In modern times, the concept of dragon blood has evolved to encompass a range of interpretations and applications. Some of these include:
For a thousand years, the Divine Dragon, Ryūjin no Mikoto, had blessed the land. His ichor—thick, shimmering, and hotter than molten gold—was the source of the empire’s holy miracles. Priests drank it diluted to heal the sick. Warriors smeared it on their blades to cut demons. The Emperor bathed in it once a decade to retain his godlike youth.
The world is thrown into chaos when the gods go mad, leading to a brutal war between the divine army and a horde of dragons. Iris, the protagonist, witnesses her village engulfed in flames and her parents killed. As a half-dragon, she must harness the power within her blood—often referred to as the "Dragon's Curse"—to survive and exact revenge on the divine entities responsible for the slaughter. Genre: Dark Fantasy RPG with adult content. Dragon Blood - Ryuu no Noroi to Seieki de Kami ...
The resulting explosion did not destroy the empire. It un-wrote the rules of divinity. The gods did not die—they became human. The dragon did not die—he became a mortal man, weeping on the floor, finally feeling pain. And Akane?
“I am the curse that loved itself. Call me Akane. Or call me the final drop.” In modern times, the concept of dragon blood
The dragon’s curse had turned her into a . She was a walking anti-miracle.
The curse code, written in no mortal language, overwrote her cells. Her veins turned to liquid magma. Her eyes became vertical slits. And a voice—ancient, furious, and masculine—whispered inside her skull: Priests drank it diluted to heal the sick
While the title is often associated with its adult elements, players frequently highlight its and the "gritty" nature of its revenge-driven narrative.