BIS, since we have Dryosaurus and Homalocephale now, here’s an idea for your next park series: a JPOG recreation! Here’s the catch: - You can ONLY use the 25 base species from JPOG - You can only use skins that are reminiscent of JPOG skins, except where no such skin for a certain dinosaur exists; (i.e. Tundra or Wetland for the JP/// Tyrannosaurus, Alpine(?) for the Velociraptor, etc.) - You cannot have curved fences or slanted buildings, etc. (JPOG couldn’t let you do it, so you can’t here either) - You cannot use the new scenery trees and rocks, nor the sand/rock/dirt/shale terrain textures - You can only use buildings/amenities that JPOG had or similar thematic variations (i.e. no monorail or Gyrosphere, but you can use Jurassic Tours in lieu of a Safari Ride; Viewing Vents and Platforms are completely fine, but you cannot mount the Platforms onto the fences) Like this comment so BIS can see!
I feel it would be cool if they added a chance for herbivores that cannot fight back to successfully flee from a carnivore attack, Like when a carnivore initiates the hunt animation it has a 50/50 chance to trigger an animation that results in the herbivore escaping. I feel that would be a fairly simple way to make the hunting much more interesting without having to redesign how it works.
It could be a good Dino if you rushed through isla Pena without getting 5 stars and needing to go back to get woodland and due to the poor state you left your park you just decide to restart the island.
I love it. I really good beginner dinosaur. Unlocked on Sorna... that seems to defeat the purpose of a beginner dinosaur if you ask me. Regardless, great vid!
Why does Dryo get so much hate? In JPOG it was the only 1 star dino, it's 1 star in Prehistoric Kingdom, and it ranks even lower than the Struthis here in JWE. Show the poor guy some love people!
Ryaquaza 1 Finally I've found someone whose having the same problem as me. tell me buddy is it show up on the main menu screen and when you press square it takes you to the store and says "not available at this time"
I think a lot of people assume it's smaller than it is because of the neoteny of the body and it's head. it looks too "cute and smol" to be big. Neoteny is the word for the properties that make an animal or human look like a juvenile or baby, for example a disproportionally large gead or paws, rounded facial features, fluffy fur, etc.
Dryosaurus, a small fleet little critter that's built for speed. Dryosaurus (dry - oh - sawr - rus) was an iguanodontid ornithopod dinosaur. They lived during in the Late Jurassic period. Its name meaning "Oak lizard", due to the vague oak shape of its cheek teeth. This diminutive herbivore is both swift and agile. Lacking any other defensive abilities, its only means of defense is to flee any predators. It lives in herds to guarantee early warning of nearby predators. *Dryosaurus elderae: (meaning "Elder's oak reptile"), 7.8-4.3 m (7.8-14.1 ft), and 77-100 kg (169-220 lbs). Fossil remains: Complete skull and skeleton, other skeletons, nearly completely known. Anatomical characteristics: Standard for group. Age: Late Jurassic, early Tithonian. Distribution and formation/s: Utah; middle Morrison. Habitat: Short wet season, otherwise semiarid with open floodplain prairies and riverine forests. Notes: Usually placed is D. altus but probably a different species than the later dryosaur, and differing genera cannot be ruled out. It has been suggested that the larger specimens are not mature, but absence of larger individuals leaves the possibility unsupported. Shared it's habitat with Camptosaurus (or Uteodon) aphanoecetes. *Dryosaurus altus: (meaning "Tall oak reptile"), 7.8-4.3 m (7.8-14.1 ft), and 77-100 kg (169-220 lbs). Fossil remains: Partial skeletons and skeletal parts. Anatomical characteristics: Standard for group. Age: Late Jurassic, middle Tithonian. Distribution and formation/s: Wyoming; upper Morrison. Habitat: Short wet season, otherwise semiarid with open floodplain prairies and riverine forests. Description: Dryosaurus had a long neck, long, slender legs and a long, stiff tail. Its arms, however, with five fingers on each hand, were short. Known specimens were about 8 to 14 feet (2.4 to 4.3 m) long and weighed 170 to 200 pounds (77 to 91 kg). However, the adult size is unknown, as no known adult specimens of the genus have been found. Dryosaurus had a horny beak and cheek teeth and, like other ornithopods, was a herbivore. Some scientists suggest that it had