How did the Parasurolophus get infected - (Origin of Zombie virus) PRIMAL
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- Опубліковано 3 кві 2020
- In PRIMAL, Plague of Madness, the Parasurolophus infected the sauropod. What caused this zombie disease and what is it? Here is our theory.
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Necrotizing fasciitis + super rabies (one that even after the animal is dead still animates the body as long as it is usable to spread the virus) is another theory. 😄 This is so nasty and fun
Alteori so a rotting virus puppet? Groooosss...I love it 😍
Alteori 👌
Alteori maybe it’s a CWD rabies hybrid
So basically what I'm getting (based on the look of the situation)is that this things skin is breaking down but it's still alive because it's brain is still working but at the same time it's brain is starting to break down causing it to lose control of its own body and then eventually dying .
I think that the virus infects the brain and thus can control the animal and the virus causes the body to slowly rot expect for the brain so the animal is technically alive but does not have any control over it's own body.
What horrifies me ; both of those infected beings were herbivorous, yet were twisted into murderous creatures.
Also, somehow, despite having rotten alive for god knows how long, the sauropod was capable of physical feats that I can only attribute as being from crazed and maddened willpower. Not only did it overpower every other member of its herd, it managed to ignore injuries and wounds that would absolutly result in death normaly.
Fucking hell
Imagine if it infected a T Rex or a Spinosaurus
@Glen West not true tbh
@@Val17282 I mean how does a vegetarian get protein
@@themostbritishpersonalive868 protein is found in any organism, it's one of the fundamental building blocks of life. One example of a plant that's a good source of protein is beans. Btw this is coming from a person who's a not a vegan
@@Val17282 ok but isn't there a lot more protein in red meat than in plant
Normally stuff like this in cartoons dont scare me, but this episode right here was down right disturbing.
Especially considering how he pretty much murdered his entire family.
Just because something is animated doesn't mean it can't be scary. The anime Devilman Crybaby fucked me up the first time i watched it
Eduardo Pinheiro Ok what the actual fuck
@@Bullboy_Adventures akira fucked me up pretty good as a kid, especially the scene when tetsuo intestines came out.
Even though its a cartoon the puffy balls on the dinosaur made me sick
Rabies also makes the infected extremely hydrophobic, which makes drinking water next to impossible without spasms in the throat muscles.
Toothfoot looked extremely dehydrated, and when he tried to quench his thirst, well...
Could also be to get excess weight/organs out. Or to infect the pool
So it’s rabies on steroids?
@@alastorandhazbinfan1186 Yeah
Would also explain ot ignoring normally fatal wounds
Rabies doesn’t cause necrosis though and it’s not rapid generally rapid onset Ebola cause hemorrhaging and is very quick to onset but doesn’t cause aggression
This episode has really made my skin crawl. The haunting music, this peaceful giant turning into a mindless rabid decaying monster. The thought of wondering what was it thinking as it lost its mind. I'm watching funny movies just to try to forget this episode but I look forward for more episodes. This was like resident evils t -virus but with dinosaurs.
I was thinking that it wasn't actually mad when spear and the dinosaur was being chased you could see a water or tears coming from its eyes so the virus might be controlling the dinosaurs body and its in pain Also sorry for this dark thought
@@ritastandford734 I thought it was more like rabies, which makes you leak from all pores like: sweat glands, tear glands, salivary glands etc, but your theory makes it 10x sadder
Being pregnant, I tend to have crazy, horrifyingly vivid dreams based on the last things I saw or thought about before I went to sleep.
Tonight does not look good.
@@lolineko2083I-
And the DEATH scene, worst of all. The lava and the heat boiling the virus out of the brain letting the sauropod re-gain control over its body. Those last couple seconds of true life weren't screams of murder and frustration, they were of hopelessness and suffering. The damn thing was half rotten just boiling in lava with half its guts spilling out. Well, at least it didn't die slower.
I think the biggest question is....
IS THERE MORE INFECTED?
That is actually a good question.
Who knows where that first dino zombie came from.
My guess is no, the thing about the infected is everyone avoids them and their carcasses insects included... And they typically go utterly berserk and kill everything in sight, not wound. The only reason this Sauropod wasn't killed was the immense size difference between it and "Patient 0"
@@valiatus6719
I agree with you on that, but how do we know if that was actually patient Zero, especially since I think said dino is also a type of herbivore that also roams in groups.
Thoughts?
kind of late IK but we saw that sauropod puke blood in to the water sooo what stops another animal that didn't witness the event to drink from that water unaware of the virus and get infected
@@wirelesdust I think they migth still notice if the water is infected, Fang upon smelling the carcasses imediatly backed up, and they seem overall fine (could be wrong thou).
But yeah the puke blood might be how the virus spreads in teh valley.
