Ok here's my suggestion.The allosaurus.Ok here's 10 facts:
1. Allosaurus used to be known as Antrodemus.
After it was discovered in the late 19th century, Allosaurus bounced around a bit in the classification bins. This dinosaur was first named Antrodemus (Greek for "body cavity"), after an obscure anatomical feature, and was only systematically referred to as Allosaurus ("different lizard") starting in the mid-1970's.
2. Allosaurus may have preyed on Stegosaurus.
Paleontologists have unearthed solid evidence that Allosaurus preyed on (or at least occasionally tussled with) Stegosaurus: an Allosaurus vertebra with a puncture wound that matches the shape of a Stegosaurus tail spike (or "thagomizer"), and a Stegosaurus neck bone bearing an Allosaurus-shaped bite mark.
3. The typical Allosaurus lived for about 25 years.
Estimating a dinosaur's life span is always a tricky matter, but based on the voluminous fossil evidence, paleontologists believe Allosaurus attained its full adult size by age 15. Barring disease, starvation or thagomizer wounds from angry stegosaurs, this dinosaur may have been capable of living another 10 or 15 years.
4. Allosaurus was one of the instigators of the "Bone Wars."
In their zeal to one-up each other, the 19th-century paleontologists Othniel C. Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope sometimes "diagnosed" new dinosaurs based on too-scanty evidence. Marsh coined the genus Allosaurus, but both he and Cope went on to name other, supposedly new dinosaurs that (on further examination) turned out to be separate Allosaurus species.
5. "Big Al" is the most famous Allosaurus fossil.
It was only in 1991--after a full century of Allosaurus discoveries--that researchers unearthed an exquisitely preserved, near-complete fossil, which they promptly dubbed "Big Al." Big Al didn't live a very happy life: analysis of its bones reveals numerous fractures and bacterial infections, which doomed this 26-foot-long teenaged dinosaur to an early death.
6. Allosaurus regularly shed and replaced its teeth.
Like many predatory dinosaurs (not to mention modern crocodiles), Allosaurus constantly grew, shed and replaced its teeth, some of which averaged three or four inches in length. For this reason, it's possible to buy real, fossilized Allosaurus teeth for reasonable prices--meaning a few hundred dollars each!
7. Allosaurus comprised at least seven separate species...
As mentioned above, the early history of Allosaurus is littered with supposedly "new" dinosaurs that turned out to be separate Allosaurus species. To date, seven species (chief among them Allosaurus fragilis) have been more-or-less accepted by paleontologists, with a dozen or so more considered dubious at best.
8. ...one of which may or may not have been Saurophaganax.
Saurophaganax (Greek for "greatest lizard eater") was a 40-foot-long, two-ton theropod that lived alongside Allosaurus in late Jurassic North America. Pending further fossil evidence, paleontologists haven't yet decided whether this dinosaur deserves its own genus, or is more properly classified as a new Allosaurus species, Allosaurus maximus.
9. There's no evidence that Allosaurus hunted in packs.
Paleontologists have long speculated that the only way Allosaurus could have preyed on the huge sauropods of its day was if it hunted in cooperative packs. It's a pretty picture, but the fact is that even modern big cats don't team up to bring down full-grown elephants--so Allosaurus individuals probably hunted smaller prey on their own.
10. Allosaurus was one of the first dinosaur movie stars.
The Lost World, made in 1925, was the first full-length dinosaur movie--and it starred not Tyrannosaurus Rex, but Allosaurus (not to mention Pteranodon and Brontosaurus, the dinosaur later renamed Apatosaurus). It was only a few years later, in the King Kong era, that T. Rex supplanted Allosaurus as Hollywood's famous carnivorous dinosaur.
I copied all of these.Just a few facts you can use.(I dident read them myself )
Here's some pics.
Reposting Pics :tongue.gif: .
FIRST TIME POSTING PICS SO SORRY IF THEY DON'T WORK.This fierce two legged carnivore lived in the Late Jurassic period. It inhabited the plains, and normally hunted alone. It would hunt in groups to tackle the largest prey. It was approximately 12 metres long, five metres high and weighed up to three tonnes.