cheek-like structures to prevent the loss of food while the animal processed it in the mouth. A quick and agile runner with strong legs, Dryosaurus used its stiff tail as a counterbalance. It probably relied on its speed as a main defense against carnivorous dinosaurs. The teeth of Dryosaurus were, according to museum curator John Foster, characterized by "a strong median ridge on the lateral surface." Discovery and naming: In 1876, Samuel Wendell Williston in Albany County, Wyoming discovered the remains of small euornithopods. In 1878, Professor Othniel Charles Marsh named these as a new species of Laosaurus, Laosaurus altus. The specific name altus, meaning "tall" in Latin, refers to it being larger than Laosaurus celer. In 1894, Marsh made the taxon a separate genus, Dryosaurus. The generic name is derived from the Greek δρῦς, drys, "tree, oak", referring to a presumed forest-dwelling life mode. Later it was often assumed to have been named after an oak-leaf shape of its cheek teeth, which, however, is absent. The type species remains Laosaurus altus, the combinatio nova is Dryosaurus altus. Gregory S. Paul in his 2010 field guide to dinosaurs (2nd edition published in 2016) suggested that the Utah material represented a separate species, which was confirmed by Carpenter and Galton (2018), who described the Dinosaur National Monument Dryosaurus as a new species, D. elderae. Apart from Dryosaurus altus, several other species have been named in the genus. The first of these was created accidentally when in 1903 Giuseppe de Stefano renamed Crocodilus phosphaticus Thomas 1893 into Dryosaurus phosphaticus; he had intended to call it Dyrosaurus phosphaticus. This was only emended by Éric Buffetaut in 1981. Paleobiology: Dryosaurus subsisted primarily on low growing vegetation in ancient floodplains. Growth and development: A Dryosaurus hatchling found at Dinosaur National Monument in Utah confirmed that Dryosaurus followed similar patterns of craniofacial development to other vertebrates; the eyes were proportionally large while young and the muzzle proportionally short. As the animal grew, its eyes became proportionally smaller and its snout proportionally longer. Paleoecology: The Dryosaurus holotype specimen YPM 1876 was discovered in Reed’s YPM Quarry 5, in the Upper Brushy Basin Member, of the Morrison Formation. In the Late Jurassic Morrison formation of Western North America, Dryosaurus remains have been recovered from stratigraphic zones 2-6. A spectacular digsite near Uravan, Colorado held hundreds of D. altus fossils which represented multiple stages of the animal's life cycle. This formation is a sequence of shallow marine and alluvial sediments which, according to radiometric dating, ranges between 156.3 million years old (Ma) at its base, to 146.8 million years old at the top, which places it in the late Oxfordian, Kimmeridgian, and early Tithonian stages of the Late Jurassic period. The Morrison Formation records an environment and time dominated by gigantic sauropod dinosaurs such as Camarasaurus, Barosaurus, Diplodocus, Apatosaurus and Brachiosaurus. Dinosaurs that lived alongside Dryosaurus included the herbivorous ornithischians Camptosaurus, Stegosaurus and Othnielosaurus. Predators in this paleoenvironment included the theropods Saurophaganax, Torvosaurus, Ceratosaurus, Marshosaurus, Stokesosaurus, and Ornitholestes and Allosaurus, which accounted for 70 to 75% of theropod specimens and was at the top trophic level of the Morrison food web.Other vertebrates that shared this paleoenvironment included bivalves, snails, ray-finned fishes, frogs, salamanders, turtles, sphenodonts, lizards, terrestrial and aquatic crocodylomorphans, and several species of pterosaur. Early mammals were present in this region, such as docodonts, multituberculates, symmetrodonts, and triconodonts. The flora of the period has been revealed by fossils of green algae, fungi, mosses, horsetails, cycads, ginkgoes, and several families of conifers. Vegetation varied from river-lining forests of tree ferns, and ferns (gallery forests), to fern savannas with occasional trees such as the Araucaria-like conifer Brachyphyllum. Other sites that have produced Dryosaurus material include Bone Cabin Quarry, the Red Fork of the Powder River in Wyoming and Lily Park in Colorado. Sources: jurassicpark.fandom.com/wiki/Dryosaurus. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dryosaurus. The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs: 2nd Edition.
