Dungeons and Dragons Lore: Dinosaur

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  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2024
  • Dinosaurs in Dungeons and Dragons go back to the early 80's, so, pretty much from the beginning, and in Forgotten Realms, the dinosaurs, or behemoths, or thunder lizards, are woven into the setting quite smoothly, which provides two distinct areas of the world where these creatures can commonly be found.

Komentáře • 325

  • @crackedjabber
    @crackedjabber Před 7 lety +126

    Fun fact: The tail on a stegosaurus is called a thagomizer. Because of a joke in an old Far Side comic where they comment it was named in honor of Thag.

    • @Thagomizer
      @Thagomizer Před 5 lety +5

      Damn straight!

    • @vincentdark54
      @vincentdark54 Před 3 lety +8

      RIP Thag Simmons

    • @SassyXan
      @SassyXan Před rokem +1

      And at the time scientists didn't actually have a name for it so they saw the comic and said "yeah, that works" and starter using it in papers

  • @hydradragon7573
    @hydradragon7573 Před 4 lety +68

    The velociraptor in jurassic park were originally supposed to be deinonychus, but the writer of the book thought the name velociraptor was better.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 4 lety +9

      The mind boggles... I read some of that writers work.. got half way through the Sphere novel and got bored with it.

    • @wolfmoonstudios7901
      @wolfmoonstudios7901 Před 2 lety +2

      They even combined the scientific names of them.
      Deinonychus antirrhopus.
      Velociraptor mongoliensis.
      In the movie/book they are called velociraptor antirrhopus. There are also close similarities to Utahraptor, which is another cool dino.

    • @Thagomizer
      @Thagomizer Před 2 lety +6

      Crichton was referencing Gregory S. Paul's 1988 book "Predatory Dinosaurs of the World", which lumped Velociraptor and Deinonychus into the same genus. This is a classification that paleontologists have since largely rejected. The "Velociraptor" portrayed in the JP movie is larger still, about the size of Achillobator.

    • @wolfmoonstudios7901
      @wolfmoonstudios7901 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Thagomizer I also remember reading a fictional story called "Raptor Red" about a female Utahraptor, and the author mentions that the movie's raptors also drew heavy inspiration from that species as well.

    • @DeathPaladin02
      @DeathPaladin02 Před rokem +2

      @WolfMoon Studios Oh I loved that book. The first xenofiction I'd ever read. I still have my copy. Falling apart, dog-eared, torn in places, and still read through at least twice a year.

  • @Nightfire99201
    @Nightfire99201 Před 7 lety +90

    I made a half Red Dragon T-Rex for a 3rd ed game a few years back. My players were totally unprepared for an intelligent T-Rex that had a cone of flame as a breath weapon.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +38

      Ha ha! That is so nasty, I love it. I once planned to use a black half dragon that had been transformed into a draconic mind flayer, but the campaign ended before they got to meet that nightmare boss.

    • @Nightfire99201
      @Nightfire99201 Před 7 lety +11

      That would of been an excellent boss monster. To bad they never got to meet it.

    • @TheUnholyHandGrenade
      @TheUnholyHandGrenade Před 3 lety +4

      Sounds like a sentient Anjanath.
      _slowly pulls out Kadachi Kaina_

    • @dirandrous7682
      @dirandrous7682 Před 2 lety

      @@TheUnholyHandGrenade hehe

    • @kuriboh635
      @kuriboh635 Před 2 lety

      Dude suck. Would you mind if I do something similar in one of my games

  • @LoneTiger98
    @LoneTiger98 Před 7 lety +68

    I actually went with a journey to the center of the earth feel with a artificial sun. So while my players haven't seen it yet I think they'll be laughing before yelling at me that I have duergar riding around on dinosaurs

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +26

      Angry Dwarves on Angry dinosaurs.. I like it.

  • @PlanetZoidstar
    @PlanetZoidstar Před 4 lety +43

    Fun fact - T-Rex is as far removed in time from Stegosaurus as we are from T-Rex.

    • @markusnavergard2387
      @markusnavergard2387 Před 3 lety +7

      further. there is 80 million years between Stegosaurus and T.rex, where there is 65 million years between us and T.rex

    • @ShineyFace1337
      @ShineyFace1337 Před 2 lety +2

      @@markusnavergard2387 that just makes me think like damn that's a lot of years

    • @tOGGLEwAFFLES
      @tOGGLEwAFFLES Před 8 měsíci

      Which also means a T-Rex fighting a stegosaurus is more anachronistic than a T-Rex riding a moped.

    • @tOGGLEwAFFLES
      @tOGGLEwAFFLES Před 8 měsíci +1

      Which also means a T-Rex fighting a stegosaurus is more anachronistic than a T-Rex riding a moped.

    • @kingdon7795
      @kingdon7795 Před 2 měsíci

      That's a hypothesis

  • @Supersaurus4
    @Supersaurus4 Před 3 lety +10

    All this time I kept thinking Dinosaurs didn’t exist in that world, but it turns out they do

  • @damianmorningstar3150
    @damianmorningstar3150 Před 3 lety +7

    On my current D&D game we use Dinosaurs and Mammalian Mega Fauna a lot because for our setting, we actually a month ago met a really strange Tribe of Orcs who became completely Vegan to emulate things like Therozinasaurs, Giant Ground Sloths, and and Theropods. They where a nasty bunch they used gauntlets made of wood and bone with the Claws of Therozinasaurs and Ground Sloths. They where also massive with even bigger tusks used to strip bark and dig up roots. They where so massive and had hide so thick the local Elven People had to develop new weapons to put them down massive Two Person Bows where one person held and aimed the bow and the second person was the person to draw the string back that loosed a Lance sized arrow

  • @Jpteryx
    @Jpteryx Před 7 lety +83

    Dinosaurs actually did live in environments where it snowed near the poles, so it's scientifically justified to add some to cooler climates.