Anatotitan
A herbivorous dinosaur, of the Late Cretaceous period, Anatotitan was one of the last duckbilled dinosaurs. Its name literally means "giant duck". It had a long wide beak, with hundreds of cheek teeth behind it. It could be up to 13 metres long, and weigh up to 5 tonnes
Sorry no pic :sad.gif:
Angiosperm
Angiosperms or flowering plants are the most recent major group of plants to evolve. They first appeared early in the Cretaceous period and dominated the world's flora by the end of it. Angiosperms have seeds inside a nutritious fruit which gives them a better start in life. Fertilisation can occur by the wind, or very often by flying insects and other animals, enabling flowering plants to spread rapidly
Ankylosaurus
Literally "fused" or "stiff lizard". A medium sized, herbivorous dinosaur of the Late Cretaceous period. It had a heavily plated back and a club tail. All its bones had fused together so thickly that there was very little room for a brain. It was up to 10 metres long and weighed up to 7 tonnes.
Anurognathus
This small flying omnivore lived in the Late Jurassic period. It is possible it could have spent its life onboard the back of sauropods such as Diplodocus or Brachiosaurus that wandered the plains. It fed on the insects disturbed by the feeding of the massive herbivores. It had a wingspan of up to 50 cm and weighed about three to seven grams.
Araucaria
This is the name for a group of ancient trees that survive to this day. They are tall, evergreen coniferous trees which have cones and needle-like leaves. One of the modern representatives of this group is the Monkey Puzzle tree
No pic but its a gaint carnivore turtle so you can proboly guess what it looks like.
Archelon
A carnivorous sea turtle of the Cretaceous period which grew to be about the size of a car.
Belemnite
A soft bodied, squid-like carnivore that lived in the sea. It caught small fish and marine organisms with its tentacles and ate them with its beak-like mouth. It had had hooks on its tentacles instead of suckers. Common in the waters of the Jurassic period, it is now extinct.
Bennettite
The name for a group of ancient plants with a bare central trunk topped by a crown of leaves. Similar in appearance to the cycad, these plants thrived on the plains in the Triassic and Jurassic periods and became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous period.
Brachiosaurus
A tall herbivorous dinosaur of the Late Jurassic period, its name means "arm-lizard"
Coelacanth
This medium sized carnivorous fish evolved more than 360 million years ago. They were prevalent in the Triassic period in both fresh water and marine environments. Surprisingly this ancient fish still survives today in the depths of the Indian ocean. It is approximately one and a half metres long and weighs 50 kg.
Coelophysis
This small two legged carnivore lived in the Late Triassic period. It inhabited river valleys and scrubland around the plains, hunting alone or in small groups. At the end of the dry season Coelophysis formed large packs to hunt. It was two to three metres long and weighed 35 to 40 kg.That should be enough for today.Notice i'm going in alfibetical order.More tommorow.Hope you enjoy these.Gotta go do homework.Maniac out.
hey, I found some bugs in the 1.0 that no one seams to be talking about... so i dont know if they were fixed
1. Plesiaur swims indefinetly fast, meaning that it has no cap to its speed... i went speeding accross the ocean and almost froze my computer
2. Dropping Sio-Cu-le neer Mosasaurus crashes game
some one please tell me that this is fixed in 1.1 version
1.I think they still go this fast.
2.I thinks its fixedTested it.
1.Im not sure because im not using the newest version.
2.Yup its fixed.Ps.Does anyone like my ideas?Gonna Give more tomorrow.AND DOES ANYONE LIKE MY PIC/AVATAR?
hey, I found some bugs in the 1.0 that no one seams to be talking about... so i dont know if they were fixed
1. Plesiaur swims indefinetly fast, meaning that it has no cap to its speed... i went speeding accross the ocean and almost froze my computer
2. Dropping Sio-Cu-le neer Mosasaurus crashes game
some one please tell me that this is fixed in 1.1 version
if your talking about the 1.1 minecraft version working with those i am not certain about the first bug but mosasaurus will not crash when eating Sio-Cu-le
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
[SSSS]
GENERATION 28: Community experiment. The first time you see this, copy it into your signature on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
Ok here's my suggestion.The allosaurus.Ok here's 10 facts:
1. Allosaurus used to be known as Antrodemus.
After it was discovered in the late 19th century, Allosaurus bounced around a bit in the classification bins. This dinosaur was first named Antrodemus (Greek for "body cavity"), after an obscure anatomical feature, and was only systematically referred to as Allosaurus ("different lizard") starting in the mid-1970's.
2. Allosaurus may have preyed on Stegosaurus.
Paleontologists have unearthed solid evidence that Allosaurus preyed on (or at least occasionally tussled with) Stegosaurus: an Allosaurus vertebra with a puncture wound that matches the shape of a Stegosaurus tail spike (or "thagomizer"), and a Stegosaurus neck bone bearing an Allosaurus-shaped bite mark.
