What you fail to understand is D&D. That's you're first problem.
Take this scenario.
Rule: Drawing a weapon requires a move action, and it may also be done as part of a move action spent moving.
I don't like that rule, hurr durr dupa durr doesn't say unless otherwise noted blah blah blah. I see a Samurai example with Quick Draw, he explicitly gets to draw his weapon as a free action. The above rule is abolished, I ignore it.You are that guy, and you sound like an idiot to me. This isn't how D&D works and never has, the entire feat concept is based off making exceptions that only apply to certain people or things to begin with.
The DMG notes it somewhere, but my RC is OCRed so you'll have to take that.
ORDER OF RULES APPLICATION
The D&D game assumes a specific order of rules application: General to specific to exception. A general rule is a basic guideline, but a more specific rule takes precedence when applied to the same activity. For instance, a monster description is more specific than any general rule about monsters, so the description takes precedence. An exception is a particular kind of specific rule that contradicts or breaks another rule (general or specific). The Improved Disarm feat, for instance, provides an exception to the rule that an attacker provokes an attack of opportunity from the defender he’s trying to disarm (see Disarm, page 45).
So
True Dragon is literately the first set of rules to what is or isn't a TD. All 8 natural weapons, breath, FP, spells, SLAs DR, immunities, etc. The Fang Dragon is a specific monster description and it says flat out it is a True Dragon so regardless it is one. Likewise, "a fang dragon does not have a breath weapon but it's bite permanently drains Constitution" only trumps the base rules in the same activity (being a fang dragon).
Since the argument is based on the DWK Kobold being a
True Dragon, the Fang is of no value to even talk about. Specially since the concept of finding an exception to a rule in order to ignore it is total bullshit to begin with.
This has no real value to say since the exception argument shouldn't exist to begin with. But if you did humor it, every single TD listed as a TD in official sources does in fact gain Spell Resistance, Damage Reduction, Frightful Presence, and pretty sure Blindsense. I like bringing it up, because no single argument is capable of supporting it's self. Even if you demand exception replaces general, you still need to make up another excuse to validate your kobold opinion.
What does this even mean? Yes, I assume that Dragonwrought Kobolds qualify as the Dragon race - that's literally what the feat does. I'm not sure I understand the point you're trying to make.
And this comment. Wow. Just wow. You're pretty special huh?
DWK changes your
type to Dragon, your race is still Kobold. You say you are a "dragon", then bank on ambiguity that "dragon" can also mean True Dragon. Reminds me of how to escape from jail,
I pee in the bucket, then I look in the bucket and I see what I saw. I take that saw and cut my bed in half. To halves make a whole. So I crawl out through that hole and escape., which while pretty entertaining it's nothing more than a play on sounds.
I gave better examples in my first post, which was then quoted by Plz so you missed it twice or forty times prior to this thread give or take. But expanding on that, a Cleric obtaining Smite Evil can't qualify for being a Paladin to use a Holy Avenger. A Sorcerer casting Devil's Ego (changes type to outsider) can't qualify to become a Devil to take Devil feats, a Barbarian with bonus feats isn't a Fighter and won't be taking Weapon Specialization, a humanoid changing his type to dragon isn't a true dragon, a Aassmir with a Belt of Dwarvenkind can't take levels in Stone Warden, an Elven Wizard using Polymorph isn't a Changling to take levels in Recaster, hey is any of this sinking in yet? There is no rules to
qualify for another race (or class) at a base level. Specific exceptions exist (UMD for items, reincarnation which changes race, casts as a X level this, etc) but
you cannot simply obtain a similar ability found in another race or class and say you are that race or class. IE changing your type to Dragon and having three functioning age categories listed as 12 doesn't mean you are a True Dragon. Even if you did obtain SR, DR, FP, Blindsense, Breath Weapon(s), innate casting, and so on you're still just a guy wishing he was something else.
In case you've lost count here. I've shot down your argument in three different ways. How you are using two house rules and how each doesn't work like you think it does. And the fact that even in your set of house rules you still fail to make your point and need to add more bullshit to make your opinion function. Like you're last post where you just pick stuff that seems similar (kobolds have arms and dragons do too!) and ignore all text that disagrees with you. As stupid as it is, at least you were consistent.