I actually like vivid and arid the most. Vivid reminds me of something Bob Bakker said once in a documentary, about dinos being able to see colors, so it would be logical, if they had elaborate display colors. idk if that old statement still holds merit, but I always loved his idea of a "mottled blue brachiosaur" etc :)
People keep on saying the Compsognathus is the last film dinosaur left while completely ignoring Microceratops, It had an absolutely tiny role but it was in Jurassic World.
I wonder if 6 is the limit for the number of skins that any one dinosaur can have? They all have a default skin and five alternate patterns, but none have more than that. Also the spots pattern on the arid pattern Dryo reminds me more of the JP:OG dryo than that of the default.
I personally love the Dinosaurs with more vibrant and more drab skins. Males and females for my park. Also, if u want a more realistic version then the drab ones are nice
the only thing i dont like about this is that sandbox to have all the dinos you need to have atleast 4 stared all the island and that can be a pain when you just want to go and play on sandbox its just they want people to play the story mode alot
Bestinslot I think they should add in new different species to make it more interesting like oviraptor, or a new otnithomimus, or a therizinosaurus, or something to add new things to the game that would make it interesting or add in a plateosaurus or I know it's not a dinosaur but like dimetrodon postosuchus or something
BIS, since we have Dryosaurus and Homalocephale now, here’s an idea for your next park series: a JPOG recreation!
Here’s the catch:
- You can ONLY use the 25 base species from JPOG
- You can only use skins that are reminiscent of JPOG skins, except where no such skin for a certain dinosaur exists; (i.e. Tundra or Wetland for the JP/// Tyrannosaurus, Alpine(?) for the Velociraptor, etc.)
- You cannot have curved fences or slanted buildings, etc. (JPOG couldn’t let you do it, so you can’t here either)
- You cannot use the new scenery trees and rocks, nor the sand/rock/dirt/shale terrain textures
- You can only use buildings/amenities that JPOG had or similar thematic variations (i.e. no monorail or Gyrosphere, but you can use Jurassic Tours in lieu of a Safari Ride; Viewing Vents and Platforms are completely fine, but you cannot mount the Platforms onto the fences)
Like this comment so BIS can see!
You really thought that through... Im 100% with u on this it's A GREAT idea
Great idea but I feel monorails could kind of be used due to how in jpog you were able to have multiple entrances it could be kind of like that
Groovy!
It’s already a thing called the JPOG challenge which has 3 extensive rule sets
BestinSlot: It so cute...now let's see how it get eaten.
Poor dryo😂
For science
@@cryobk3540 You monster
Edit: ok how the quack did i get a like in 2 minutes?
Dont call him a monster
Finally, a small *JURASSIC* herbivore!
A small herbivore period.
I find you everywhere awesome productions
Yes it's small, but the Homalocephale is twice as tiny.
I feel it would be cool if they added a chance for herbivores that cannot fight back to successfully flee from a carnivore attack, Like when a carnivore initiates the hunt animation it has a 50/50 chance to trigger an animation that results in the herbivore escaping. I feel that would be a fairly simple way to make the hunting much more interesting without having to redesign how it works.
It's hard to convince stupid people to make important changes
Agreed.
Thankfully, Jurassic world evolution 2 did it
BIS: The Dryosaurus is a great starting Dinosaur
Me: And yet u unlock it on the last Island
It could be a good Dino if you rushed through isla Pena without getting 5 stars and needing to go back to get woodland and due to the poor state you left your park you just decide to restart the island.
Can you make park with only JPOG dinos?
