Comments: 20
kingrexy [2018-03-08 10:53:29 +0000 UTC]
Carno is awesome! Surprising that it didn't appear in the franchise earlier. Also, the carno has black stripes on its back and spots on the body.
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Michiragi In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-08 18:03:03 +0000 UTC]
this was before i saw the trailer and randomly added brown black bloches
gonna do another one but properly soon!
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kingrexy In reply to Michiragi [2018-03-08 18:40:22 +0000 UTC]
Hah! That's so cool!
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Taliesaurus In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-08 14:29:13 +0000 UTC]
indeed, but too be fair it was planned for JP3 but Disney stole their thunder
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Taliesaurus In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-08 18:43:28 +0000 UTC]
hence why the ceratosaurus was used instead.
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Taliesaurus In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-09 13:08:29 +0000 UTC]
btw, you know how a lot of people comp;lain how JW's stego has a droopy tail?
so I did a bit of research and found out this-
the lost world one DID hold it's tail low occasionally, look, here's the model-cache.popcultcha.com.au/media/…
and here's the lost world concept art-media.liveauctiongroup.net/i/5…
and here's a stego animatronic from the lost world film-www.paulmejias.com/images/lost…
and here's one from the lost world film-vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/no…
now compare it to what is considered an "accurate" stegosaurus-phenomena.nationalgeographic.c…
and you see it doesn't break consistency at all, in fact, it KEEPS consistency!
but even if what people are saying is saying is true, perhaps understand they should understand that
Isla Sorna's Stego is wild
and JW's stego is domesticated. it would have no real need to defend itself and therefore wouldn't have enough exercise, hence why the tail is a bit droopy
I think of it like an orcas doral fin, wild ones have it pointing up straight, and the ones in captivity have it drooping.
Wild ocra-www.takepart.com/sites/default…
"domesticated" Ocra-i.ytimg.com/vi/ZIYVHCF04A4/max…
Because you have to remember, Jurassic World is a ZOO!
what do you think of that?
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Michiragi In reply to Taliesaurus [2018-03-15 01:12:40 +0000 UTC]
droopyness might actually have resulted in lack of need for self defence. but Shamu and other orcas were placed in a very small captive area while stegosaur was living in a more open living space.
the information conflicts with the timelines of design updates irl of the stegosaurus
they do in fact have their tails droopy but the image of the stego in TLW when the group encounters them first at the river is actually what people are using as a base reference to the new JW design while forgetting every other scene there is.
i do think its absurd that they let it droop so far but then again, its a very over blown thing and its not too horrible. The stego looks great either way
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Taliesaurus In reply to Michiragi [2018-03-15 07:38:40 +0000 UTC]
mabe but I'm still saying that it's an effect of being kept in a safe zoo enviroment
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kingrexy In reply to Taliesaurus [2018-03-09 16:05:16 +0000 UTC]
Oh my, that's true! You do a lot of research! Must share this.
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Taliesaurus In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-09 16:09:50 +0000 UTC]
1- how would you want to do that?
2- what do you like what i showed you?
3- and do you understand why JW's stego is perfectly fine as far as consistency in the CONTEXT goes?
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kingrexy In reply to Taliesaurus [2018-03-09 16:34:05 +0000 UTC]
1- By means of a facebook group where every single JP fan is present. The group even has people from Jurassic Outpost! Chris Pugh for example.
2- That stegosaurus from the universe doesn't cause a consistency issue! And the interesting fact about orca dorsal flippers. Why though?
3- yes indeed!
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Taliesaurus In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-09 16:43:33 +0000 UTC]
1- well look forward o what you say when sharing this knowledge
(and what their reactions will be)
2- not even the keepers are fully sure but it seems to have something to do with lack of exercise, constant food supply, lazy lifestyle or limited space
3- which goes into the idea that they were bred from eggs/DNA samples taken from sorna...
how's that idea?
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kingrexy In reply to Taliesaurus [2018-03-09 17:09:29 +0000 UTC]
1- Eh, they won't find it so special but will share the news when someone says that "it's a downgrade' or something like that.
2- So it's under research then? And here's a wild piece of speculation with nothing to back it up except dogs, that it might be a show of emotion. Dog tail positions can show their emotions, what if this is the same? Mammals can show emotions only.
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Taliesaurus In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-09 19:56:01 +0000 UTC]
1-that would be funny to see
2- yes but the thing with dinosaurs, you needs some wild speculations sometimes (because we still don't know EVERYTHING about them)
plus you can also make the idea that it is an effect of genetic engineering.
(and dinosaurs may nit be related to mammals, but they do live in similar niches)
and just a note, it is not ONLY mammals that have it, flamingos never get as red as wild ones (sometimes they are just white) as you cannot easily get the flowers they eat.
some macaws lose their feathers from the stress.
crocodiles scales bleach
some birds have their birds chipped from peaking on the bars.
the list goes on and on.
we aren't 100% what CAUSES it, but we do know it has something to do with living in a zoo environment.
you understand?
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kingrexy In reply to Taliesaurus [2018-03-09 20:05:58 +0000 UTC]
2- I was talking about the orcra only, but I didn't know that all that happens to other animals.
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Taliesaurus In reply to kingrexy [2018-03-09 20:13:13 +0000 UTC]
it does, meaning it very well would happen to dinosaurs.
that is something most people don't consider
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