More like a pride of lions bringing down an elephant, or maybe wolves on a bison.
1v1 dragon slaying would still be more like a badger taking on a tiger.
Player characters (as opposed to non d&d dragon slaying stories) aren’t usually as ill prepared as a cat is vs a human, and rarely “hunt” alone. PCs have better weapons than claws and teeth, and the ability to coordinate attacks reduces the advantage of size and power the dragon has more than the comparison between a cat and a standard, unarmed human.
In a fight badger vs tiger I’m not sure if I’d put my money on the tiger. At least the European badgers are nasty af. Golden rule: if you hit them / run them over with a car, don’t leave the car. They’re pretty sure still alive and mad as hell and you’ll regret it.
More like a pride of lions bringing down an elephant, or maybe wolves on a bison.
1v1 dragon slaying would still be more like a badger taking on a tiger.
Player characters (as opposed to non d&d dragon slaying stories) aren’t usually as ill prepared as a cat is vs a human, and rarely “hunt” alone. PCs have better weapons than claws and teeth, and the ability to coordinate attacks reduces the advantage of size and power the dragon has more than the comparison between a cat and a standard, unarmed human.
I do, however, love the idea presented :)
In a fight badger vs tiger I’m not sure if I’d put my money on the tiger. At least the European badgers are nasty af. Golden rule: if you hit them / run them over with a car, don’t leave the car. They’re pretty sure still alive and mad as hell and you’ll regret it.
To use another IRL example, humans did drive the wooly mammoth to complete extinction with little more than sharpened rocks attached to sticks.
Humanity’s ability of cooperation is a massive force multiplier and let’s us accomplish tasks that would kill and individual.