That's now possible.
@@ToastTheThe but we are missing microsearatis
@@raccer7453 there where never such a dino in jpog
@@Kurominos no not the original the new verison
Colton landis there is no new JPOG 2, JWE is the equivalent of number two
I love how ornithopod herbivores like Dryo are getting more love
TheScauldron Fan
Here’s hoping for Leaellynasaura or Thescelosaurus soon. Maybe even Hypsilophodon or Othnielosaurus.
Awesome Productions yas and Parksosaurus or even Zephyrosaurus
TheScauldron Fan
Oh, and maybe even Callovosaurus, as it’s name dropped in some versions of the Jurassic Park novel.
I feel like you guys are just competing to see who knows more ornithopods...
Giant Cobra felt the same way
I love it. I really good beginner dinosaur. Unlocked on Sorna... that seems to defeat the purpose of a beginner dinosaur if you ask me. Regardless, great vid!
I like how both The Isle and JWE went for a similar Dryo design:
-smol head
-cHUnkY body
-arms tucked in
-green
-wholesome
Why does Dryo get so much hate? In JPOG it was the only 1 star dino, it's 1 star in Prehistoric Kingdom, and it ranks even lower than the Struthis here in JWE. Show the poor guy some love people!
The steppe one looks like a baby tapir! It's absolutely adorable
IT LOOKS LIKE A T H I C C STRUTHIOMUMOUS-Bestinslot 2019
Leave it to BIS to make the testing grounds beautiful with all the terrain tools.
Bestinslot: Puts spino against dryo.
also
Bestinslot: Spino I hope you're very proud of yourself.
Dryosaurus is one of the dinosaurs that loves it’s colors.
And it’s one of my favorite herbivore
"it's a great beginner-dinosaur"
Unlocks on Sorna, the last island in the game...
;)
Hi I loved your Jurassic park tour can you make an ingen facility with the rainforest skin indominus
"Your dryosaurus has died."
I just wish the pack would come out for PS4 tbh, love the almost leopard like Arid skin tho
Ryaquaza 1 Finally I've found someone whose having the same problem as me. tell me buddy is it show up on the main menu screen and when you press square it takes you to the store and says "not available at this time"
Ryaquaza 1 I have had the problem before, all you have to do is wait and eventually it works.
@@enderethan144 Yeah,"this content cannot be selected at this time"
@@enderethan144 Yeah, I'm having the same problem... And, others...
@@enderethan144 Can someone notify me when it gets available?
They should make a escape percentage so that if a carnivore stalks a herbivore theres a percent that they can escape
Dino Wolf246 maybe that's what their defense should go into.
2:46 I laughed way too hard at the idea of someone pepper spraying a dinosaur
They're SO. Cute. 🤩
The Arid pattern reminds me of the Leptictidium in the first episode of Walking With Beasts.
Why is everything unlocked in Campaign, but half of the stuff is locked in Sandbox mode?
whats locked in sandbox?🤔
I lost all my progress
U need 4 stars on each island tonto use sandbox mode
@@erichumphreys6656 I mean all my progress in all the islands
@@AllosaurusJP3 A lot of my dinosaurs, the heavy steel fences, The viewing platform, the greenhouse, jurassic tours ride, and medium power station...
The dryosaurus is by far my favourite dinosaur ever added to this game
OUIIIIIIIIIIIII !! Depuis le temps que je l'attendait !!
Holy cow, you work fast!
The jungle skin reminds me of a gold dust gecko or Madagascar day gecko. Arid is a leopard gecko. These facts make those my favorite skins
I think a lot of people assume it's smaller than it is because of the neoteny of the body and it's head. it looks too "cute and smol" to be big.
Neoteny is the word for the properties that make an animal or human look like a juvenile or baby, for example a disproportionally large gead or paws, rounded facial features, fluffy fur, etc.
Dryosaurus, a small fleet little critter that's built for speed. Dryosaurus (dry - oh - sawr - rus) was an iguanodontid ornithopod dinosaur. They lived during in the Late Jurassic period. Its name meaning "Oak lizard", due to the vague oak shape of its cheek teeth.