This is just god playing plague inc millions of years ago
Round 2 is going on rn
Yep 😂
beta testing
But he losed for a reason
god was playing the demo of the game with the dinosaurs, then played the full version with us
I love how the episode doesn't show the Camarasaurus' transitioning into the zombified form, it leaves us to picture in our heads what it looked like as it began decaying and go insane
@J Foster I was talking about the appearance. It jumps from the normal coloration to the green and zombie form
That was the normal rate
The 'webbed eye' is a cinematic clue that this is more than an infection: a vile curse!
Only one creature at a time shows this eye, despite passing the infection to others.
When the infection first appears in another beast, so does the webbed eye.
But when the 'host' dies after passing it on, his eyes return to normal.
I noticed that to and it seems the virus has a intelligence to it because it just kills at first but once a host reached a certain stage of decomposition that's when it tries to spread and doesn't move when a target is not around as if to preserve its current host as long as possible.
i personally think it is a curse, the hella strength the dino showed at first made sense since muscles are stronger than what our brain will allow it to be. The curse most likely removed that limiter and tortured the animal, but it didnt make sense when the dino lost alot of its muscles, but still had extreme strength and agility, last of all it looked like the dino knew what it was doing, but was unable to stop it, all this points it to be a curse from the gods since something like this would need specific circumstances to develop naturally (it also looked like it was hard to spread and even then the dino made not attempt to spread it)
I find this theory a lot more interesting, and scarier, than the rabies theory
By that, then it could've been started by the witches/druids. I wouldn't put it past them.
Never in my life did I think sauropods could ever be terrifying, thanks Primal for proving me wrong
I made the mistake of watching this at 2 am.
@@blazermettro2059 omg
230am
if you dont think sauropods are terrifying try playing ark while getting chased by a titano
Camarasaurus weighed around 22 tons. Some titanosaurs hit the scale at 60 tons.
An African bush elephant, especially the male, is a lot stronger, and a lot more dangerous than any carnivore on land today. They can chase away lion prides, and would make easy work for the biggest crocs, grizzly's or polar bears.
Sauropods were elephants on steroids, titanosaurs were probably the worst animal to be around especially during mating season [every vertebrate is aggressive during mating season].
Elephants kills hippos and rhinos in mating season.
I am sure sauropods did a lot worse.
Jurassic Park has brainwashed people into thinking its content is nonfiction
This whole episode made me profoundly uncomfortable. It all hit so close to The Land Before Time series on top of the sounds of horrid rotting/gurgling and behavior of typically graceful and gentle species. The combination of these things just urgh. And how hard it was to kill. I don’t want to know what this would even do to a predator.
Same I'm a fan of the LBT and yeah this episode hit me hard.
@Hunter X you a fan?
@Hunter X which movie is your favorite?
@Hunter X yeah I those films were a big part of my childhood and you know what's funny I used to pretend I was in the movies and hung up with em as a kid lol 😂
Unfortunately, Dondi’s “The Isle” creates something like this: the Type-D Strain, an artificial genetic mutation that puts the host into an endless cycle of decay and regeneration, putting it in enormous amounts of pain, fueling an insatiable bloodlust
I remember reading a theory that old legends of vampires could be related to early (human) rabies victims. Aggression, bouts of fatigue abruptly intercut with bursts of energy, and sensitivity to light could all lead past humans to the idea that the infected were vampires or something else of supernatural origin. And on top of all that, it can be spread through bites.
Aren’t most vampire stories basically like a old rich man classily kills a woman or something
The comments mention "must be even scarier when a predator had this", and I have to disagree - imagine being hunted by a diseased and maddened cow.
From being such a docile creature to become so violent, is what makes this that much more terrifying
Also a predator wouldn't change much. A herbie made for defense so aggressive would be horrifying
Also, the fact that the Argentinosaurus is the biggest Dinosaur on the fossil record. The Sauropod that got the Plague was said species
Ya if it was a traditional predator Spear and fang may have been able to simply kill or cripple it so it camt follow them
The sauropod is so large they didn't even consider that it's simply to big to kill with a Spear or fang
@@DancingAngelz The idea is that with predator animals, they are designed to kill things and are carnivores anyway. It's usually more unnerving that a normally docile creature with a preference for plants as its diet suddenly becomes a maddened beast hellbent on tearing open your body.
@@jar_knight Herbivores are not docile creatures, this myth needs to end ASAP. There are far to many people who approach herbivores in the wild, believing them to be peaceful, only to end up horribly injured or even dead.
These animals fight because they truly believe that you will kill and eat them, they give their all in order to survive. Sure, they don't go around looking for someone to hurt, but they will attack if they feel threatened.
Keep in mind that they are pray animals, and thus are threatened easily.
