The answer below is complete BS. If you mean mythical dragons, all around places. If real dragons, Komoda, and other places.
the ice dragon lives in a cave in Antarctica where no one has ventured, the ice dragon will be found one day when our technology has improved enough to survive at the southernmost point of earth.
the fire dragon lives in Papa New Guinea and hides in the forest, it is quite fast, agile and small. Papa New Guinea is very hot because it is right near the equator, this is why the fire dragon chooses to live there.
the shadow dragon lives in the hills of Seathwaite, the exact location of its lair is unknown. it chooses to live in Seathwaite because it is the rainiest place in Europe, and allot of rain means allot of clouds.
the light dragon lives in western Phoenix it loves taking the form of a rock and laying in the sun for hours. it lives in Phoenix because it is always hot and sunny.
the water dragon lives in the depths of the Indian ocean, right near the coast of western Australia. it is really obvious why it lives here... it is wet! why it chose the Indian ocean, we don't know yet but hopefully some day we will.
they mostly live in dragons
Europe. Trust point please!!
Dragons don't exist, and this should say "Where do all dragons live and what is their habitat like?"
most medieval myths say they live up to 150-200 years.
They don't Dragons are fictional
No. Dragons are from myth and do not exist so they do not live in Pennsylvania.
Dragons from China live in open areas preferable next to a water supply and a very warm environment.A dragon can live in different places. It can live just about anywhere! (Yes, even Frost dragons can live in Antarctica.)
Dragons don't live on Earth, that's for sure, unless they live in the center of the planet.... or something
Komodo dragons live on the Island of Komodo in Indonesia. Komodo dragons also live on a few other Indonesian islands.
No the dragons don't exist no more
Dragons live in many different areas.
Weedy sea dragons live in southern Australian waters in kelp beds.