3. The typical Allosaurus lived for about 25 years.
Estimating a dinosaur's life span is always a tricky matter, but based on the voluminous fossil evidence, paleontologists believe Allosaurus attained its full adult size by age 15. Barring disease, starvation or thagomizer wounds from angry stegosaurs, this dinosaur may have been capable of living another 10 or 15 years.
4. Allosaurus was one of the instigators of the "Bone Wars."
In their zeal to one-up each other, the 19th-century paleontologists Othniel C. Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope sometimes "diagnosed" new dinosaurs based on too-scanty evidence. Marsh coined the genus Allosaurus, but both he and Cope went on to name other, supposedly new dinosaurs that (on further examination) turned out to be separate Allosaurus species.
5. "Big Al" is the most famous Allosaurus fossil.
It was only in 1991--after a full century of Allosaurus discoveries--that researchers unearthed an exquisitely preserved, near-complete fossil, which they promptly dubbed "Big Al." Big Al didn't live a very happy life: analysis of its bones reveals numerous fractures and bacterial infections, which doomed this 26-foot-long teenaged dinosaur to an early death.
6. Allosaurus regularly shed and replaced its teeth.
Like many predatory dinosaurs (not to mention modern crocodiles), Allosaurus constantly grew, shed and replaced its teeth, some of which averaged three or four inches in length. For this reason, it's possible to buy real, fossilized Allosaurus teeth for reasonable prices--meaning a few hundred dollars each!
7. Allosaurus comprised at least seven separate species...
As mentioned above, the early history of Allosaurus is littered with supposedly "new" dinosaurs that turned out to be separate Allosaurus species. To date, seven species (chief among them Allosaurus fragilis) have been more-or-less accepted by paleontologists, with a dozen or so more considered dubious at best.
8. ...one of which may or may not have been Saurophaganax.
Saurophaganax (Greek for "greatest lizard eater") was a 40-foot-long, two-ton theropod that lived alongside Allosaurus in late Jurassic North America. Pending further fossil evidence, paleontologists haven't yet decided whether this dinosaur deserves its own genus, or is more properly classified as a new Allosaurus species, Allosaurus maximus.
9. There's no evidence that Allosaurus hunted in packs.
Paleontologists have long speculated that the only way Allosaurus could have preyed on the huge sauropods of its day was if it hunted in cooperative packs. It's a pretty picture, but the fact is that even modern big cats don't team up to bring down full-grown elephants--so Allosaurus individuals probably hunted smaller prey on their own.
10. Allosaurus was one of the first dinosaur movie stars.
The Lost World, made in 1925, was the first full-length dinosaur movie--and it starred not Tyrannosaurus Rex, but Allosaurus (not to mention Pteranodon and Brontosaurus, the dinosaur later renamed Apatosaurus). It was only a few years later, in the King Kong era, that T. Rex supplanted Allosaurus as Hollywood's famous carnivorous dinosaur.
I copied all of these.Just a few facts you can use.(I dident read them myself )
Here's some pics.
Reposting Pics :tongue.gif: .
FIRST TIME POSTING PICS SO SORRY IF THEY DON'T WORK.
This fierce two legged carnivore lived in the Late Jurassic period. It inhabited the plains, and normally hunted alone. It would hunt in groups to tackle the largest prey. It was approximately 12 metres long, five metres high and weighed up to three tonnes.
Anatotitan
A herbivorous dinosaur, of the Late Cretaceous period, Anatotitan was one of the last duckbilled dinosaurs. Its name literally means "giant duck". It had a long wide beak, with hundreds of cheek teeth behind it. It could be up to 13 metres long, and weigh up to 5 tonnes
Sorry no pic :sad.gif:
Angiosperm
Angiosperms or flowering plants are the most recent major group of plants to evolve. They first appeared early in the Cretaceous period and dominated the world's flora by the end of it. Angiosperms have seeds inside a nutritious fruit which gives them a better start in life. Fertilisation can occur by the wind, or very often by flying insects and other animals, enabling flowering plants to spread rapidly
Ankylosaurus
Literally "fused" or "stiff lizard". A medium sized, herbivorous dinosaur of the Late Cretaceous period. It had a heavily plated back and a club tail. All its bones had fused together so thickly that there was very little room for a brain. It was up to 10 metres long and weighed up to 7 tonnes.
