Paleo-Artograchian cuneiforms

The Paleo-Artograchian cuneiform is a writing system historically employed for writing the Despotanmagi and Archaic Lizardman languages, and is still used to write down Draconic to this day, at least by its native speakers. It mixed alphabetic and logographic elements (similar to the real-life Korean mixed script), albeit the alphabetic element was often considered clumsy, and thus logographs were preferred for anything other than foreign names and onomatopoeias.

Spelling conventions
Rather than each letter written left to right or right to left (or top to bottom), like what would be expected from an alphabet, letters for consonants and vowels are packed into syllable blocks, with said syllable blocks following each other in a left-to-right order. Within a syllable block, each sound is written top to bottom, with the exception being consonant clusters: each consonant in a consonant cluster is written left-to-right.

In the the Lizardman language, the aspirated stops were written as if they were consonant clusters, and likewise, the affricates  were written as if they were consonant clusters.

Logographic characters
The writing system also employed logographs - in fact, due to the complexity of the alphabetic system, logographs were preferred for everything other than foreign names and onomatopoeias.