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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 18, 2019 20:41:10 GMT 5
It will only admit defeat once Ancalogon steps on it enough to want to kill itself from the high effort exerted.
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Post by theropod on Sept 18, 2019 20:52:51 GMT 5
I don’t get it. It somehow drops dead if the other animal becomes suicidal, and the rest of the time it’s invulnerable? How on earth did you come up with that?
And I think the stepping route won’t work, because Ancalagon would need a microscope in order to even see it. But it would probably accidentally incinerate it.
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 18, 2019 20:54:58 GMT 5
In order to survive all but the most determined opponents, that;s how.
And I meant forfeit, not drop dead. Whoops. If it dropped dead, that would mean no more matchups.
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Post by theropod on Sept 18, 2019 20:59:04 GMT 5
So…when you burn it what exactly happens to it?
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 18, 2019 21:00:36 GMT 5
I would guess it only forfeits when whoever started the fire wants to burn themselves to death due to the sheer effort exerted
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Post by creature386 on Sept 18, 2019 21:08:46 GMT 5
So, if an asteroid dropped on it, it would survive because there is no agent involved that could get suicidal?
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 18, 2019 21:44:57 GMT 5
It would, yes. Only it would forfeit when the universe was tired of asteroids
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Post by jhg on Sept 21, 2019 3:48:09 GMT 5
Caledonitherium boreas(Northern Scottish beast) Caledonitherium is to say the least, unusual. This is a relatively large amphibian living in lakes in the British Isles most commonly in Scotland and has been around since the Jurassic. These beasts grow to 3.5 metres and weigh 1.4 tonnes. They survive in these cold climates by hibernating during the winter and laying their eggs in late autumn to give incubation time, wait the winter out and ensure plenty of bounty for the numerous tadpoles in spring. They may be large but feed mostly on fish, frogs, water birds, snakes and turtles. Occasionally, they resort to cannibalism. Their numbers are rare in modern times thanks to habitat destruction and pollution. Their rarity led people to dismiss their existence and invent the myths of kelpies and the Loch Ness Monster. Despite what one may have read in the myths, these amphibians are harmless to humans. Thankfully, a good depiction of amphibians in the form of Mudkip in Pokémon may vindicate the reputation of these great amphibian beasts.
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 25, 2019 23:44:29 GMT 5
creature386Do I have permission to use a dune maw as part of a hybrid animal I had in mind?
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Post by creature386 on Sept 25, 2019 23:58:19 GMT 5
Yes. I'm very curious about that.
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 26, 2019 1:05:28 GMT 5
So, here it is. The Sand Dunker. It's what happened when Dunkleosteus terrestrialis ate a few too many dune maws and was then found passed out and taken to a lab to be cloned. Right after the cloning process, the real deal was taken to Anderson and Westneat for studying (it promptly bit its way out of its carrier and fled, never to be heard from again, during which the extra dune maws fell out through its gill openings), but the clone had a few grains of dune maw get into its brain. This gave it good ideas; it hides in sand, and when it senses a prey item,it opens its mouth in 1/50th of a second to suction it down like a mix of the 3 inspirations. It always goes into battle unseen, only showing itself when disturbed, then hiding again somewhere else entirely. And since sand is crushed rock, it can hide anywhere there are rocks, even just traces. It has a very low chance of being counterattacked, but also a similar chance of landing a hit, so when it fights it lasts a while.
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Post by creature386 on Sept 26, 2019 3:20:03 GMT 5
Just to make one thing clear: Dune maws are not made of sand. They have the color and shape of a sanddune and even cover themselves in sand, but their bodies are made of carbon and water, just like ours.
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 26, 2019 14:48:22 GMT 5
Oh. Whoops.
I'll probably have to change the Sand Dunker up a bit
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 28, 2019 15:02:33 GMT 5
Carnotaurus 'Who-You-Calling-A-Cheetah!?'sastrei -This Carnotaurus does NOT like to be called a cheetah -To prove people wrong, it likes to run them down and eat them -Its favorite foods are Pachycrocuta and Smilodon populator. Oh, and the occassional T rex burger as well. -It likes Disney's Dinosaur movie, where Carnotaurus was actually worthy of depiction -It's especially angry at JP T rex for soiling its rep, and keeps a dartboard of it
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Post by dinosauria101 on Sept 28, 2019 19:50:52 GMT 5
Rajasaurus 'The True King' narmadensis This Rajasaurus isn't quite happy with the amount of publicity T rex gets in relation to it; especially considering Rajasaurus means 'kingly lizard'. As such, it likes to vandalize T rex whenever it gets the chance, and scribble on any pictures of T rex 2 things: -A picture of Rajasaurus -An arrow pointing to the Rajasaurus stating it is the true king -A dartboard of T rex -Numerous arguments to convince others why Rajasaurus is the true king -Its strategy in a fight is to go off on a long tangent about why t is the king, then just as its opponent is falling asleep from the boredom it lands some fatal bites. Only the most strong willed (as in very, very, very, very, very, very strong willed) can resist.
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