Anurognathus
This small flying omnivore lived in the Late Jurassic period. It is possible it could have spent its life onboard the back of sauropods such as Diplodocus or Brachiosaurus that wandered the plains. It fed on the insects disturbed by the feeding of the massive herbivores. It had a wingspan of up to 50 cm and weighed about three to seven grams.
Araucaria
This is the name for a group of ancient trees that survive to this day. They are tall, evergreen coniferous trees which have cones and needle-like leaves. One of the modern representatives of this group is the Monkey Puzzle tree
No pic but its a gaint carnivore turtle so you can proboly guess what it looks like.
Archelon
A carnivorous sea turtle of the Cretaceous period which grew to be about the size of a car.
Belemnite
A soft bodied, squid-like carnivore that lived in the sea. It caught small fish and marine organisms with its tentacles and ate them with its beak-like mouth. It had had hooks on its tentacles instead of suckers. Common in the waters of the Jurassic period, it is now extinct.
Bennettite
The name for a group of ancient plants with a bare central trunk topped by a crown of leaves. Similar in appearance to the cycad, these plants thrived on the plains in the Triassic and Jurassic periods and became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous period.
Brachiosaurus
A tall herbivorous dinosaur of the Late Jurassic period, its name means "arm-lizard"
Coelacanth
This medium sized carnivorous fish evolved more than 360 million years ago. They were prevalent in the Triassic period in both fresh water and marine environments. Surprisingly this ancient fish still survives today in the depths of the Indian ocean. It is approximately one and a half metres long and weighs 50 kg.
Coelophysis
This small two legged carnivore lived in the Late Triassic period. It inhabited river valleys and scrubland around the plains, hunting alone or in small groups. At the end of the dry season Coelophysis formed large packs to hunt. It was two to three metres long and weighed 35 to 40 kg.
That should be enough for today.Notice i'm going in alfibetical order.More tommorow.Hope you enjoy these.Gotta go do homework.Maniac out.
Thanks for suggestion.
But some of them are really similar to which we already had.So..would you mind us to make'em as sub-species?
hey, I found some bugs in the 1.0 that no one seams to be talking about... so i dont know if they were fixed
1. Plesiaur swims indefinetly fast, meaning that it has no cap to its speed... i went speeding accross the ocean and almost froze my computer
2. Dropping Sio-Cu-le neer Mosasaurus crashes game
some one please tell me that this is fixed in 1.1 version
1.I remember I've slowed then down to exchange the stability.
2.It should be fixed.At least no problem while testing.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Team July--Programmer ↑Click the link to our facebook page.
Ok sub species would be fine.T rex/allosaurus.But I would never of asked to implement them all.I would never do that to your art desiner.But i would be honoured if you use them in any way.Sub species would even be an honour.
Gonna suggest more stuff tomorrow. s for you and your whole team.
My velociraptor went after my sabre-toothed tiger as soon as it was hatched. The cat didn't really like that. The Velociraptor's lifespan was about 15 seconds. Is this a bug?
Question:My velociraptors overbreed.4 in 1 cage.next day=8 in cage.Next day=16 in cage.Today 54 in cage.They overbreed is there a way I can stop this?I don't wanna kill them because then they won't be my pets again and I don't like killing the babies .Help!I had the same problem with ptarradons.Had to slaugter them all.
Excuse me, Flammarilva - I have posted with some questions/concerns twice, and you have skipped over them both times. I would really appreciate if you would address my posts.
I have noticed that at least one other person has posted that Anu is far too common. It would be very helpful if you could arrange to have an option to disable Anu added to the mod.
I also posted about a bug where Minecraft would crash if Anu is hit by special projectiles. I think that this issue would be very easily fixed by adding a trailing else with a default return to Anu's entity class where he is checking weapon types for his responses.
hey exdragonith i gave each creature somthing unique about them so plz plz reread my list.
Not to put you down or anything, but I'm kinda in the same boat as Kragtast. Aside from the different appearances, they practically have the same functions. Although, I'd love to see Deinosuchus and Megalodon.
Hey dragonith, long time, no see from the jurrasicraft mod thread. I love yours and Tiramos dino models, if im correct heres the list of the ones you have both modlled:
Not to put you down or anything, but I'm kinda in the same boat as Kragtast. Aside from the different appearances, they practically have the same functions. Although, I'd love to see Deinosuchus and Megalodon.
Not to put you down or anything, but I'm kinda in the same boat as Kragtast. Aside from the different appearances, they practically have the same functions. Although, I'd love to see Deinosuchus and Megalodon.