    • @marcopohl4875
      @marcopohl4875 Před 6 lety

      but i here they died out do to cold, so i'd doubt it

    • @Giganfan2k1
      @Giganfan2k1 Před 5 lety +7

      Espically with all the feathered therapods we got now. It will be really interesting if we can learn more about their avian like metabolism.

    • @adamwelch4336
      @adamwelch4336 Před 5 lety +7

      Scientist. Agree that dinosaurs are at most partly if not all warm blooded animals much like there bird kin!

    • @TheRealEvilRoy
      @TheRealEvilRoy Před 4 lety

      Just cover them in penguin style fur/feathers and their good to go. Lol

    • @hydradragon7573
      @hydradragon7573 Před 4 lety +2

      Yup I can think of one of the top of my head, that's cryolophosaurus

  • @demetrinight5924
    @demetrinight5924 Před 2 lety +12

    I think Forgotten Realms and Eberron have the right idea of having Dinosaurs in their own sections of the world.
    I have given Dinosaurs their own planet/plane of existence in my homebrew multi-verse. They are more rare sights on the main world.

  • @chaddixon9764
    @chaddixon9764 Před 7 lety +8

    I could see these being in a similar ecology to Giants. A Fire Giant going into battle on top of a T-Rex sounds like something I will throw at my players in the future.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +3

      Visually appealing, but I think a fire giant would be too heavy for a T-Rex.. still, these are not Earth Dinosaurs, so, I say hell yeah!

    • @chaddixon9764
      @chaddixon9764 Před 7 lety +1

      Actually you make a good point... hmm... time to come up with a new plan.

    • @Birbucifer
      @Birbucifer Před 6 lety

      Noximus Jamaicanus Why dont you just make it an extra large t-rex that has a fire breath cone attack!

  • @ghostoftanelorn9928
    @ghostoftanelorn9928 Před 7 lety +18

    In my setting all reptilians are decended from dragons, dinosaurs branch off from drakes.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +9

      That also works.

    • @fhuber7507
      @fhuber7507 Před 5 lety

      @@TheBlackLantern34 Who said Dragons were reptiles?

    • @FiddleWiddle
      @FiddleWiddle Před 4 lety +2

      Kaz Avian it’s dnd who cares

    • @markusnavergard2387
      @markusnavergard2387 Před 3 lety

      @@TheBlackLantern34 they are reptiles. they are diapsids, all diapsids are reptiles, can also be called Sauropsids

  • @konewhatsthenamespolicy6308

    It is taking all my restraint to only say Dimetrodon wasn’t a dinosaur it’s the ancestor of mammals and neither are pliosaurs, which are marine reptiles. Also it’s Die-non-ickus

  • @joze838
    @joze838 Před 3 lety +6

    The Great White Shark is not a very primitive shark. Yes, not as "modern" as hammerheads but still fairly derived compared with sand tiger sharks and deep sea sharks.

  • @ecthelion1735
    @ecthelion1735 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I like the idea of dinosaurs being a major theme in Maztica. In my homebrew setting, the only place with dinosaurs is the "New World" equivalent, where there are no dragons.

  • @coreymerrill3257
    @coreymerrill3257 Před 4 lety +20

    Dimetradon is older than dinosaurs by a large margain. They are from before when dinosaurs existed and is more closely related to people than dinos. It is " dyno sue kiss" just so you know . i cant spell greatly well but i am pretty ok with pronunciations .

    • @joze838
      @joze838 Před 2 lety +1

      Is it possible that you mean to pronounce Deinosuchus (a big crocodile relative) instead of Dimetrodon?

    • @almitrahopkins1873
      @almitrahopkins1873 Před 2 lety +2

      Dimetradon is a synapsid. That means it is closer to mammals.

  • @kingstewy
    @kingstewy Před 7 lety +56

    Welcome Chultassic Park.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +26

      spared no expense.

    • @kingstewy
      @kingstewy Před 7 lety +8

      AJ Pickett When Annihilation comes out, you should do a Jurrassic Park side campaign. A human Merchant Prince College of Valor or Lore bard has a large swath of land where he gives guided tours of dinosaurs. He has a group of followers that protect the tourists and act as guides. He, also, has an tiefling artificer and elven wizard who help the eggs grow faster and do experiments on them, aka like adding element or other creature types to them, in secret to any guests. There is a wild dwarf big game hunter conclave of beasts ranger with a raptor as a pet. But, there is one ghostwise halfling, he was kicked out of his tribe for acts just like this, mastermind rogue who wants to sabotage an excavation, so he can take the eggs to Waterdeep for profit. There is a tabaxi jungle circle of the land druid that knows nature always finds a way as well as a gnome nature and half-elf life domain clerics of Ubtao who want to see if he would approve. I'm bored lol!

    • @opalthediloalt9595
      @opalthediloalt9595 Před 6 lety

      Lol

    • @miles6283
      @miles6283 Před 6 lety +4

      They have a Terrasque

  • @ChasoGod
    @ChasoGod Před 2 lety +4

    I would always locate them in an isolated area that is hard to reach from the outside world. Like on an macro island surrounded by razor reefs and constant storms. The only humanoids on it are the survivors of shipwrecks of crews trying to sail through the area, but leaving would be close to impossible The storms could also interfere with magical or technological teleportation in and out of the region, so once you're there you're pretty much stuck.

  • @Pokemon4WoT
    @Pokemon4WoT Před 7 lety +6

    "Dinosaurs afflicted with lycanthropy."
    Wow...that's an awesome idea.