If spear or fang gets infected I’m going to make a whole video of me smashing my desk
Yes
I think only dinosaurs can get the disease
@@piretiris8223 fang is a dinosaur.......
@@phantomisoffline9744 I know
Same
This episode was really sad and gory im really scared for all the dinosaurs
pupet monster same because the primal world is full of crazy animals like the giant snake imagine that getting infected or even worse imagine a Dino like giganotasaurs being infected those things are already way over powered
@@The-Spaceducky I see you play the game ark survivle evolved.
جند الله idk what that is
Dont worry they in heaven or heck. Better then getting hunted by zombies
@@The-Spaceducky oh haha ark survival... I cant play my solo world on phone because i wasted 15 dollars in creative mode and it messed it up.
One thing that still bothers me is the scene where they jump onto the giants back while in the lava fields, spear looks down and we see the exposed bones and rotten flesh and it pans up to spears shocked look. I always wanted to know….was there anything inside of the beast? If you looked past the bones you see nothing, could the virus literally reanimate the dead?
I think it's even more grisly than that. The Sauropod spent a long time chasing Fang and Spear, burning off millions of calories in the process. It doesn't seem like the Mad Sauropod needed to eat, so how was it able to keep barreling through everything without shriveling up and dying of heatstroke or exhaustion? By *burning its own organs as fuel.*
In the throes of starvation, a creature's own cells will start dismantling it to try and keep the vital organs running. They go after excess fat, then excess muscle, then eventually all muscle. It's not starvation itself that leads to death, but rather the resulting damage to vital organs when they can no longer function. My theory is that the Plague of Madness kicks that same cellular programming up to 11. Everything that isn't needed to keep it running after and biting new hosts is expendable. Its organs didn't just fall out offscreen somewhere - they were consumed to either replace or nourish the Sauropod's muscle systems.
That explains why it burned up so quickly in the lava at the end, too. It took all of 30 seconds for a 50-ton dinosaur to be reduced to ash. The only way this could happen that makes sense -besides animation time constraints- is because most of those 50 tons were already gone.
@@Nepter8248 well that explains alot
This episode literally makes me terrified and nauseous from how well done they animated the terrifying zombie dinos
I think personally that it’s a evolved version of rabies that took traits of chronic wasting disease turned up to 11
Or you could combine it with necrotizing fasciitis. Then CWD wouldn't be necessary unless those were the symptoms prior to full-blown infestation by the infection.
or its backwards, its the original primal form of rabies, the rabies we have now currently is what it is now because everyone has formed some kind of immunity to its more gruesome effects
A late addition, but something that was brought to my attention by the UA-camr The Unnatural History Channel's Primal video that seems to lean into the theory that the Plague is something supernatural instead of a disease, and I feel I should spread it around since, just like me, no one else seems go have noticed.
That dinosaur is hollow inside.
Look at those shots that reveal its interior, there's no muscle or organs, most of it's literally just skin over bones.
I think it didn't really click with me because I'm too used to goreless damage from cartoons, but Primal isn't a show where we can use that excuse.
We know there's magic. Could be witches made it. Or other hostile people. Magic spread through bites.
I see it as an early form that is totally out of control.
I don't mean to be a nerd here but imagine this in a DnD setting: You & your party in this episode and you guys are suddenly being a GIANT FREAKING DINO ZOMBIE!! What would you guys do?
Or, you're on an adventure and show up at a Gith stronghold, everything is dead including the dragons, with no trace as to what killed them. Suddenly: Zombie Unicorn.
...
Shoot it in the knee with an arrow...
Roll for initiative.
Dice flips to a 1
@@minnion2871 get the fucking BFG And chainsaw
What I find interesting is that non of the other members of the herd became infected but maybe it's because they died before it could actually affect them?
How isnt it obvious?
Why are people asking this
They clearly died before they could get infected
For a long time, Resident Evil 2 had been the scariest thing I had ever seen, then when I was 12 I watched gameplays of Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs and that haunted me for years. I then read Frankenstein, which described the Monster in vivid detail and constantly reminding the reader that every piece of it was a horrible part of a stolen corpse stitched together into a horrible creature. Since then, nothing came across as scary to me anymore, not even Lovecraft's stories (or that one horrible video on Reddit of a sea lion bitten clean in half by a shark and somehow remaining alive). If I could read Frankenstein, I had seen it all.
Then today I watched this masterpiece.
I cannot describe in words the combination of fear, disgust, pity and anger this episode made me feel. This goes beyond the limits of gore as I knew it. This doesn't simply have torn, bleeding limbs or bones being broken into gravel. A word stronger than disgusting needs to be invented for this episode. The screams of agony and projectile-vomited blood are the least horrible thing. They made flesh melt and churn; they made exposed bones tear through the rotting skin of a living creature and they somehow gave this huge pile of nightmare fuel a bloodthirsty rage I have not seen on any movie, cartoon or videogame monster ever. On top of that, the most horrible part is somehow the *aura* they gave this thing; how they made it seem so empty of life yet full of evil intentions.