1. Allosaurus used to be known as Antrodemus.
After it was discovered in the late 19th century, Allosaurus bounced around a bit in the classification bins. This dinosaur was first named Antrodemus (Greek for "body cavity"), after an obscure anatomical feature, and was only systematically referred to as Allosaurus ("different lizard") starting in the mid-1970's.
2. Allosaurus may have preyed on Stegosaurus.
Paleontologists have unearthed solid evidence that Allosaurus preyed on (or at least occasionally tussled with) Stegosaurus: an Allosaurus vertebra with a puncture wound that matches the shape of a Stegosaurus tail spike (or "thagomizer"), and a Stegosaurus neck bone bearing an Allosaurus-shaped bite mark.
3. The typical Allosaurus lived for about 25 years.
Estimating a dinosaur's life span is always a tricky matter, but based on the voluminous fossil evidence, paleontologists believe Allosaurus attained its full adult size by age 15. Barring disease, starvation or thagomizer wounds from angry stegosaurs, this dinosaur may have been capable of living another 10 or 15 years.
4. Allosaurus was one of the instigators of the "Bone Wars."
In their zeal to one-up each other, the 19th-century paleontologists Othniel C. Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope sometimes "diagnosed" new dinosaurs based on too-scanty evidence. Marsh coined the genus Allosaurus, but both he and Cope went on to name other, supposedly new dinosaurs that (on further examination) turned out to be separate Allosaurus species.
5. "Big Al" is the most famous Allosaurus fossil.
It was only in 1991--after a full century of Allosaurus discoveries--that researchers unearthed an exquisitely preserved, near-complete fossil, which they promptly dubbed "Big Al." Big Al didn't live a very happy life: analysis of its bones reveals numerous fractures and bacterial infections, which doomed this 26-foot-long teenaged dinosaur to an early death.
6. Allosaurus regularly shed and replaced its teeth.
Like many predatory dinosaurs (not to mention modern crocodiles), Allosaurus constantly grew, shed and replaced its teeth, some of which averaged three or four inches in length. For this reason, it's possible to buy real, fossilized Allosaurus teeth for reasonable prices--meaning a few hundred dollars each!
7. Allosaurus comprised at least seven separate species...
As mentioned above, the early history of Allosaurus is littered with supposedly "new" dinosaurs that turned out to be separate Allosaurus species. To date, seven species (chief among them Allosaurus fragilis) have been more-or-less accepted by paleontologists, with a dozen or so more considered dubious at best.
8. ...one of which may or may not have been Saurophaganax.
Saurophaganax (Greek for "greatest lizard eater") was a 40-foot-long, two-ton theropod that lived alongside Allosaurus in late Jurassic North America. Pending further fossil evidence, paleontologists haven't yet decided whether this dinosaur deserves its own genus, or is more properly classified as a new Allosaurus species, Allosaurus maximus.
9. There's no evidence that Allosaurus hunted in packs.
Paleontologists have long speculated that the only way Allosaurus could have preyed on the huge sauropods of its day was if it hunted in cooperative packs. It's a pretty picture, but the fact is that even modern big cats don't team up to bring down full-grown elephants--so Allosaurus individuals probably hunted smaller prey on their own.
10. Allosaurus was one of the first dinosaur movie stars.
The Lost World, made in 1925, was the first full-length dinosaur movie--and it starred not Tyrannosaurus Rex, but Allosaurus (not to mention Pteranodon and Brontosaurus, the dinosaur later renamed Apatosaurus). It was only a few years later, in the King Kong era, that T. Rex supplanted Allosaurus as Hollywood's famous carnivorous dinosaur.
I copied all of these.Just a few facts you can use.(I dident read them myself )
Here's some pics.
Reposting Pics :tongue.gif: .
FIRST TIME POSTING PICS SO SORRY IF THEY DON'T WORK.This fierce two legged carnivore lived in the Late Jurassic period. It inhabited the plains, and normally hunted alone. It would hunt in groups to tackle the largest prey. It was approximately 12 metres long, five metres high and weighed up to three tonnes.
Anatotitan
A herbivorous dinosaur, of the Late Cretaceous period, Anatotitan was one of the last duckbilled dinosaurs. Its name literally means "giant duck". It had a long wide beak, with hundreds of cheek teeth behind it. It could be up to 13 metres long, and weigh up to 5 tonnes
Sorry no pic :sad.gif:
Angiosperm
Angiosperms or flowering plants are the most recent major group of plants to evolve. They first appeared early in the Cretaceous period and dominated the world's flora by the end of it. Angiosperms have seeds inside a nutritious fruit which gives them a better start in life. Fertilisation can occur by the wind, or very often by flying insects and other animals, enabling flowering plants to spread rapidly
Ankylosaurus
Literally "fused" or "stiff lizard". A medium sized, herbivorous dinosaur of the Late Cretaceous period. It had a heavily plated back and a club tail. All its bones had fused together so thickly that there was very little room for a brain. It was up to 10 metres long and weighed up to 7 tonnes.