    • @MaxCanberra
      @MaxCanberra Před 5 lety +1

      Pokemon4WoT it is

    • @brianroberts783
      @brianroberts783 Před 5 lety +2

      What about dinosaur lycanthropes? Like a were-Tyrannosaurus!

    • @vatofdread1468
      @vatofdread1468 Před 3 lety +2

      I have the best idea for lore about a WereDino if anyone would like to hear me out?

  • @elizabethfernandez9466
    @elizabethfernandez9466 Před 5 lety +10

    BODAK T-REX
    I recommend you modify the T-rex to a Yutyrannus if you want to have it in a colder climate because the Yutyrannus was basically a T-rex but much more adapted to the colder climates of northeastern China.

  • @YoKhai1221
    @YoKhai1221 Před 4 měsíci +2

    6:40 If we’re being technical dimetrodon’s are actually synapsids meaning they are more closely related to us/mammals.

  • @DabIMON
    @DabIMON Před 7 lety +5

    I like to think of them as the perfect mounts for lizardfolk

  • @tinim5145
    @tinim5145 Před 6 lety +14

    12:48 is that a froghemoth fighting a trex?

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 6 lety +7

      Excellent spotting sir! Yes, the relative size of the two creatures is evident in this image.

    • @tinim5145
      @tinim5145 Před 6 lety +2

      Subbed

    • @spacewarsfight281
      @spacewarsfight281 Před 4 lety

      Metal as fuck

  • @kingcazar2285
    @kingcazar2285 Před 7 lety +34

    diemetrodons were technically not dinosaurs

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +21

      Dimetrodon is a Pelycosaur (or pelycosaur-grade synapsid), you are correct, they were not dinosaurs,

    • @auroraourania7161
      @auroraourania7161 Před 7 lety +11

      Yup, they're closer related to Mammals than to dinosaurs.
      Also, the one you were having trouble pronouncing is pronounced die-non-ick-us.

    • @CultOfNothoon
      @CultOfNothoon Před 4 lety +3

      Very true. Neither are Pteranodons and Plesiosaurs!

    • @hydradragon7573
      @hydradragon7573 Před 4 lety +3

      We are actually related to dimetrodon as it was a mammal like reptile

    • @skezeksskybreaker5425
      @skezeksskybreaker5425 Před 4 lety +2

      If you ever play the game Ark Survival Evolved everyone gives up and calls all the creatures including mammals like a Mammoth and Megelaceros and fantasy creatures like a Wyvern a "Dino" even though probably 80% or more of the player base knows better.

  • @Thagomizer
    @Thagomizer Před 7 lety +15

    I hate to be a nitpick, but Paleontology Nazi that I am, I have to point out a few things:
    The name Pteranodon means "Winged and Toothless", because it is indeed both of these things. "Pteros" means wing, "-odon" means tooth, and the prfix "a" or "an" means "without". The way you pronounced it "Pterodon" would mean "winged tooth".
    The creature pictured at 4:09 is a Camarasaurus, not a Brontosaurus. Camarasaurus was the most common sauropod in Late Jurassic North America, living alongside Brontosaurus, Apatosaurus, Diplodocus, Brachiosaurus, Stegosaurus, Camptosaurus, Dryosaurus, Torvosaurus, Ceratosaurus, Allosaurus, etc. But for some reason, it doesn't have as much pop culture exposure. It had stats in 1st edition D&D, though, and so did the rest of those guys. Less powerful than Diplodocus (no tail-whip), and less hit points, but it's much more plentiful.
    The creature pictured at 8:20 is a Parasaurolophus, a lambeosaurine. "Hadrosaur" is a good umbrella term to denote the superfamily which includes Hardosaurinae and Lambeosaurinae etc. But Hadrosaurus itself is not particularly well known. I don't know why it would be given specific attention in 5e when there are other, more quintessential hadrosaurs that could have been statted out instead, like Edmontosaurus, Brachylophosaurus, Lambeosaurus, Parasaurolophus, Shangtungosaurus, etc. you could probably simulate any of these dinosaurs using the same stats, with some hit point modifications where appropriate.
    Heck, they really should have included Iguanodon as well. Two thumb spike attacks in addition to a tail lash! And it's damn big to boot.
    The name "Quetzalcoatlus" is obviously derived from Quetzalcoatl, since it was found around Texas and Mexico. As such, I think it would be pronounced the same way, with the "-us" at the end. But perhaps this could even be an Easter egg in a game set in Maztica. Maybe a Quetzalcoatl worshipping cult trains these? Maybe (and this would truly be outlandish), there could be some breed of these creatures replacing the Coatl in certain settings, retaining the same stats, but with Coatl's intelligence, alignment, role and abilities.
    Regarding Triceratops, most depictions in pop culture have grossly understated the lethal power of this beast. This was such a nasty and dangerous animal, larger and stronger than an elephant and with the same muscular build as a hippo. I truly hate that stupid "herbivores are friendly" trope all the JP movies have used. Elephants, Hippos, and Cape Buffalo are the most dangerous animals in Africa, and they're all herbivores. The ceratopsids may have even been omnivorous, too. It seems now that they were more like giant boars than dinosaurian bovines or rhinos.
    I don't know if you've covered these guys in the past, but I'm very glad the Froghemoth (seen around 12:45) has been included in Volo's new guide. I don't think they've been in print for a long time.

    • @DCdabest
      @DCdabest Před 5 lety +1

      Nice name btw!

    • @darrylviljoen6227
      @darrylviljoen6227 Před 5 lety +4

      Lol. Your name gives away your affection for dinosaurs.
      I completely agree. It irritated me in Jurassic world when the ankylosaurus turned tail and tried to run from the plotasaurus instead of presenting their tail and pounding it into hamburger meat.
      Seriously. They are tanks armed with wrecking balls. Why would they run away.