Now I've seen it all.
Frankenstein is pretty tame. 😐
9:30 dammit umbrella has been around for that long?
Well some virus and parasites like the Ganados in R.E universe exist millions of years before it was discovered by umbrella corp
Theory: the origin of the virus is what happens when a dino drinks the black liquid from ep 5 and there is some evidence like the camarasaurus was able to single handedly killed the whole herd. also the eyes go red like when the ape drank the liquid which could explain why it was able to kill every single one so easily and why it does not give up/die so fast but this is just a theory.
Single problem, is that the eyes are all red by default. The infection isn't red eyes, it's the white manic cracks/patterns, as when the first dino died, the white disappeared leaving only the red, and the second dino was shown with a darker tinted eyes, if not red, before it was even bit.
Well this IS a theory
A FIILM THEORY
So does spear have it ?
A FILM THEORY
As far as the "living dead" aspect of this particular virus goes, rabies also has a side effect that causes the infected to ignore pain and injury due to the brain dying. I have seen animals with rabies get shot and completely ignore the injury, even if it caused the animal to lose the use of a limb.
What I found interesting about the plague was that to me it look like it’s more of a singular entity that just jumps hosts. Cause it killed the herd but nothing was infected.
same
Possibly it has a long incubation period? And the other dinos died from injury before the disease could progress far enough
It might be a prehistoric version of the cordyseps fungus kind of like what happened in the last of us no just like that
Hmmmm good point
Ecowolf 1995 oooh I forgot
She mentioned cordeyseps. It's the fungus that infects ants.
More like the virus, a rabies variant I think, from the left 4 dead series.
Not even, cause the only zombie infection (that i know of) where the zombies can't die even after being severely burned is the movie Return of the living dead.
Lot of good points, but I feel it’s something else. Rabies doesn’t cause necrosis, and the infected dinosaur seemed to lay dormant for a hole day before noticing Fang and Spear again and chasing after them. Not to mention it’s very zombie like in that it just won’t fucking die, no matter how many chunks are ripped from it.
Also I think we should mention the eyes of the zombies changing, and how the eyes of the paraserolophus changed back to normal after it died. Not sure what it means (a force controlling them?) but it is worth noting.
That is an interesting note and can even be a thing that transfers from one thing to the other. It could make more sense that it would be something supernatural but I think they also embellish with this.
I think the decay sets in after they are dead. After a while the animal is dead and it's not the one controlling its movements any longer.
Alteori Watch this being canon with Samurai Jack and this disease, along with the magic hulk juice the Apemen use, are offshoots of Aku XD
@@Alteori a hybrid of the two things she talked about
@@AlteoriThe infection could be technology related. Like Primal does have the option of actually being set in the far future after humanity (most of it) is gone, and that could be a remnant. Either we Jurrasic parked Earth up or symmetric evolution happened, letting the mammalian creatures go into the niches of what was available as dinosaurs. Camarosaurids actually being evolved giraffes.
This could also explain the more highly evolved thought processes of Fang, the reason that Fang was able to stand the bitter cold without any fur (actually a type of mammal or related to one). Explaining how the mammals and dinosaurs were inside the same ecosystem.
In order for everything to be this large, oxygen levels would have to be significantly higher than they are today, for practically anything to have that size, there would need to be a significantly higher amount of oxygen available for consumption by the animal population.
Zach Omara this is the “Yor the Hunter from the Future” sequel we never got 😂
Considering that the first infected dino was a herbivore, I'd say that, when it was eating grass from, for example, the ground, it accidentally ate a mushroom, with a fungus carrying the zombie disease. Additionally, Spear seemingly recognized the type of monster he was fighting against when he, on the dino body, saw a wound it had. Perhaps he had seen the fungus acting before, and that's why he was so afraid, even having nightmares.
No its that spear realized that there was nothing left inside the sauropod. It was hallowed out but was somehow still moving. This thing was dead physically but was still moving.
After seeing the episode, it looked like the dinosaur turning zombie was only a few seconds. He looks at his wound in a "well would you look at that," and turned to a pond. In the distance of just walking a few steps, it turned green and started showing symptoms. I never really saw Primal beforehand.
I took it as a 28 days later influence. It only takes 20 seconds for the infection to take hold in that universe. The vomiting blood too further felt like a reference
*I have a theory, the ape men drink black goo that looks like the essence of Aku, a tame version maybe. A super version could cause zombification.*
I was thinking of that too like maybe it starts a horrible reaction
@@Alteori one more thing, the eye transformation of the ape men are pretty similar to the pupils of the zombies.
