When I tried to pin this down more methodically, I considered several angles: was it a novel fragment, an indie game, or a tabletop supplement? Because the exact phrase 'dragon sword outlander' doesn’t map cleanly to any major published franchise, my educated take is that the work is likely indie or fan-made. In many indie cases the person who ‘created’ the piece is also its world-builder — they handle concept, art direction, and the backstory — but if the project scaled up they may have contracted a writer to flesh out the lore. That writer is almost always named in the credits or in the project description.
If I were doing the detective work right now, I’d search for the phrase in quotes on Google, check itch.io and Steam for any tiny releases, and look through Reddit or fan forums for mentions. For books I’d cross-reference Goodreads and publisher listings. Doing this has helped me uncover authors who hide behind small imprints or pen names, and it’s always satisfying to finally find who crafted a world I’ve come to care about — makes me want to read their notes over coffee.
I dug through the usual corners of my memory and a few quick searches, and the short, honest truth is that there isn’t a single, widely recognized property exactly called 'dragon sword outlander' that pops up in mainstream databases. That could mean a few things: it might be a small indie game, a fan project, a self-published novella, or even a tabletop module that hasn’t hit big distribution channels. In cases like that, the creator and the person who wrote the backstory are usually credited in the product page — on Steam, itch.io, a Kickstarter, or the book’s publisher page — and often they’re the same person (the developer/author) or a small team where one person handles writing.
If you want to track it down fast, check the product’s credits, the itch.io/Steam description, the ISBN metadata for books, or the Kickstarter campaign. Often the lead designer or studio founder conceived the world and either wrote the backstory themselves or hired a narrative designer or freelance author to do it. I love sleuthing through credits for mysteries like this, and whenever I find the creator listed I get this little rush of satisfaction seeing how much heart went into worldbuilding — it always makes me want to dive in more.
If your title is exactly 'Dragon Sword Outlander' and you can’t find a clear creator in major databases, don’t panic — smaller creators often distribute through niche channels. My instinct is that the creator is most likely the person or small team listed on the product page, and the backstory typically comes from one of two sources: the original creator (who builds the lore) or a credited writer/narrative designer. For games, check Steam’s credits, the dev blog, or the game’s press kit. For books or novellas, look up the ISBN on Goodreads or the publisher’s website; author pages usually list related works and backstory notes.
I’ve chased down indie projects before by following the trail from a forum post to a creator’s Tumblr and then to a Kickstarter where the lore was first revealed. If the title is part of a fan project, you’ll probably find the backstory in the fan community’s thread or the mod notes. Personally, finding those creators and backing small projects feels rewarding — like discovering a hidden gem.
Okay, short stroll through my mental library: there’s no blockbuster or classic with the exact title 'dragon sword outlander' that I can point at with confidence. That usually means it’s either an indie project, a fan creation, or a title that’s listed under a slightly different name. The person who made it and who wrote the backstory will almost always be in the credits — for games that’s the dev team or lead writer, for books it’s the named author or a credited world-builder.
When I hit dead ends, I look at the hosting platform (Steam/itch/Kickstarter), publisher notes, or the file metadata; those places almost always list creator and writer. I enjoy the treasure hunt of finding small-press creators — every time I find the person behind that lore, it brightens my day a bit.
2025-10-19 20:11:14
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The Exiled Dragon
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"Please, don't eat me," it begged. The voice was that of angels...Another hand gripped the trunk until finally, another eye appeared. One was beautiful, but now both looked back at me with an intensity that would sear into my soul until the day I died. It was a girl, a tiny girl. Her smell continued to be blown in my direction, and by the gods, I swear they were trying to draw her to me."Creed, an exiled dragon, known for his ruthless fighting and disturbing appearance. The dragon elders deemed him unworthy of a mate, the moon goddess would not grant one that was conceived of r*pe.Odessa, a woman who lost her father to cancer, her estranged mother finds her hours later after her father's death, whisks her away to a fantasy world to repay her debt to the Duke of Vamparia. She is now a mere blood bag, but one night fate was on her side. She escaped the vampire kingdom only to find herself found by a beast who takes her under his wings.Together they will unfold a new love and adventure as they try and defeat the vampires that hold humans hostage, for Creed to get his revenge for the new treasure he wants to call his own. Romance blossoms and even a special twist to make your heart squeeze with warmth.
When his village was attacked and burned down, five-year-old Xiu Zhangjian chose to escape. Living in disguise for many years, he always prepared himself for revenge.
One day, the sect headquarters where he lived was attacked. He made a different decision: instead of running away, he approached the enemy by choosing to become a slave in the palace prison. All the prisoners and guards knew him as a weak and stupid slave. However, at night, he secretly showed his true abilities.
Until the time came, Xiu Zhangjian reclaimed the Sacred Dragon Sword. With the sacred ancestral sword in his hands, he fulfilled his duty as the heir, eradicating the evil of the black sect alliance.
"I swear, they will beg for death!"
When enemy soldiers breached Drakefire Keep, the first people they seized were Liora Vale and me.
My betrothed, Lucian Vale, Lord of Drakefire, chose to save Liora, his brother’s widow.
Then he ordered the iron gates shut and left me outside, six months pregnant with his child.
I was taken by the enemy and later thrown from a cliff. Everyone believed I was dead.
Seven years later, I returned to Drakefire Keep with Kael Drakon, the Supreme Dragonlord.
At the welcome feast, I saw Lucian again.
His eyes lit up when he recognized me.
“Elara, I knew you survived. My brother was dead, so I could not abandon Liora back then.”
He looked at me as if nothing had changed.
“Now that you are back, we should complete our dragon vow. You will become Lady of Drakefire and hatch the fire-dragon egg for me.”