    • @crackerman5519
      @crackerman5519 Před 4 lety

      Thagomizer hippos are onivoures arent they?

    • @RokuroCarisu
      @RokuroCarisu Před 3 lety +1

      If my memory is correct, the only "friendly" herbivores in the Jurassic Park movies are the Triceratops in the first, who was sick and could barely move, the Brachiosaurus also from the first, who is so large that it has no reason to find humans threatening, and a couple of babies in Jurassic World's petting zoo. The Lost World and Fallen Kingdom depicted Stegosaurs and Pachycephalosaurs as quite dangerous too.

    • @fwwaller
      @fwwaller Před rokem +1

      He also calls plesiosaurs “marine dinosaurs” when they were not dinosaurs at all

  • @sapphhere283
    @sapphhere283 Před rokem +1

    I'm actually planning on doing a dnd campaign completely centered around dinosaurs who look, behave, and fight as realistically as possible

  • @opalthediloalt9595
    @opalthediloalt9595 Před 6 lety +2

    A dinosaur alone won’t case that much distraction, sure a group of 10 or 20 sorapods could wipe out a forest but alone they are ineffective.

  • @UforEuphrates
    @UforEuphrates Před 3 lety +1

    You have given me so many ideas. I love these videos.

  • @AzraelThanatos
    @AzraelThanatos Před 2 měsíci

    As another place you missed, there's the Crawling Jungle...which is a terrifying thing to deal with at all

  • @CaptainCretaceous91
    @CaptainCretaceous91 Před 6 lety +10

    Dinosaurs in D&D? Where do I sign up?!

  • @seangere9698
    @seangere9698 Před 5 lety +15

    It's pronounced dino-ny-kus

  • @elricengquist9989
    @elricengquist9989 Před 7 lety +2

    I've been thinking about creating a race of Dino-like humanoids, kinda like the Voth in star trek, which would be a collective race of several different sub-races that had evolved from the different types Dinosaurs. Which might serve a niche in a setting like the Lizardmen races do, if you chose to not include them, or had this type of race as a ancestor of the Lizardmen in such a setting. I do remember there being some Dino-races at some point in D&D, but it has been quite sometime since I read up on them.

  • @MarkATorres1989
    @MarkATorres1989 Před 6 lety +1

    You reminded me of the insanity of my DM that used Dinosaurs...
    We fought an adult red dragon and managed to knock it prone into a mud pool.
    Our Druid wild shaped into a Tyrannous Rex and began to devour the Red Dragon.
    The weirdness began that after eating the Red Dragon, the Druid's T-Rex form had a property changed.
    Became Fire affinity with Fire Immunity and attacks inflicted Fire Based damage.
    I stopped and asked my DM why or how this happen?
    "Roll me an Arcana Check."
    ... I happen to be playing a Barbarian with an INT dump stat.

  • @Tyrantlizard127
    @Tyrantlizard127 Před 5 lety +2

    Dimetrodon is not a Dinosaur. It is an ancient reptile, that existed in the early to mid Permian Period. The raptor you're talking about is pronounced Die-na-nie-cus.

  • @bobkaminski3782
    @bobkaminski3782 Před 5 lety +1

    Not sure if this has been said but in the Mystara Campaign the first Immortal was in fact a Dinosaur.

  • @KingGoobus
    @KingGoobus Před 7 lety +2

    hey AJ! I love your vids, and they help me with my on going campaign to make the enemies feel more deep and alive. however I was wondering if you could do a series on the common/interesting deities? the DM and Player handbooks don't explain what the gods expect from followers. I know it's not in depth so the DM has control, but for on the fly situations it's impossible. thanks and keep up the fantastic videos!

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +1

      Oh sure, there is LOADS of lore on that, I can certainly make a vid on that for you.

    • @KingGoobus
      @KingGoobus Před 7 lety +1

      AJ Pickett thanks AJ! I'm looking forward to watching it! Thank you for being engaging with your community!

  • @marcoghiotti7153
    @marcoghiotti7153 Před 7 lety +3

    AJ, nice references to Dinotopia by Gurney

  • @purplehaze2358
    @purplehaze2358 Před 5 lety +3

    I get that D&D dinosaurs are entirely different from real dinosaurs, but my OCD is killing me with the fact that dimetrodon was a synapsid, not a dinosaur, and pterosaurs were an entirely different group from dinosaurs.

  • @marvalice3455
    @marvalice3455 Před 6 lety +9

    "hadrosaurus" shows pic of Parasaurolophus (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 6 lety +2

      HA! There is only one specimen of the Hadrosaur, if you ask me, it was probably a Parasaurolophus anyway, (no offense to the people of New Jersey). :)

    • @marvalice3455
      @marvalice3455 Před 6 lety +1

      fair enough. tho fun note, recent research indicates that large pterosaurs probably lived on the plains. they'd have an advantage over larger birds because the used the same muscles to take of as to fly, while birds use their leg muscles to take off so they can get away with being heaveyer!

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 6 lety +1

      That explains a lot :)

  • @shorgravan
    @shorgravan Před 7 lety +3

    Great video, as always. Still, a few "real world" corrections:
    Pleiosaures, ichiosaures and pterodons are NOT dinosaurs, and sharks are definitely not mammals. Also, although relatively clumsy on the ground, it seems that Quetzalcoatlus could maneuver reasonably well there, and could kick themselves into flight in one large leap (strongly assisted by the front-limbs). Quetzalcoatlus definitely had the muscle attachments for active flight, so although they could glide quite well, there would have been more if a wing-flapper than our vultures and albatross (closer to a large bird of prey that glide most of the time, but would fly very actively at the final stage of a hunt, or just for takeoff)
    I know that does not affect the game, but still...