*COINCIDENCE? I THINK NOT!*
Heh, my friend's name is Aku
@@dirandrous7682 I have togo back and look. I think when they were transforming it looked like that momentarily. I have to look again.
Oh and one more thing, i think the ape men harvested the goo from the saliva of the bats, the carriers of Aku's essence. Like hell they even share his color palete.
When the big Dino killed all of the others did he cry cause there was something came out of his eyes
This is probably from the illness which may of made the eyes water because it had no intent of stopping
I think it was actually a mix of crying and just being infected
Not that kind of show its from the virus
The lancet liver fluke also has the ability to take over ants. It's a very small leech which actually has quite a complicated and interesting circle of life.
Seems like with the Vastness of Primal, the zombie disease seems to be somewhat minor. Or maybe it’s a new thing that we will see a lot of in the future.
Aside from the zombie sauropod still being alive after swimming in lava, i could see this as a possible way the dinosaurs went extinct. A very contagious virus that either kills instantly, or makes the infected act hostile towards everything, further spreading the infection. But it's a very slim chance that they would be unkillable zombies like from return of the living dead.
Doesn't really make sense considering the fact that many completely different species went extinct during that time
Everyone keeps saying it’s lava....it’s a geyser. Most modern day geysers contain sulfuric liquids and like it’s shown in the show it behaves like a sulfuric acid. It gets on spear and fang and it burns the skin. Like an acid would. That’s why the camara was able to survive it. The color of the liquid should be obvious enough it isn’t magma or lava.
The lava scene was bad, Lava can not be swam in, it's like trying to swim is malasis(cant figure out how its spelled) even then not a good comparison, like quicksand but it's a mass that's consuming you completely
SeichOfLacanGetter refer to my comment of “Everyone keeps saying it’s lava....it’s a geyser. Most modern day geysers contain sulfuric liquids and like it’s shown in the show it behaves like a sulfuric acid. It gets on spear and fang and it burns the skin. Like an acid would. That’s why the camara was able to survive it. The color of the liquid should be obvious enough it isn’t magma or lava.” Or it’s just some fictional liquid that is some acid/lava hybrid.
@@eneskaradeniz4311 you're absolutely right. If it were lava, the sheer temperature from being that close to it would have killed all three of them.
Still after all these years, you and the team are still one of the best channels I have ever had the pleasure of stumbling across. Been here since the early days, changed accounts a few times, but never left. You go Alty!!!
My buddy was doing a project for a high school anatomy class. He made a theoretical disease he called perniciosius insanire. The math he used was a hybridization of rabies, madcow disease and CWD. The teacher sent it in to the CDC and got a message from a scientist that stated that it is possible to make such a disease artificialy....
Nice
oh no
That's one thing that Hunters need to watch out for, Chronic waste disease. If one deer has it, most likely others do, thankfully none of that has been a problem for now.
I haven't seen this show sadly, but holy shit was I deeply disturbed by the imagery and clips.
Same
Chels The Game Ruiner beware the actual episode. Good god.
Watch Primal. It's an amazing (and brutal) show
I think rabies is also the explanation to all the “vampire” stories.
Most vampire stories are believed to originate from another disease called porphyria, which is actually also known as "the vampire disease." Good guess, though.
Nah one of them is because of a stone mask some buff pole men created
@@redwood6518 eyy,fellow man of culture
@@dr.h0agieplays540 I have waited 4- No, 5 months for this reply
This is the episode in Primal that makes me feel some sympathy. It’s a deeply disturbing and somewhat sad of the fact that it’s an unknown zombified plague that robs the dinosaurs of their souls, and have them go in an urge of bloodlust.
Kind of interesting adding this type of threat in the prehistoric times, and it sends chills down the spine of that it’s unknown on how it or why it was created in the first place.
Kind of makes you wonder if this was the cause of the extinction of the dinosaurs.
Remember the black liquid the ape in episode 5 dronk and became hulk-like powerful,
what if it's effect differently on dinosaurs?
I think it was the spoiled of the black liquid then they dumped and a parasaurus eat ot and here it comes the nightmares
Quite a possibility since we haven't seen it affect dinosaurs like it's for mammals only
Exactly my thoughts too. Maybe the effect from reptiles is different. They turn into aggressive, terrifying, mindless zombies instead.
I personally think that primal takes place in the same universe as samurai jack. and all the supernatural stuff like the strength enhancing black ooze in episode 5 and the virus in this episode is from the primordial evil ooze that formed aku.
Jesus when you actually see aku you forget he's not just a one dimensional villain who laughs at his own jokes but as the evil unholy monstrosity that he is and what he can create.
I love the avatar! So cute 😁 and the voice over is soooo enthralling.
