agenda, as his biography in the game's manual states that he wants the position of successor to the WAR company for his own purposes (instead of as a representative of Kreissack, as the other man intends) and is always looking for an opportunity to allow one of Kreissack's would-be killers to "slip through" the company's security system.
 * Final Fight: Dumb Muscle wrestler Abigail is touted as the Dragon to the Big Bad Belger, since he's the last boss you fight before facing Belger. It's also possible that Rolento (the boss before Abigail in the Industrial Stage, which was cut from the SNES port of the game) is in fact the Dragon, since he's the one in charge of Mad Gear's military power and connections.