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +1

      Good to know... I wonder what the heart capacity of the Quetzalcoatlus was, must have been massive. Those things were huge! Like a flying giraffe.

    • @shorgravan
      @shorgravan Před 7 lety +2

      I don't know about that, but yes: between flight athleticism and maintaining the right blood pressure in the head when it moves up and down, the cardiovascular system of these beasts must have been very unique. Even on our giraffes [for which we have the full physiology AND behavior], we still (as far as I know) do not fully understand how their heads do not explode every time they drink...

  • @trajanfidelis1532
    @trajanfidelis1532 Před 2 lety +1

    My favorites are the Pachycephalosaurs aka the Bone headed dinosaurs. Hitting you with their armored heads like a Ram! ouch!

  • @kyliepoe6231
    @kyliepoe6231 Před 6 lety

    There's a travelling animatronic dino exhibit at the Phoenix zoo right now; standing 6-10' from life sized, reasonably realistic dinos is pretty thrilling and gives you a greater appreciation of an animal, particularly a predator, at that size.
    I highly recommend it to anyone who has one visit their area.

  • @Giganfan2k1
    @Giganfan2k1 Před 5 lety

    4:15 Dian-Nye-Kus: I finally hundreds of hours of dinosaur documentaries pays off. XD
    Love your channel. Keep it up. Cant wait to be a paytreon.

  • @opalthediloalt9595
    @opalthediloalt9595 Před 6 lety +1

    In real life, if your bitten by a T-rex, your dead, there is no going back, that bite force is so powerful that you will die just from it biting the tip of your tow... ok so I exdurated.

  • @ImADogRuff
    @ImADogRuff Před 7 lety +3

    Now I want to do a Cadillacs and Dinosaurs campaign even more.

    • @antonymash9586
      @antonymash9586 Před 7 lety +4

      Why wipe out a perfectly good food source? I can just imagine a dragon dinosaur rancher. "Drako the Terribles hunder lizard ranch"

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +2

      Like a .... Jurassic park *puts on sunglasses*

    • @ImADogRuff
      @ImADogRuff Před 7 lety +3

      It'd have to be its on world, but just check out the cartoon and see what I mean. Use modern rules and it'd be hilarious.

  • @kordelshorgar122
    @kordelshorgar122 Před 7 lety +1

    oh Men i remember in an odl video when i wished (and comment) fot you to tackle dinosaurs and paleo fauna and you finally manage it to get to it amazing great video and thanks :) !!! (still waiting fo paleo fauna but i'm sure you will get to it evetually too)

    • @kordelshorgar122
      @kordelshorgar122 Před 7 lety

      sorry for my english by the way is not my native language

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +1

      That's one of the conundrums with the fantasy world of Abeir-Toril, it doesn't have a fossil record and incredibly ancient plant & animal life, the whole planet is only 32489 years old, because it was remade by Ao when he split the planet into Abeir and Toril. But, there are all sorts of critters on it, and I will get around to them eventually :)

  • @flibbernodgets7018
    @flibbernodgets7018 Před 6 lety +2

    Die-non-uh-cuss. That's how I always learned to pronounce it.

  • @jackiesantos2121
    @jackiesantos2121 Před 5 lety +2

    I'm glad I Universe have their own version of Jurassic Park

  • @chadevinellers5384
    @chadevinellers5384 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Omg, tuatara are my fav animal. Learned about them when I was a kid. Iv always wanted one so I could pass him on to my kids. Is Henry still alive??

  • @gratuitouslurking8610
    @gratuitouslurking8610 Před rokem +2

    Dun mind me, just borrowing these stat blocks to try and make some Monster Hunter creatures.

  • @Jader7777
    @Jader7777 Před 7 lety +3

    1:46
    Ahaha, Katashaka looks like a warped Australia.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +1

      It is a bit like that yeah, the Human's of Chult (also called Tabaxi actually) migrated from there (I wonder if they brought Dingos with them, and how long before they all got eaten by Death Turkeys).

  • @That80sGuy1972
    @That80sGuy1972 Před 6 lety

    An alternative prime material plane (1980s gamer here) had dinosaurs never go extinct. They became Saurians, their version of humans, demi-humans and humanoids.

  • @alanschaub147
    @alanschaub147 Před 4 lety +1

    Transporting dinosaurs on a large ship! What could possibly go wrong?

  • @mattnerdy9430
    @mattnerdy9430 Před 7 lety +1

    Hey AJ... always love your M.E.. I remember AD&D had a huge section on dinosaur's. The lost world is always interesting. Have a great day AJ..!!

  • @zcollins860
    @zcollins860 Před 2 lety +2

    DIE-nah-NUH-cus. Mid sized (about wolf sized) dromeosaur aka "raptors ". Also fun fact: Dimetrodon was not a dinosaur but rather a synapsid, a group of reptiles that have been thought to be ancestral to mammals.

  • @filimonpoptudor799
    @filimonpoptudor799 Před 3 lety +1

    Character idea
    Kobold ranger, give him a australian accent take swarm keeper, and become a velociraptor wrangler.

  • @ancientreddragon5617
    @ancientreddragon5617 Před 5 lety +1

    A Deinonychus(pronounced di-non-i-kus) was about the exact same size as the Velociraptors from Jurassic Park NOT smaller, although Velociraptors in real life WERE the size of turkeys, for some reason in Jurassic Park they made them bigger

  • @mikewaterfield3599
    @mikewaterfield3599 Před 3 lety +3

    Dyna-ni-chus, member of the raptor family. Utah Raptor is the biggest of the family.