Lol "Don't Escape" music, very nice. Very good video.
Maybe this episode could be years after Fang’s near death experience
Anyone else want to pet that little talking black cat? Lol
Me lol
That cat would scratch you.
How do you know she's a cat? I see tiny little hoof things and a slug tail/foot
Yes
J. Scott Yes, must pet
Hey! Super late to the party here, but I fucking LOVE this episode. It's probably my favorite animated depiction of disease. I'd like to weigh in on what the Plague of Madness might be. Im a physician, so I dont work with disease specifically, but I do work with the anotomy of the victims of it.
Necrotizing fasciitis? No. Not at all. It presents in several ways, but none are vaguely similar to what's seen here. Prion disease is a fantastic comparison, but I'm going to say no on that as well. We can only imagine what sort of terrifying, ancient prion diseases existed in prehistoric times, but a common thread in their behavior is they tend to be very very slow moving by nature. The sauropod began exhibiting symptoms almost immediately, which makes me believe the plague is a virus. Adding to that, the little dinosaur died right after its spine was broken, which probably means that the virus lives in the dorsal root ganglia of the central nervous system. We have viruses today that live and spread this way as well. The plague seems a lot like rabies, with the body rejecting water, the heightened aggression, and the ability of the sauropod to use strength that it shouldn't be capable of (galloping, biting through tissue, jumping), and surviving while its insides are seemingly melted away and hollow. In theory, a creature should be able to maintain locomotion so long as the attachment points for its joints and ligaments remain intact, and theres a blood supply to oxygenate the remaining muscles. Obviously in real life, a creature made of just skin and bones couldn't continue moving, but otherwise, you get what I'm saying. The fact that the plague is wildly unsuccessful in spreading because its lethality far surpasses its contageousness also makes me think it's a virus. There are SO many terrifying viruses out there that you'll never hear about because they're just too lethal. A virus cant succeed if it's so deadly it kills its host before it has a chance to spread. But it happens. The fact that it's explicitly called a "plague" implies that it DOES spread effectively though, but it isnt seen reanimating the dead in any way, so my thoughts are that it's regionally localized. The way Fang recoils from the smell of the dead makes me wonder if it's still present in dead tissue though. Who knows? Fascinating either way!
Overall, I think it's pretty accurate to call this prehistoric rabies on steroids lol
Keep up the good content. U got a new sub
fun fact: scientists experimented on CWD and it has been successfully transmitted to a chimpanzee. So technically speaking, we could get the zombie apocalypse
Don't get anyone worried enough as it is, i'm sorry man it's just I can't bare to hear another apocalypse joke or whatever
While we are close to primates however there are manny stuff primates have where we don't and also vice-versa
@@Draculas-knight so you're saying, we're OK
@@JohnnyVavala basicly yes, if we on purpose infect humans then we deserve our fate
@@Draculas-knight well I do have one more question, is this a good thing ua-cam.com/video/vj_-mo_S6z4/v-deo.html
So the bat started the disease?
“Ironic”
hmmmm??????
CCCAAAARRRROOOONNNNAAA@-@
They knew what they were doing.
First video I've seen of yours, subbed belled and liked! I was curious about someones thoughts and input on this and so here I am!
I've watched this episode 50 times and it's still the best thing I've ever seen
This literally reminds me of Vaal Hazak from mhw....
OMG YOUR RIGHT!
lol
give it red rotting flesh and wings
YES
That's instantly what I thought of
Has to be alien no way anything like that can come from Earth.
Can something like this happen to humans now that's terrifying
@@GamerBoy870 it can rabies is a major source of symptoms
@@amberterrell6830 I'm pretty sure CWD cant occur in humans
@@GamerBoy870 the real life zombie virus cannot infect humans only ants but maybe monitor if it starts infecting other insects that's how they get you
@@themostbritishpersonalive868 true
You're one smart Fox love your videos keep it up
i clicked on this video expecting badass zombie dinosaurs, ended up watching the actual episode and feeling nauseous on the blood vomiting scene, never again.
There is a very likeness to this “disease.” In the Steam game called The Isle: the Type-D, or Dermadocrine, Giganotosaurus. It had a severe genetic mutation where it’s in a constant state of decay and regeneration, it’s skin constantly shedding in a painful manner which leads to uncontrollable bouts of aggression as new skin grows, only for the cycle to repeat itself endlessly
It's good thing that the type-D strain is only a fanmade one and not part of the lore of The Isle
Omg this oldster is gonna check that OUT. You little fuckers are so lucky growing with all this cool media at your fingertips! Class of 1985...RESPEK, lol...seriously though, keep using tech to make unbelievable shit my generation could only DREAM of.
Yeah man that aint an official strain and tbh it just seems like a boring strain.
