These six creatures would be a great complement to JW/TG!
Brontosaurus
HP: 3,159
ATK: 964
Ferocity: 5,519
Coins: 132,711/3H
Rarity: Tournament
Animation set: Sauropod
Class: Herbivore
- Evo 1: An interesting fact about the Brontosaurus was that it stood approximately 15 feet high at the hips, and had a length of about 90 feet.
- Evo 2: This dinosaur is best known for its large neck, which serves as sort of a counter balance for its long tail.
- Evo 3: Riggs stated that “In view of these facts the two genera may be regarded as synonymous. As the term ‘Apatosaurus’ has priority, ‘Brontosaurus’ will be regarded as a synonym”.
- Evo 4: Brontosaurus has often been depicted in cinema, beginning with Winsor McCay’s 1914 classic Gertie the Dinosaur, one of the first animated films.
Saltasaurus
HP: 2,016
ATK: 753
Ferocity: 5.174
Coins: 299,520/17H
Rarity: Tournament
Animation set: Sauropod
Class: Herbivore
- Evo 1: In the Cretaceous period, sauropod dinosaurs in North America were behind the survival game to duck-billed dinosaurs, such as Edmontosaurus.
- Evo 2: Since then, palaeontologists have investigated the option that other sauropods also had armour; for example, the Argentinian Laplatasaurus.
- Evo 3: Saltasaurus came to light in 1980, most experts believed that when predators came calling, sauropods simply fended them off with their sheer size and whip-like tails.
- Evo 4: The wilds of South America have produced several decent Saltasaurus skeletons—but the same can’t be said for other titanosaurs.
Megalania
HP: 2,697
ATK: 795
Ferocity: 5,364
Coins: 225,792/12H
Rarity: Tournament
Animation set: Monitor Lizard (new)
Class: Savannah
- Evo 1: Megalania had heavily built libms and body and a large skulle complete with a small crest between the eyes, and a jaw full of serrated, blade-like teeth.
- Evo 2: The scales of Megalania would possibly be similar to those of their extant relatives, possessing a honeycomb microstructure and both durable and resilient to water evaporation.
- Evo 3: The lack of complete or nearly complete fossil skeletons has made it difficult to determine the exact dimesnions of Megalania.
- Evo 4: Megalania weighed more than 5 times the weight of the largest living reptile, which usually weighs 150 pounds, the Komodo Dragon.
Maiasaura
HP: 2,643
ATK: 826
Ferocity: 5,288
Coins: 158,976/6H
Rarity: Tournament
Animation set: Iguanodon
Class: Herbivore
- Evo 1: Maiasaura is a duck-billed dinosaur which is thought to have taken good care of its babies. The name of this dinosaur means “good mother”.
- Evo 2: As a member of the saurolophinae branch of hadrosaurs, Maiasaura lacked the complex crest of lambeosaurines such as Tsintaosaurus, but had a small spiky crest above the eyes.
- Evo 3: The young grew up at a remarkable rate for an animal the size of Maiasaura, for by the time they reached one year old, they could leave the nest, suggesting they were warm blooded.
- Evo 4: The first specimens of Maiasaura was an enormous nesting colony discovered between 1978 and 1979 in an areal known as Egg Mountain in the Two Medicine Formation.
Torosaurus
HP: 2,397
ATK: 547
Ferocity: 5,746
Coins: 221,184/15H
Rarity: Tournament
Animation set: Ceratopsid
Class: Herbivore
- Evo 1: Torosaurus is known for possessing one of the largest skulls of any terrestrial animal, measuring 9.1 feet (2.77 m) in length.
- Evo 2: In terms of its environment, Torosaurus lived in a range of ecologies including subtropical inland, coastal regions, and semi-arid plains.
- Evo 3: Torosaurus was first named in 1891 based on two complete skulls and has been found throughout the North American continent from Texas to Saskatchewan.
- Evo 4: Torosaurus was one of the last dinosaurs living in the Late Cretaceous prior to the KT mass extinction.
Styracosaurus
HP: 2,397
ATK: 547
Ferocity: 5,288
Coins: 158,976/6H
Rarity: Tournament
Animation set: Ceratopsid
Class: Herbivore
- Evo 1: Along with Sinoceratops, they are part of the centrosaurine branch of ceratopsids which are categorized by their nose-horn being larger than their brown horns.
- Evo 2: Styracosaurus was discovered in Alberta, Canada in 1913 by Lawrence Lambe. Today, Styracosaurus fossils are found in the rich Dinosaur Park Formation in Alberta.
- Evo 3: Styracosaurus must forms pairs or small herds between two and five individuals to satisfy its comfort requirements.
- Evo 4: Whose horns would have scared off many attackers. This Styracosaurus was a herbivore that probably traveled in large herds over what is now North America.