[RPG] Is an Illusory Dragon a creature

dnd-5eillusionspellswizard

The Illusory Dragon spell creates a "tangible" illusion that "occupies its space as if it were a creature". But is it actually a creature for mechanical purposes?

If it is a creature, that opens up a lot of follow-on questions, such as:

  • Can the Illusory Dragon be the target of a spell such as Teleport?
  • Can the wizard use the dragon as a mount?

To clarify: some illusions are clearly a creature. For example, Phantom Steed definitely creates a creature, complete with a stat block. The question is whether Illusory Dragon works this way as well.

Best Answer

No, the dragon is illusory

Illusory dragon says:

The illusion lasts for the spell’s duration and occupies its space, as if it were a creature.

Right there at the top of the spell it defines what the spell creates: an illusion that acts in one way like a creature (occupying its space). In all other ways, it is an illusion as described in the rest of the spell. It is also described in every other instance in the spell as an "illusion" and nothing else.

When a spell creates a creature, they call it a creature. For example, phantom steed says:

A Large quasi-real horse-like creature appears. [...] The creature uses the statistics for a riding horse, except it has a speed of 100 feet.

Note that it calls it a creature and gives it statistics. Nowhere in illusory dragon does it do either.

So, the dragon is purely an illusion (albeit a more physical than normal one). Thus the answers to your specific questions are:

  1. No, teleport requires creatures or objects as targets. An illusion is neither.
  2. No, a mount must be "a willing creature".
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