“With a fire dragon, I will surpass Kael Drakon and become the true Dragonlord of this continent.”
I smiled.
He did not know the fire dragon had hatched long ago.
It hatched seven years ago, on the day I married Kael Drakon.
"Master, do you miss this apprentice?"
Lips painted in bright red ticked up in a sharp smile. Her eyes were a pool of dark red, like a swirl of the finest wine. One jaded hand in his throat, nails slightly digging in the skin there, the other was on his cheek carefully caressing.
The clashing of both gestures were confusing, but Rion's mind only provided one instinctual response; to run away as far as possible.
-----
Rion Ren, one of the strongest sword masters in the world, had to make a difficult decision to hand over his apprentice, Ruby, to the Demon Master when Ruby's real identity as a descendant of Demon Sovereign was revealed.
Three years later, Ruby who had successfully taken the reign of the Demon Realm, came back to take revenge on her master that had betrayed and abandoned her in the hand of cruel demons.
Rion swore on his life as a sword master, he only wanted to protect those who were precious to him, but how did it manage to turn the whole world into chaos? How would Rion face his own apprentice in a battle between life and death?!
Since The Fires of Alira one thousand five hundred years ago, dragons have lived separate from the other races in Midgar. They rarely make contact with others, unless in terms of conflict.
Eleonora is the descendant of the dragon sovereign, and will one day assume the throne of the Perilous Horde herself. The horde, despite years of murky conflict, forges an alliance with the human kingdom of Samirya located in the northern region. It is no longer a matter of petty bickering. Now, with the eve of a Great War looming over them, both groups lives depend on a truce.
As conflict thickens and land disputes grow increasingly more bitter, the chieftain of the Perilous Horde makes a final desperate move to unite the two worlds: the dragons will send an ambassador to protect the humans capital city of Mimmgar from the oncoming invasion.
And who should be that ambassador be but Eleonora?
Eleonora just hopes to complete that task quickly so she can return home, but soon finds that the humans are nothing like she expected. Forming an unforeseen connection with the human king, and becoming captivated by a young blacksmith, she begins to question everything she's ever known and learns that her homeland may have some terrible secrets of its own.
Book one of A Dragon’s Legacy.
Boro Malus, and his family, lived in shame and exile after the death and defeat of his
father Bora Malus. The King, enraged by the loss of his greatest warrior, stripped Bora, and his family, of all their lands and titles and banished them to live in the outskirts of the kingdom. Boro grew up with two things on his mind after the shaming of his father. The first, to return the honor to his family's name, and second, to take his father’s title of Greatest Blade-master, for himself.
On storm-swept peaks where old banners fray, the tale I learned from a grizzled singer goes like this: the blade known as 'Dragon Sword Outlander' wasn't born in a normal forge. It came together at the edge of two dying worlds — a shattered dragon's heartstone fused with a fallen star metal during the Night of Crossing. A nameless exile, who had spent years wandering ruined temples, hammered the first edge while singing an old binding chant; that chant braided a fragment of the dragon's memory into the steel.
After it was forged the sword didn't simply serve; it chose. Whole clans of wanderers later called themselves Outlanders because the sword's presence changed how they moved through the world — doors opened where there had been walls, and those who bore it remembered places they'd never been. Over centuries the weapon accumulated rites: oiling with ash from volcanic springs, moonlit re-blessings, and the placing of small dragon-scale sigils along its fuller.
What I love about this version is how alive it feels — it's not just a tool but a living ledger of exile, music, and starlight. Even now, thinking of that first hammer blow gives me chills; it's the kind of legend that makes me want to hike to a ruined temple and listen for the wind to answer back.
I've gone down this rabbit hole more than once because the title 'Dragon Sword Outlander' just begs for myth-hunting. From what I can tell, it's not a straight adaptation of one single, real-world myth or a direct retelling of a specific novel. Instead, it feels like an original story built from a collage of mythic building blocks: dragon lore, the enchanted blade motif, the exile-or-outsider archetype and a healthy dose of heroic quest structure.
The cool thing is how familiar pieces show up — echoes of 'Excalibur' style sword-magic, the dragon as both guardian and destroyer like in East Asian myths, and that wandering, outsider vibe you see in stories such as 'Outlander' or certain fantasy epics. Those are influences and homages rather than a strict source text. Reading it, I kept spotting nods to 'Journey to the West' and northern sagas, yet the plot threads and world rules felt original enough to stand on their own.
Personally I love that hybrid approach; it gives the narrative a timeless, lived-in feel while still letting the creators surprise you. It reads like a new myth stitched from older ones, and that patchwork vibe is exactly why I keep recommending it to friends.
Picking up 'Dragon Sword Outlander' felt like grabbing a ticket to a train that doesn’t stop for comfort—fast, exciting, a little terrifying. The sword itself isn’t just a power-up; it’s a narrative engine. Early on, it forces the protagonist out of easy moral standpoints: allies warm to them, enemies covet or fear them, and everyday choices suddenly have consequences that echo. The blade changes how people see the hero and how the hero sees themselves, which steers the plot more than any prophecy ever could.
Mechanically, the sword escalates stakes. Battles become less about survival and more about what the protagonist is willing to sacrifice to win. That tension reshapes relationships: a companion who once trusted them begins to worry, a rival shows begrudging respect, and the protagonist’s inner monologue tightens into something sharper. The sword makes the protagonist confront legacy, guilt, and ambition all at once.
By the time the climax rolls around, destiny isn’t handed down; it’s wrestled into place. The sword can grant victory, but only by robbing certain parts of the protagonist’s old life. I loved how bittersweet that felt—victory with cost, growth with loss—and it stuck with me long after the final page.