The decision where you give dragons to children only targets one child that you can't choose, unlike the granting an egg and forcing training decisions.
No, the issue is that I can only grant a dragon to one child. Say the decision only lets me give a dragon to my second child, but not my first. If I give a dragon to my second child, then the decision to give a dragon to my first child becomes available. Same thing with other close relatives.You can grant dragons? That seems off, why would they listen at all to their new owners?
Never saw this decision at all
As far as I know you can only grant dragon eggs to your near relatives.
A dragon should be inherited to the legal heir after his owners death and only if the heir is of age, right?
I don't think you should be able to transfer a dragon like an egg or a sword...in some sense they are free "people" and not property.
The decision where you give dragons to children only targets one child that you can't choose, unlike the granting an egg and forcing training decisions.
What about in situations where two dragons would be inherited by the same person?This decision is only available for Dany and her spare dragons. It works this way to make it possible to give dragons to non-dynastic children. If you want to give a dragon to a different child you can navigate away from the decision and then go back to it.
Dragon eggs are inheritbale, dragons themselves have not been inheritable since they became characters.
No, I mean what do you do with dragons once you're already a rider and someone who had one in your court dies? You can't tame a second one or give it to someone else until the first dies.