This diminutive herbivore is both swift and agile. Lacking any other defensive abilities, its only means of defense is to flee any predators. It lives in herds to guarantee early warning of nearby predators.
*Dryosaurus elderae: (meaning "Elder's oak reptile"), 7.8-4.3 m (7.8-14.1 ft), and 77-100 kg (169-220 lbs). Fossil remains: Complete skull and skeleton, other skeletons, nearly completely known. Anatomical characteristics: Standard for group. Age: Late Jurassic, early Tithonian. Distribution and formation/s: Utah; middle Morrison. Habitat: Short wet season, otherwise semiarid with open floodplain prairies and riverine forests. Notes: Usually placed is D. altus but probably a different species than the later dryosaur, and differing genera cannot be ruled out. It has been suggested that the larger specimens are not mature, but absence of larger individuals leaves the possibility unsupported. Shared it's habitat with Camptosaurus (or Uteodon) aphanoecetes.
*Dryosaurus altus: (meaning "Tall oak reptile"), 7.8-4.3 m (7.8-14.1 ft), and 77-100 kg (169-220 lbs). Fossil remains: Partial skeletons and skeletal parts. Anatomical characteristics: Standard for group. Age: Late Jurassic, middle Tithonian. Distribution and formation/s: Wyoming; upper Morrison. Habitat: Short wet season, otherwise semiarid with open floodplain prairies and riverine forests.
Description:
Dryosaurus had a long neck, long, slender legs and a long, stiff tail. Its arms, however, with five fingers on each hand, were short. Known specimens were about 8 to 14 feet (2.4 to 4.3 m) long and weighed 170 to 200 pounds (77 to 91 kg). However, the adult size is unknown, as no known adult specimens of the genus have been found. Dryosaurus had a horny beak and cheek teeth and, like other ornithopods, was a herbivore. Some scientists suggest that it had cheek-like structures to prevent the loss of food while the animal processed it in the mouth. A quick and agile runner with strong legs, Dryosaurus used its stiff tail as a counterbalance. It probably relied on its speed as a main defense against carnivorous dinosaurs.
The teeth of Dryosaurus were, according to museum curator John Foster, characterized by "a strong median ridge on the lateral surface."
Discovery and naming:
In 1876, Samuel Wendell Williston in Albany County, Wyoming discovered the remains of small euornithopods. In 1878, Professor Othniel Charles Marsh named these as a new species of Laosaurus, Laosaurus altus. The specific name altus, meaning "tall" in Latin, refers to it being larger than Laosaurus celer. In 1894, Marsh made the taxon a separate genus, Dryosaurus. The generic name is derived from the Greek δρῦς, drys, "tree, oak", referring to a presumed forest-dwelling life mode. Later it was often assumed to have been named after an oak-leaf shape of its cheek teeth, which, however, is absent. The type species remains Laosaurus altus, the combinatio nova is Dryosaurus altus. Gregory S. Paul in his 2010 field guide to dinosaurs (2nd edition published in 2016) suggested that the Utah material represented a separate species, which was confirmed by Carpenter and Galton (2018), who described the Dinosaur National Monument Dryosaurus as a new species, D. elderae.
Apart from Dryosaurus altus, several other species have been named in the genus. The first of these was created accidentally when in 1903 Giuseppe de Stefano renamed Crocodilus phosphaticus Thomas 1893 into Dryosaurus phosphaticus; he had intended to call it Dyrosaurus phosphaticus. This was only emended by Éric Buffetaut in 1981.
Paleobiology:
Dryosaurus subsisted primarily on low growing vegetation in ancient floodplains.
Growth and development:
A Dryosaurus hatchling found at Dinosaur National Monument in Utah confirmed that Dryosaurus followed similar patterns of craniofacial development to other vertebrates; the eyes were proportionally large while young and the muzzle proportionally short. As the animal grew, its eyes became proportionally smaller and its snout proportionally longer.