  • @austinstowe8111
    @austinstowe8111 Před 3 lety +1

    There’s a plesiosaur in Icewind Dale

  • @Jader7777
    @Jader7777 Před 7 lety +16

    TRIGGER WARNING:
    Feathers.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +9

      no proof the T-rex did, but the Raptors, yep, fossil evidence.

    • @Jader7777
      @Jader7777 Před 7 lety +6

      I roll to disbelieve.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +12

      www.amnh.org/our-research/science-news/2007/velociraptor-had-feathers
      *MAKE YOUR ROLL WITH DISADVANTAGE*

    • @Jader7777
      @Jader7777 Před 7 lety +13

      *Takes 20d6 psychic damage*

    • @Thagomizer
      @Thagomizer Před 7 lety +3

      There is no excuse for portraying a featherless dromaeosaurid (i.e. "raptor") in ANY context whatsoever. I have no sympathy for anyone who whines about their ruined childhood and their memories of Jurassic Park. How small-minded is it to prefer a childhood chimeras without stopping to contemplate that dinosaurs are a real part of our world and our planet's history! How does this fact NOT blow your mind? It's almost like a religious revelation. The real thing was richer, more complex, more beautiful, more subtle, and less predictable than anything that could have been imagined by a fantasy or sci-fi writer.
      On the other hand, the more derived Tyrannosaurids (Tyrannosaurus, Daspletosaurus, Albertosaurus, Gorgosaurus, Tarbosaurus) appear to have had fairly standard mosaic scales on the basis of what we've found so far.

  • @onyxgrnr666
    @onyxgrnr666 Před 3 lety +1

    In my world dinosaurs exist on what today we would call the mammoth step and the grasslands of the Sahara because apparently grasslands are incredibly good at feeding large numbers of massive grazing animals since it grows so fast

  • @Thagomizer
    @Thagomizer Před 7 lety

    The1e Monster Manual and Monster Manual II (from 1977 and 1983) have a huge menagerie of dinosaurs to choose from, much bigger than what the later editions provided. Tanystropheus, Coelophysis (Podokesaurus), Dilophosaurus, Temnodontosaurus, Kentrosaurus, Massospondylus, Mamenchisaurus, and more. For the most part, their stats are relatively accurate, though the Iguanodon is underpowered, the Stegosaurus is overpowered, and the sauropods are swamp-dwellers. Despite this, it would be fairly easy to convert the stats of 1e dinosaurs into another ruleset.
    In the DMG, Gygax made note on the dinosaur subtable that the creatures present didn't come from the same time period, but in his view, the provided a "highly interesting mix", and suggested that the DM devise his own encounter tables for the Triassic Jurassic, Cretaceous, or any other period desired if they wanted to. This is an interesting suggestion, because while our D&D world doesn't need to conform to real history in regard to the mere coexistence of certain creatures, it might be good to consider the ecological conditions of varying Mesozoic biomes accordingly. It could even add a certain amount of depth to the game world. In an arid Jurassic environment, for instance, there would be no grasses or flowering plants of any kind. Would this affect anyone with a herbalism skill or the workings of a mage or priest who needs another sort of component not found in the area? Would these places be lethal hotbeds of insects and disease for non-locals? How might a tribe of humans, demi-humans, or humanoids live in such places if they had to?
    A good book to expand on this sort of research might be "Dinosaur Odyssey" by Scott D. Sampson, which goes over this sort of thing, sometimes in visceral detail. The sort of biome of Jurassic North America was utterly unique and we haven't seen anything like it since. According to Sampson, the space needed to recreate the appropriate Jurassic milieu and sustain the number and variety of animals would pretty much cover all of North America, rather than a tiny isolated island. In the planes, of course, this problem is easily remedied.

  • @dragonlord498
    @dragonlord498 Před 7 lety +1

    YES DINOSUARS AND PREHSITORIC CREATURES!.
    pleasersors. their are also sort necked varieties also their necks were likely not that flexible.
    dimetredon is actually more related to mammals then dinosuars. its in the ears
    yes got it right velocirpators aren't that big and are feathered seems like even JP had a paleontologist on staff dnd still is more accurate in that regard. also t-rex young were also apparently covered in feathers of down like stuff and lost most of it when they grow up.
    also a few suggestions for things that may not be found in the dnd books.
    Leviathan melvillei (the real killer whale).
    Quetzalcoatlus (its a bird, its a plane, its RUN!!)
    megaraptor (probably not related to the other raptor dinos)
    Paraceratherium (pfft elephants)
    terror birds.
    Cronopio Dentiacutus (name it scrat)
    Kaprosuchus (aka boar croc)
    Kronosaurus
    maybe some demon prince who favors dinos and similar life forms (if one doesn't already exist).
    dire dinos/prehistoric creatures.
    some jobba the hutt like character with a pet t-rex instead of a rancor.
    etc

  • @3gswsfdpigwedgg783
    @3gswsfdpigwedgg783 Před 7 lety +12

    I'm not saying dinosaur but dinosaurs

  • @HavocUproar
    @HavocUproar Před rokem

    great intro. really got me laughing lol

  • @kishinasura1989
    @kishinasura1989 Před 4 lety +1

    We desided to go full jurassic Park let me say this the 6ft velociraptor is 10 times more terrifying not just the size up and stat boost but the fact only 3 almost whipped out a level 4 party of 6 people

  • @kuriboh635
    @kuriboh635 Před 2 lety +2

    A little off topic but interesting to work into the story if you're inclined to, in the yugioh anime they explain that in dule monsters either dinosaurs come from dragons or the other way around. I always thought of it as an interesting idea and have thought about doing that in one of my worlds as an explanation of how overtime dragons have become rare or dinosaurs exist in greater numbers than them but it's not something I've done yet but maybe one day 🤔

  • @elmeromogollon
    @elmeromogollon Před 2 lety

    It would be cool to have dinosaurs if you want a jurassic park or dinotopia campaign, in chult they feel out of place, tolkien didn't have dinosaur in middle earth, but for a pulpy land before time or prehistoric campaign they are awesome.

