![]() They have four wings, like a Thunderdrum, but with the bigger pair being set lower on its back. Singetails have a wide, flat body and a long tail. Snotlout holding a Singetail Egg while on Hookfang. Here they are ovoid, have a scale-like pattern, and come in colors that reflect the colors of a standard Singetail - lime green, yellow, orange, and red. Singetail eggs appear in the episode, " Family Matters". In Dragons: Rise of Berk, the eggs look more like a flaming bush, with frill-like fins lining across its length and a color scheme of red, orange, and yellow. They have a pock-marked texture, mimicking flowing lava. In School of Dragons, Singetail eggs are oval-shaped and orange with red spots. ![]() Sneaking up on a Singetail is hard enough, but finding its weak spot during battle is nearly impossible! These territorial Dragons can blast fire out of their jaws, gills, and tails! It's best not to get in a Singetail's way. Since it can look at two directions at once, the Singetail can act as its own tailgunner ![]() No dragon or rider can ever get the drop on a Singetail due to its articulated eyes-they swivel to the sides and back of its head and give the Singetail a 360-degree lay of the land. However, Singetails also pose a danger in close-quarters combat by shunting jets of flame from their gills lining their exposed underbellies. Fiercely territorial, Singetails don't just breathe fire-they send it blasting out of their jaws, gills and tails.įirst discovered by Spitelout when he colonized Storehouse Island, the elusive Singetails prefer to scare away their enemies with long-range attacks, like hurling fireballs from their tails.
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