Lillia Andrew it does not -_-
@@ChonkedCat its just a zombielike hypo without increased size and armour boi
Although necromantis titanis (my classification of the giant bats) are likely. There's two observations you have neglected. First, the eyes of necromantis titanis are not red and veiny, both parasaurolophus and camarasurus are. While their eyes are green, they are not veiny. Second is the necrotic flesh, the immune system is shut down in both subjects allowed decomposition, necromantis titanis doesn't have the necrotic flesh. The aggressive nature of necromantis titanis is from the relationship with the spider in the caves. They have to get more aggressive to take down bigger prey as both the spider and bat colony got bigger.
The bats might be immune to certain traits of the plague.
I always wondered how the spider eats. Cause it has jaws with teeth but yet also cocoons it's prey like a normal spider and plus compared to its size and how much the bats feed it I wonder how much share they get from feeding it.
Ok, a study shows that bats, while carry a lot of diseases, do not show any symptoms, as their body have adapted to said diseases, like the Corona virus. While their immune system is strong enough to withstand the illness, it also causes the illness to mutate, to adapt
Bats in the real world can harbor several viruses in their body and not show side effects which could be why the bats don't show symptoms
Necromantis was a real carnivorous bat, but it was a lot smaller, modern eagles would have made easy work of the bat [and ancient eagles likely did].
Bats unfortunately have a size limit, biggest bat ever was about the same size as a fox bat.
Bats have primitive mammal bones, and primitive mammalian lungs. Saurischians [including birds]and pterosaurs were/are more advanced in this aspect, thus can and could reach far larger size limits.
Birds flight size limit is believed to be set by how long it takes for large feathers to regrow.
I didn't expect such a cute cat to explain something so horrifying to me. Neat, I'm subbing.
Like 20 years ago when i was in highschool I once told my friends that I knew how the world (humanity) would end.
And I quote "a HIGHLY contagious virus will somehow mix with rabies and will be spread by crazed infected people attacking other people in a blind confused frenzy"
Currently I'm just sitting in wait to see if the rabies/covid mix will produce normal zombies or usain bolt zombies.... If the former... then I think my fatass got a chance... if its the latter .... then .......... fuck.
No anime girls will take over the world
I always looked at sauropods with a lot of friendship, before I played ark looking at him like great friends, today I look at the titanosaur and imagine him as a giant zombie trying to kill me by the map, a beautiful job they did in this episode XD.
Really? I looked at them as "don't step on my home"
@@TheNavigator4552 I like them, the only thing that bothers me and the paraceratherium, they walk around the base shaking everything, hardly the brontos or titanosaurus make me upset, only the paracer makes me angry.
@The Navigator same. The only thing that comes to my mind when i see a bronto is "please leave my base alone"
That's the scariest thing we don't know
I was the first to spot a case of CWD in my community. It was pretty damned chilling. A zombie-like deer, disoriented and wandering dangerously close to the road- when I called the local department of wildlife, they were audibly shaken. The disease, they said, hadn't reached this far yet... I had to answer, "There's always a first time." I think they felt about as sick as I sounded.
“Little plant eating Cujo”
Y e s
Maybe it's like a single parasite like worm or something
I think that because after the parasaurolophus bites the foot of the sauropod and gets kicked away it's eyes turn normal before it dies
When I heard it can be a fungus: *prehistoric the last of us*
Look up the Cordyceps Fungus.
*the past of us*
I thought there would have been more infected considering it being a virus. I first thought this when it whipped it's tail on one of it's own, only to kill all of it's herd soon after. I also thought it could have been some virus cooked up by the sorceress or someone similar. This episode was so horrifying, it was like (28 Days Later) had a baby with the (Blackwing Virus).
Wow, your vocabulary is so intelligent & sophisticated so well educated..... nice.
Except for the hydrophobia in rabies. The sauropod had the opposite.
But didn’t you see what happened as soon as it started to drink it Immediately vomited blood back into the water
@@Peecgroave
It's most likely that it ruptured its stomach from water intake, hence the blood.
Im pretty sure this was the testing phase of Plague Inc.
I think that the plague was exclusive to that valley, because in the background that area was surrounded by cliffs or mountains, which is why they don't encounter the plague again in the series. The exit being a volcano. The plague might have been still going in that valley but couldn't find a way out to infect hosts outside of that area.
This is THE first Time watching ur channal and i realy like THE cat
The real question is how did Fang survive after Episode Five!?!
@Megalodon Really!? Are you sure!?!😲
@Megalodon it better be! Because if not, I'll be very lost and disappointed!
@Megalodon Uhhh, I guess you could say that!
@Megalodon It's fine. I haven't seen Birds of Prey or Sonic yet!
Probably healed off screen.
