Character: grand, egocentric, generous, straightforward, theatrical.
When the Dragon enters a room, the air becomes thinner. He looks as if he has just won the lottery or saved the world, even if he simply stepped out to buy bread in a stretched t-shirt. He is a fireworks display of a person, radiating absolute confidence in his right to the throne. However, behind this dazzling, armored facade often lies a fragile ego that needs applause just as much as lungs need oxygen. Remove the audience, and this giant risks turning into a confused child, not understanding why he exists at all.
In communication, he does not engage in dialogue; he preaches from the podium. To interrupt the Dragon is to declare war, for he genuinely believes that his opinion is the only correct one. He can give his last shirt to a friend, but will then remind them of this feat for the next ten years, expecting eternal gratitude. In love, he demands total adoration: if his partner does not look at him with admiration, the Dragon concludes that he is being devalued and stages a grand drama with dish-breaking and door-slamming.
For him, money is not a goal but a means to maintain brilliance and power. He is not good at meticulously saving, but he is a virtuoso at spending and earning on pure enthusiasm. The Dragon is not made for routine, minor tasks, and Excel spreadsheets; he needs grand projects, risk, and the ability to lead the parade. He often takes on impossible tasks simply because the word "impossible" personally offends him.
The main trap of this sign is its own language, which always outpaces the thoughts. He can wound a person with a deadly precise, venomous phrase without even noticing it, and then be genuinely surprised by the cold reception. Additionally, the Dragon often suffers from paralyzing perfectionism: if he feels he cannot do something perfectly on the first try, he prefers to abandon the task midway and pretend he was never interested in it at all.
His superpower is the ability to infect others with frenzied energy and lift hopeless projects from the bottom, but for this, he needs to learn to tame his pride and acknowledge his mistakes. The best version of the Dragon is born when he stops performing for the audience and starts to work genuinely.
Most compatible with Rat, Monkey, Rooster.
The Dragon is not one who follows the rules but one who writes them to later demonstratively break them.