sweet! I buy the hollow rubber/plastic ones from Walmart for $1 a piece and they're the same scale. I do need to learn how to paint them though because the paint they come with is not great on all but a few of them.
Very cool! They're a bit harder to find with decent sculpts and the right scale where I come from, but I definitely know what you mean concerning the paint jobs! ;) Also, don't be afraid to get started painting! Learn to base coat and dry brush, and you'll know enough to paint a mini like these dinos, and much more! :D
The T. Rex, Triceratops, and Stegosaurus are very nicely scaled. Spinosaurus is a bit small, it should be at least as big as T. Rex, and if you follow the (paleontologically inaccurate) D&D v3 rules, it's supposed to be MUCH bigger; gargantuan size. That sauropod is way too small to be an adult Brachiosaurus, maybe it could make a good Volkheimeria, which is one of the smaller sauropod dinosaurs. Thanks for the video, I might buy some of these.
Hey, there! Yeah, the spinosaurus should be slightly larger than the tyrannosaurus, but in D&D they aren't generally meant to be scale perfect - though if you're into having near perfect scale in your minis, that's pretty cool! But the important thing to me is that it fits on a Huge sized base, and don't look too small on them. :) You are definitely right about the brachiosaurus though! I see now that it is way too small. I might've thought of a different dinosaur, indeed! Thanks for your comment! :D
@@theastro9830 I'm not complaining, I was simply providing more information about the dinosaurs in the video. Why are you complaining about my comment? Sounds like you are just trying to be mean.
Nicholas Lavictoire my g being mean your a grown ass man who knows nothing about dinosaurs other from Jurassic park and paleontologist interviews I prob know more about dinosaurs then you
sweet! I buy the hollow rubber/plastic ones from Walmart for $1 a piece and they're the same scale. I do need to learn how to paint them though because the paint they come with is not great on all but a few of them.
Very cool! They're a bit harder to find with decent sculpts and the right scale where I come from, but I definitely know what you mean concerning the paint jobs! ;) Also, don't be afraid to get started painting! Learn to base coat and dry brush, and you'll know enough to paint a mini like these dinos, and much more! :D
The Creative Kobold thank you!
I love how the Spinosaurus looks. You did an excellent job painting the minis!
Thank you! :D
The T. Rex, Triceratops, and Stegosaurus are very nicely scaled. Spinosaurus is a bit small, it should be at least as big as T. Rex, and if you follow the (paleontologically inaccurate) D&D v3 rules, it's supposed to be MUCH bigger; gargantuan size. That sauropod is way too small to be an adult Brachiosaurus, maybe it could make a good Volkheimeria, which is one of the smaller sauropod dinosaurs.
Thanks for the video, I might buy some of these.
Hey, there! Yeah, the spinosaurus should be slightly larger than the tyrannosaurus, but in D&D they aren't generally meant to be scale perfect - though if you're into having near perfect scale in your minis, that's pretty cool! But the important thing to me is that it fits on a Huge sized base, and don't look too small on them. :)
You are definitely right about the brachiosaurus though! I see now that it is way too small. I might've thought of a different dinosaur, indeed!
Thanks for your comment! :D
@@theastro9830 I'm not complaining, I was simply providing more information about the dinosaurs in the video. Why are you complaining about my comment? Sounds like you are just trying to be mean.
Nicholas Lavictoire my g being mean your a grown ass man who knows nothing about dinosaurs other from Jurassic park and paleontologist interviews I prob know more about dinosaurs then you
Great video, where did you buy these?
These were ordered through AliExpress. There's a link in the description. :)
Are these figures hollow or fairly heavy?
They're not hollow. Not too heavy, since it's plastic, but there's definitely mass there. :)
A base should definitely help keep them upright and on the table.