Not only is this a great review for the Haolonggood Stegosaurus Ungulatus, but I truly enjoy the scientific facts, presented here - well done, sir! 🙂
@MarkSmith-gt4kq6 ай бұрын
Great presentation, of a not so well known stegosaurus. I like the comparison with the PNSO stegosaurus figure. Well done !
@neilsanghvi52295 ай бұрын
Great review, great opinions, stunning model!
@JB-js4xiАй бұрын
That's awesome. Very good and informative video. I only have the Gemini & Genius one. That's what I collect because they're affordable to me and pretty good.
@an_honest_opinion6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing Rukka
@kalevipoeg6916Ай бұрын
The stegos in The Lost World were crazy over-sized lol I've actually found the shooting location in northern California for that scene and for them to take up the space they did, they'd have to be as big or bigger than T. rex.
@tharukkusАй бұрын
If I recall, the Stegosaurs were officially 40 (FORTY) feet long! Your observation of them being the same size as a T-rex (not Rexy though. I believe she's 44 ft).
@samspeaks20166 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing originally about the larger beasts having duller schemes like elephants, rhinos, hippo's, ect. but those examples we have are mammals, dinosaurs come from a lineage of reptiles. We know Edmontosaurus had patterns on it from the mummified Dakota specimen and beasts comparable to its size don't ever really have markings. Then again, a Galapagos tortoise would be very similar to a dinosaur being the same thing with a keratin sheath on its beak like a Steg and they're dull in coloration too so who knows, they could have looked like anything. But being larger reptiles in such a different environment I certainly haven't dismissed the idea they could have been super diverse in color like many lizards today.
@colinmathura-jeffree98296 ай бұрын
These models are beautiful
@elijahglasser14212 ай бұрын
Awesome stegosaurus
@colinmathura-jeffree98296 ай бұрын
My fav Stegosaurus too❤
@albertohim45774 ай бұрын
This would look awesome with PNSOs Saurophaganax Maximus
@kalevipoeg6916Ай бұрын
I have the PNSO Allosaurus but I kind of hate it, and need another 1:35 to replace it. Something about their color choices and head sculpts always bothered me - and I don't like how it's become so common to give dinosaurs bright blue eyes for no apparent reason even though if you look at LIVING archosaurs (the group including crocodiles, birds and non-avian dinosaurs), blue eyes are - just as with humans - very rare. Most humans have brown eyes, with blue making up under 1% o the global population. Most birds have eyes that range from browns and ambers to reds and yellows, but blue? Not so common. Crocodiles - which are, aside from birds, the closest living relatives of the dinosaurs - also don't have blue eyes. So I'm not sure why they keep doing that. Big animals - elephants, whales, etc - tend to be limited to greys and browns and earthy tones, however, so it's a bit surprising that the scales on the skin of DIplodocus indicate that the animal had a yellowish skin - surprisingly bright for such a big animal - though probably an earthy, muted yellow, closer to a yellow-brown mustard. I'd be shocked though if STEGOSAURUS didn't make effective use of its plates as sexual or threat displays by evolving some sort of brighter coloration, which Haolonggood has do here. I like, too, the greenish tone of the skin - these were big animals that could not simply hide, so no use being too camoflagued - an Allosaurus would spot them from far away no matter what.
@MahmWithThePlan6 ай бұрын
Battat has the only other S.ungulatus on the market, just a small correction in the intro buddy!
@rukkasaurusrex33646 ай бұрын
As I said; "Far as I know". Thanks
@MahmWithThePlan6 ай бұрын
@@rukkasaurusrex3364 wasn't trying to be rude bud.
@rukkasaurusrex33646 ай бұрын
@@MahmWithThePlan Understood. I wasn't insinuating you were. Just letting you know I didn't know for a fact if ungulatus was the 1st model or not.