Anurognathus
This small flying omnivore lived in the Late Jurassic period. It is possible it could have spent its life onboard the back of sauropods such as Diplodocus or Brachiosaurus that wandered the plains. It fed on the insects disturbed by the feeding of the massive herbivores. It had a wingspan of up to 50 cm and weighed about three to seven grams.
Araucaria
This is the name for a group of ancient trees that survive to this day. They are tall, evergreen coniferous trees which have cones and needle-like leaves. One of the modern representatives of this group is the Monkey Puzzle tree
No pic but its a gaint carnivore turtle so you can proboly guess what it looks like.
Archelon
A carnivorous sea turtle of the Cretaceous period which grew to be about the size of a car.
Belemnite
A soft bodied, squid-like carnivore that lived in the sea. It caught small fish and marine organisms with its tentacles and ate them with its beak-like mouth. It had had hooks on its tentacles instead of suckers. Common in the waters of the Jurassic period, it is now extinct.
Bennettite
The name for a group of ancient plants with a bare central trunk topped by a crown of leaves. Similar in appearance to the cycad, these plants thrived on the plains in the Triassic and Jurassic periods and became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous period.
Brachiosaurus
A tall herbivorous dinosaur of the Late Jurassic period, its name means "arm-lizard"
Coelacanth
This medium sized carnivorous fish evolved more than 360 million years ago. They were prevalent in the Triassic period in both fresh water and marine environments. Surprisingly this ancient fish still survives today in the depths of the Indian ocean. It is approximately one and a half metres long and weighs 50 kg.
Coelophysis
This small two legged carnivore lived in the Late Triassic period. It inhabited river valleys and scrubland around the plains, hunting alone or in small groups. At the end of the dry season Coelophysis formed large packs to hunt. It was two to three metres long and weighed 35 to 40 kg.That should be enough for today.Notice i'm going in alfibetical order.More tommorow.Hope you enjoy these.Gotta go do homework.Maniac out.
1. Plesiaur swims indefinetly fast, meaning that it has no cap to its speed... i went speeding accross the ocean and almost froze my computer
2. Dropping Sio-Cu-le neer Mosasaurus crashes game
some one please tell me that this is fixed in 1.1 version
2.I thinks its fixedTested it.
1.Im not sure because im not using the newest version.
2.Yup its fixed.Ps.Does anyone like my ideas?Gonna Give more tomorrow.AND DOES ANYONE LIKE MY PIC/AVATAR?
if your talking about the 1.1 minecraft version working with those i am not certain about the first bug but mosasaurus will not crash when eating Sio-Cu-le
GENERATION 28: Community experiment. The first time you see this, copy it into your signature on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
Thanks for suggestion.
But some of them are really similar to which we already had.So..would you mind us to make'em as sub-species?
1.I remember I've slowed then down to exchange the stability.
2.It should be fixed.At least no problem while testing.
↑Click the link to our facebook page.
Gonna suggest more stuff tomorrow. s for you and your whole team.
I have noticed that at least one other person has posted that Anu is far too common. It would be very helpful if you could arrange to have an option to disable Anu added to the mod.
I also posted about a bug where Minecraft would crash if Anu is hit by special projectiles. I think that this issue would be very easily fixed by adding a trailing else with a default return to Anu's entity class where he is checking weapon types for his responses.
Thanks,
SF
Not to put you down or anything, but I'm kinda in the same boat as Kragtast. Aside from the different appearances, they practically have the same functions. Although, I'd love to see Deinosuchus and Megalodon.
Almost. I also modeled Compsognathus, Dodo, Ichthyosaurus, and Pachycephalosaurus. You can see the rest in my gallery: http://dragonith.deviantart.com/gallery/27797360
Could anyone re-upload? I'm so excited to play that mod *.*
:ohmy.gif:
Great work. :biggrin.gif:
Oh, HAHAHAHAHAHA. GET IT, BOAT, SEA CREATURES??? Okay ill shut up now.
i changed them to completely diff. ones so plz
Dude.
No. Just stop.
Stop spamming us with lists for random prehistoric creatures.
Good ridance.