  • @Raptorifik
    @Raptorifik Před 4 lety +1

    you mentioned dinosaurs with lycanthrope? do you mean a dinosaur afflicted with lycanthrope or a person who changes to a dino-form on the full moon? A were-Deinonychus (dine-o-ni-kous) could be seriously cool. They would be roughly wolf sized and with claws, toe claws, and bite attack be more than a match for much of anything.
    Doesnt the afflicted require sentient intelligence?
    In a tangential question, is there a conservation of mass to polymorph and lycanthrope? I'm guessing not cause of the whole dragon to humanoid polymorph, but it has always bugged me.
    It's one thing for a ton sized dragon turning into a 250 pound man but always liked the idea of a fully adult wizard polymorphing into a hamster and finding himself a 250 pound hamster.

  • @SicFromTheKush
    @SicFromTheKush Před 7 měsíci

    The first forgotten realms book, the villain is a T Rex. Very disappointing to look it up and find that out, but was described as such in hindsight, and the party DID make a big deal about his footprint once

  • @royriley6282
    @royriley6282 Před 4 lety +2

    Dimetrodon was closer to mammals than reptiles acccchhhhttuuuuuuaaaalleeeeeeee

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 4 lety

      *considers teaching one how to fetch*

  • @jameswagstaff984
    @jameswagstaff984 Před 4 lety +3

    I'd definitely use Jurassic dinosaurs for my campaign, no other period, I just like them more, maybe use Koolacucus instead of crocodiles

    • @RokuroCarisu
      @RokuroCarisu Před 3 lety +2

      Koolasuchus was pretty small compared to some of its earlier relatives.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prionosuchus

    • @jameswagstaff984
      @jameswagstaff984 Před 3 lety +1

      @@RokuroCarisu not that it's bad but Prionosuchs is a fish eater, not a serious threat compared to Koolacucus who attacked small to medium animals like modern crocodiles

    • @james739123
      @james739123 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ye, the Jurassic period is seriously underrated

  • @malxire
    @malxire Před 7 lety +3

    dude repeat with me dei-no-ni-kuss

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +1

      Thank you! Words... sometimes they hate me.

  • @adamwelch8445
    @adamwelch8445 Před 6 lety +1

    Dinosaurs hells yeah

  • @zmishiymishi5349
    @zmishiymishi5349 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for ideas

  • @hydradragon7573
    @hydradragon7573 Před 4 lety

    Funny how they put brontosaurus in d&d, as it is not in fact real, it was the result of a brachiosaurus body being put together with a camrasaurus neck and head, although it is in an alternate dimension

  • @thehillz726
    @thehillz726 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm suprised they don't have more fantasy sounding names

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 4 lety +3

      Well, they certainly do, but for the purpose of our ease of reference, the Earth names are used (though the creatures on Toril are not actually dinosaurs, so, a Toril T-Rex could not breed with an Earth T-Rex).

    • @thehillz726
      @thehillz726 Před 4 lety +1

      @@AJPickett what are the names? Or is that for the dm to make up ?

  • @jarrodjanuary5486
    @jarrodjanuary5486 Před 2 lety

    Nice opening graphic

  • @jacobhope6164
    @jacobhope6164 Před 3 lety

    I've only encountered them on The Isle of Dread.

  • @dragonballtalk8527
    @dragonballtalk8527 Před 2 lety +2

    Please do more videos on actual dungeons and settings if able

  • @darrylviljoen6227
    @darrylviljoen6227 Před 5 lety

    Your comments about sharks was very interesting. Would never have picked the great white as the primitive one. I watched a documentary where a guy used a fossilized shark tooth to open a can.
    Also on the list of living prehistoric creatures. Crocodiles.
    I believe the prehistoric ones were enormous.
    On the behemoths though. Didn't 4e have both the macetail behemoth and an ankylosaurus?

  • @perkeyser2032
    @perkeyser2032 Před rokem

    Gorgonopsids! Not dinosaurs exactly, but damn cool animals that didn't take any crap.

  • @dracosdiabolis1769
    @dracosdiabolis1769 Před 6 lety

    really like this video. a while ago I watched Kong: Skull Island. and the gears started turning. and having a fondness for Dinobots. lol yep I went here. but the Dinobots (warforges) are like Kong and are the protectors of this lost area of land. depending on how the players I interact determines them a threat, or friend, or indifferent.

  • @Armageddon0324
    @Armageddon0324 Před 2 lety

    Your pronunciation of dinonychus killed me (also I probably spelled that wrong)

  • @sagesheahan6732
    @sagesheahan6732 Před 5 lety

    I've used dinosaurs in my campaign. And how I introduced them to the players actually worked. Do it a lot like Jurassic Park: you have the party wandering up a hill and when they reach the top and see the other side, there is a MASSIVE herd of various dinosaurs. Brachiosaurus, stegosaurus, anklyosaurus, triceratops... all herbavores. Where are the carnivores? Probably following the herd to take any sickly ones? So... Behind them, maybe even you? They'd be around. ;) And truly, having the party deal with either a herd of stampeding triceratops or a very very hungry T-rex is quite the riot at times. I also had dinosaurs spread out just a little more than just on Chult, though that is still where greatest concentration could be found. You'd be able to find stray herds here and there up the west coast of far'run and in the South, in general.