Paleoecology:
The Dryosaurus holotype specimen YPM 1876 was discovered in Reed’s YPM Quarry 5, in the Upper Brushy Basin Member, of the Morrison Formation. In the Late Jurassic Morrison formation of Western North America, Dryosaurus remains have been recovered from stratigraphic zones 2-6. A spectacular digsite near Uravan, Colorado held hundreds of D. altus fossils which represented multiple stages of the animal's life cycle. This formation is a sequence of shallow marine and alluvial sediments which, according to radiometric dating, ranges between 156.3 million years old (Ma) at its base, to 146.8 million years old at the top, which places it in the late Oxfordian, Kimmeridgian, and early Tithonian stages of the Late Jurassic period. The Morrison Formation records an environment and time dominated by gigantic sauropod dinosaurs such as Camarasaurus, Barosaurus, Diplodocus, Apatosaurus and Brachiosaurus. Dinosaurs that lived alongside Dryosaurus included the herbivorous ornithischians Camptosaurus, Stegosaurus and Othnielosaurus. Predators in this paleoenvironment included the theropods Saurophaganax, Torvosaurus, Ceratosaurus, Marshosaurus, Stokesosaurus, and Ornitholestes and Allosaurus, which accounted for 70 to 75% of theropod specimens and was at the top trophic level of the Morrison food web.Other vertebrates that shared this paleoenvironment included bivalves, snails, ray-finned fishes, frogs, salamanders, turtles, sphenodonts, lizards, terrestrial and aquatic crocodylomorphans, and several species of pterosaur. Early mammals were present in this region, such as docodonts, multituberculates, symmetrodonts, and triconodonts. The flora of the period has been revealed by fossils of green algae, fungi, mosses, horsetails, cycads, ginkgoes, and several families of conifers. Vegetation varied from river-lining forests of tree ferns, and ferns (gallery forests), to fern savannas with occasional trees such as the Araucaria-like conifer Brachyphyllum. Other sites that have produced Dryosaurus material include Bone Cabin Quarry, the Red Fork of the Powder River in Wyoming and Lily Park in Colorado.
Sources:
jurassicpark.fandom.com/wiki/Dryosaurus.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dryosaurus.
The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs: 2nd Edition.
Ok if we got a dryosaurus we need a compy
OMG Dryosaurus is the cutest dino in Jurassic world evolution
I actually like vivid and arid the most. Vivid reminds me of something Bob Bakker said once in a documentary, about dinos being able to see colors, so it would be logical, if they had elaborate display colors. idk if that old statement still holds merit, but I always loved his idea of a "mottled blue brachiosaur" etc :)
The jungle skin reminds me of a Sun-Day Gecko
The guy that made this model is a very good 3D artist!
I'm gonna need so many of these in as many exhibits/parks as possible~!
They are all just so adorable.
Jungle, Wetland, & Vivid are easily the best for me!!!
All of these guys are bloody brilliant!!!!!
People keep on saying the Compsognathus is the last film dinosaur left while completely ignoring Microceratops, It had an absolutely tiny role but it was in Jurassic World.
My favorite dinosaur is dryosaurus... HOW DID I NOT KNOW IT WAS IN THIS GAME??? I got the pack yesterday and I can't wait to unlock it!
Awesome. And so was Battle at Big Rock.
Now I can finally make my Morrison Park! Though Id still like a Camptosaurus....
I used for Camptosaurus a Steppe Maiasaura. Looked pretty good.
Looks like you're gonna have to add Dryosaurus, Homalocephale, & Nigersaurus in your 1 Year Anniversary Playthrough playlist, Bestinslot.
Has anyone else got this glitch where they've unlocked and researched the Dryosaurus but it isn't showing up in the Morrison formation?
I love that the Jungle skin is a Madagascan Day Gecko.
CUTE,Very Cute,and I think the Wetland Dryosaurus is pretty good,But I think all of the skin for the Dryosaurus are all good.
Is it just me or does everyone think that the steppe ones call sound like the characters in Don't Starve?
