So you’re playing in a one-shot and need a character real quick, or maybe you’re new to Dungeons and Dragons and you need a pre-generated character fresh and ready to go. No worries friend! I’ve got you covered!
Today we have Valrexad Urivayla, the female gold Dragonborn, Oath of Devotion Paladin! Below you will find the links for both the picture of Fenra from Heroforge.com, and the character sheet from dndbeyond.com.

Character sheet for Val from dndbeyond
Backstory for Valrexad Urivayla
Valrexad can commonly be found at inns and taverns, moving from one place to another to satiate her thirst for ale and a cheap place to sleep. When drunk, she would be often heard spouting failed promises and other broken pieces of her past.
Such as her ex, a female black Dragonborn named Thea. They met in a back alley, both drunk off ale from some hole in the wall tavern. It wasn’t love at first sight, but instead a convenient excuse to not be alone. They stayed together despite only getting along when heavily drinking. Val finally left Thea after her tirade about Val cheating on her and stealing the rent money (both accusations of which were entirely untrue).
I’m order to make ends meet, or at least enough to buy another drink and cheap bed to sleep in for the night, she would often hit up her one and only contact from her past life. A human male diplomat for a regional lord. Brem Studresk was one of high aspirations, but a pushover for an old friend in need, even if they overstayed their welcome. He would often give her an easy job or two to somewhat justify giving her money.
What most people know of Val, is the drunken no good Drangonborn without a direction in life. What most people don’t know, is that she was an up and coming paladin who had dreams of becoming the next big hero, helping those who couldn’t help themselves. However, her one fatal flaw was her hubris. Never one to take help from another, she attempted to rescue a cowardly noble who was kidnapped on an island with their family. To say things didn’t go well was an understatement. The family wasn’t saved by Val, and instead was captured by the bandits and ransomed along with the noble family. Any respect that she built up until that point was gone, and no one could look at her seriously as a hero again.
When sober, she often daydreams about the what-ifs and the coulda-beens. How if she could have just asked for help rather than going off on her own, then maybe she could still be that hero that people looked up to.