I think Gennady didn't want to write a whole series of Fang getting healed by Spear so he probably jumped a few months into the future to show Fang is mostly recovered.
Fossils show the Theropods and dinosaurs in general had considerable recovery capability if their wounds didn't get infected.
This is just my head canon. I'm not entirely sure myself. So don't take my word for it.
Imagine a POV theory on this episode 🤢
Then it would be DISCUSTANG
BRAAAAAAAIIIIIIIINS
Malachi Cook I’d actually love to see that to be honest. I mean good god theres a probably pretty interesting story that could be made with the concept. I mean think of some of the herbivorous dinosaurs at the time and what kind of damage they could do if they went into a more berserk rage.
Glad you made this video. 🙂
This was easily the most horrifying thing Ive ever seen in an animated series
You forgot to mention that hosts infected with rabies also become EXTREMELY thirsty and will often dunk their entire heads into water if they can but they just cant seem to drink, which is part of why they drool so much. The first part of rabies tends to be a desire for water, which eventually turns into a fear of water since rabies can be washed away with water (More research needed on this however)
I wonder what’s going on in the infected dino’s view.Probably scared as it sees what’s happening to itself,but then it loses it’s soul as the virus takes over turning it into a vicious, violent,murderous creature
Everyone: * looks at 2020 nervously *
2020: oh yea it's all coming together.....
Seeing a Zombie dino is way more scary than I expected. Also nice on mentioning prions.
That cat is cute
I want to see this virus come back it was a really interesting episode and imagine other already dangerous things getting infected like the T. rex
No, a more dangerous version of it
SeichOfLacanGetter that be nice
I would love to see the virus continue to mutate and become stronger, so future hosts don't rot and fall apart as quickly but are still just as dangerous.
Aayla Secura but then that would defeat the whole purpose of a zombie virus if it doesn’t even look like one but yea I would love to see the virus evolve
An infected or zombified trex would NOT be more dangerous than an infexted or zombified camarasaurus. This sauropod species weighed AT LEAST twice as much as the largest trex.
The only thing worse would be bigger sauropods, an infected titanosaur would be disastrous [2-3x larger than camarasaurus].
Thank you that was indeed informative
I feel called out here >.> but this was a really good video that I stumbled on!
the thing that most disturbed me about this episode was the roar of the Parasurolophus, usually roar in this series represents a creature trying to indimdate something, it trying to show it´s power, here you can see that the Parasurolophus whenever it roar it was not for that, it was roaring in pain and agony almost begging for help.
I have a bad feeling we’ll be seeing more of them
It was more than rabies. Both animals were rotting while it appeared their ligaments were possibly strengthening(?) Their mobility was unreal. I'm hoping it had a supernatural element which would totally fit with this show.
Another thing is when he waited almost all night till fang and spear came out he was smart he waited the virus doesn’t just make you dumb he also felt pain when he hit his head in the ravine
I’ve heard some scientists believe disease wiped out the Dinosaurs. Though it may or may not have turned them into mindless zombies, having this disastrous virus in the show was a creative idea
0:12 oof that must hurt
Jotaro Kujo part 6 well it is a dream but some dreams you can sometimes feel so idk
TheHolyPeanut oh yeah that is true
Jotaro Kujo part 6 ye
E
Jesus in a werlchair i'd forgot just how much i love this channel
Aside from the fact that Toofoot continued to move and attack till it turned into ash via the lava, what also got me during that ep, is, if you take what I'm saying with some grains of salt, the way the fluid (Mucus of some sort I'm sure) ran out of it's eyes basically the entire ep, looked very much like tears, like the poor dinosaur was still feeling the pain of its rotting, decaying, and then eventually emptied corpse in some capacity, even though I'm positive it really died at some point after being infected for a while, and what we see afterwards is just it's once again rotting, decaying, and empty of all/or most internal organs and tissues corpse. But, yeah, the way that stuff kept pouring out really made it seem like the poor thing was crying the entire time
Maybe it might be a new disease, kind if like a combination of both diseases
Agonizing in pain, womiting blood, rotting alive physically and psychically, then killing your own kind. This flesh - eating rabies is just CRUEL! 🦕
Found a new educational channel I like
That was a very interesting explanation of the episode.
I love your avatar ! So cute
Thanks!
I watched it. And holy shit. I was actually horrified.
I don't understand how its decaying so fast like damn you get bit you turn and damn you decay extremely fast apparently but still it really makes it so much better
Fun fact about rabies, those infected by it may experience severe aquaphobia in the later stages of infection, and if a rabid creature was unwilling to drink or be near water then they were usually too far gone to be saved. I'm sure that Primal's rabies is a bit different than ours ... for a myriad of different reasons, but it could have been possible for Fang and Spear to escape the Camara if they crossed a big enough river or pond.