  • @mateobarrett6829
    @mateobarrett6829 Před 6 lety

    My Homebrew is a Chult-like continent Mercer's Exandria. I've got Feysaur, Shadesaur, all manner of elemental dinosaurs and the particularly nasty Demosaurs, which are dinosaurs captured and warped by the Demon Lords.
    Yeenoghu's Deinonychus are not fun for my PCs.

  • @sebastianfrost5035
    @sebastianfrost5035 Před 5 lety

    Don’t forget about the cave dinosaurs made by the yuan-ti

  • @brightglory5734
    @brightglory5734 Před 4 lety +1

    So I'm looking at this near Earth part and I've but one question. Where is Texas?

  • @NWLR-tv
    @NWLR-tv Před 7 lety +3

    badasss intro man but no Jurassic Park music. I would've been happy if you just said dinosaurs are dinosaurs and then played the theme for 15 minutes

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +1

      Nate Romberger ha ha, bit cliché though.

  • @plantguy9
    @plantguy9 Před 7 lety

    Zombie dinosaurs sounds like it would be a good campaign. To try and stop whats causing them.

  • @simmonslucas
    @simmonslucas Před 7 lety

    Can you do a Ecology of the Saurials and their Thunderers on their Home World?

  • @nocturnalsblade8121
    @nocturnalsblade8121 Před 7 lety

    I put a dire tyrannosaurus in my game that was the result of a genetic experiment that was let loose to see how deadly it was. The locals think that its a wingless red dragon with small arms. In game its only believed to be a rumor, but when my players ever go deeper into the wilderness they'll soon learn the truth. And a bunch of Jurassic park references will ensue.

  • @gnolly8222
    @gnolly8222 Před 7 lety +3

    How hard would it be to tame dinos as mounts, I'm guessing it's next to impossible in this game. By the by I'm talking large theropods like rex or the raptor's.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety +1

      That is where magic comes in.But if you raise them from hatchlings, it's just a matter of conditioning.

    • @Birbucifer
      @Birbucifer Před 6 lety

      Could just be a moon druid and BECOME the dino

    • @darrylviljoen6227
      @darrylviljoen6227 Před 5 lety

      Home brew 3e monster training rules.

  • @Keslorian
    @Keslorian Před 7 lety +3

    yay for random earth biology lesson! interesting to not that ocean environments are reletively constant over evolutinary time periods when compared to land. maybe it has to do with the water reducing temperature changes where land has more variation? i mean, fish or things that look like fish have existed for so long filling the same giant niches so the ecosystem built up from that has also ben pretty stable

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety

      True, and some of the most extreme creatures are found in water, such as crabs that live in total darkness, feeding on exotic bacteria at the spires of volcanic vents.

    • @antonymash9586
      @antonymash9586 Před 7 lety +1

      That may not be exactly true. We know that during parts of the permian many of the shalow marine environments (the richest and most diverse) dried up as part of the end permaian extinction event. We also think that the ocean lost most of its below surface oxegen levels; again part of the end permian (I think; I could be off on that one).
      Also we know that global cooling wiped out much of the marine Mega fauna during the eocene Something to do with the abundance of food. You have to reemember that the open ocean is something of a dersert when it comes to food sources. Again not certain why bu I think it could be to do with disolved mineral abundances for algea growth.

    • @robhoteling5552
      @robhoteling5552 Před 7 lety +1

      Rob Young The evolution of land animals is so diverse due to way more ecosystems. The deeper oceans have remained MORE constant. By no means does that mean they've been stable, but the niches that need filled have remained dominated for centuries. As the temperatures rise there will be more extinctions, therefore more species will have to evolve to fill the niches left by said extinctions.

    • @Keslorian
      @Keslorian Před 7 lety +2

      you guys are right, there are more niches than originally came to mind when i wrote the comment. is a shame that the marine-life-style of creatures in fantasy worlds always end up as fish, crab, and octopus. why not giant anemonies that ponder the meaning of life? (i guess d&d has the flumph), or eels that maraud around eating everything?

    • @antonymash9586
      @antonymash9586 Před 7 lety +3

      Look at some of the erly weird stuff for inspriation. Sea scorpians, Animalorarids, Grapholytes, bellomites Plachioderms, Tullimonster and the opabinia. The cambrian brought out some really weird sea life.

  • @johntheherbalistg8756
    @johntheherbalistg8756 Před 5 lety

    Speaking of dinosaurs, have you done a video on the destrachan, yet?

  • @dvdmenyu
    @dvdmenyu Před 6 lety

    Next do Monster Ecology: Angry Human Man With A Sword

  • @HumbleMemeFarmer
    @HumbleMemeFarmer Před 6 lety

    Dude, these dinosaurs could easily out-pace even dragons with the aid of a powerful wizard. Think about it: celestial teleporting velociraptors, with lightning breath.

  • @frostdragonking5336
    @frostdragonking5336 Před 7 lety +3

    god damn it... was hoping to hear Jurassic Park theme. still 10/10 Dino documentary D&D Edition.

    • @AJPickett
      @AJPickett  Před 7 lety

      I made lots of errors, but the dino experts are correcting them all in the comments :)I had fun making the roaring sounds for the intro and outro bits.

  • @TheBlidget
    @TheBlidget Před 4 lety +2

    11:00 You're a biologist ?!

  • @ricardoramos1059
    @ricardoramos1059 Před rokem

    Id go that dinosuars are a older species of drakes why mainly cause in real world lore dinosaur or prehistoric animal bones were often mistaken for dragon bones or other mythical creature or make dinosaurs an off shoot of dragons more akin to drakes and wyverns.