Who else thought the jungle skin looked very plasticky
Of course you’ve seen that base skin before it’s the exact same skin as the one in the original Jurassic Park operation genesis
Beautiful skins! That one skin reminds me of the novel velociraptors. c:
Bestnslot: 2:46 “it looks like it’s been crying or has been pepper sprayed in the eyes”
Me: ANIME!!!
oh my god steppe makes it look so cute
I wonder if 6 is the limit for the number of skins that any one dinosaur can have? They all have a default skin and five alternate patterns, but none have more than that.
Also the spots pattern on the arid pattern Dryo reminds me more of the JP:OG dryo than that of the default.
Can we bring back the maze and use the dryosaurus and maybe the Homalocephale
I adore the arid Dryosaurus, personally
0:19 Yes they are built for battle no questions
Vivid skin looks exactly like a Tokay Gecko I think it's fantastic!
Vivid Dryosaurus reminds me of a tropical fish (either a wrasse or a grouper).
All these dinos are so cool!
The Steppe Dryosaurus kinda looks like a baby tapir and the arid one looks like an ocelot
"Good evening folks hope you are having a wonderful time scrolling down the comments
Good evening too,
I'm having a great time scrolling down the comments.
Well I don't have a good evening but rather a fine afternoon
aw thats nice, have a good day
Welp dryosaurus is a new family species in the game
Dryosaurus was my fav in jurassic park operation genesis
I really like the Wetland and Vivid pattern.
Steppe pattern reminds me of a baby deer's coloration.
Jungle is actually exactly my favorite shade of green... but it looks a bit unnatural on a living creature
To be fair on the stats and ratings, we all mostly used them is a food for other dinosaurs back in the jpog days anyway so...
The steppe looks like a baby deer pattern
Am i the only one that hears something when it comes out of the hatchery. When it does its little bark it sounds like its saying something
Dryo was about size of a large pony
I really liked the wetland but I also liked the arid and steppe.
It definitely need a high rating then what it has
7:50 vivid Dryo represents Illini.
No no, you right they adorable
The Vivid one is my favourite
How much does the dlc cost
jungle is also my favorite 🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑🤑😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇😇
I personally love the Dinosaurs with more vibrant and more drab skins. Males and females for my park. Also, if u want a more realistic version then the drab ones are nice
Can you do Nigersaurus next please?
the only thing i dont like about this is that sandbox to have all the dinos you need to have atleast 4 stared all the island and that can be a pain when you just want to go and play on sandbox its just they want people to play the story mode alot
G A R L I C B R E A D
F E T T U C C I N E
My fave Dryo is here now
the jungle skin looks like a day gecko.
I will used from Dinosaurs Roamed America in Jurassic period
Allosaurus
Apatosaurus
Camarasaurus
Ceratosaurus
Dryosaurus
Stegosaurus
Bestinslot I think they should add in new different species to make it more interesting like oviraptor, or a new otnithomimus, or a therizinosaurus, or something to add new things to the game that would make it interesting or add in a plateosaurus or I know it's not a dinosaur but like dimetrodon postosuchus or something
Just in time
BIS! You need to feed a Dryo to a Tyrannosaur!! It's a new animation
All the other dinos go for water first. Does the dryo go to food first?
Hmm. The skins are tough, but it’s a tie between the arid, vivid, and jungle.
Can they remake the Velociraptors with this quality of skins!
These guys are so cute 😍 I wish payday wasn't a week away for me 😭
It’s not much in ratings, it dies t attract a crowd, but it’s so cool.
Vivid dryo looks like candy
ARID IS SO GOOD!
I like the mainly green Dryo
I didn’t watch the whole video but the Dryosaurus has the fastest incubation time for an herbivore (or all dinosaurs?)
i love all skins on the dryosaurs they all are brightly colored none of them are dull😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎💪💪💪💪💪💪
Is it the cheapest dino to make to go with the low stats?
do more death maze
Hombre is the new Natural.
Anybody else dealing with the glitch where you download the dlc, but you can't get the Dryosaur, and is anybody working on fixing it?