Next time I'm at the Smithsonian, I'll send a few D20s rolling down the hallways and see how many staffers dive for them.I don’t know how directly I can get away with acknowledging this, but there’s a lot of demographic crossover between academics and D&D players.
To be fair, the staffers who dive for them will be those HR types only concerned about "slip and fall" risks. The gamers will be those who wait to see what the roll is...Next time I'm at the Smithsonian, I'll send a few D20s rolling down the hallways and see how many staffers dive for them.
Not likely unfortunately (I like the idea of a feathered T-Rex). The current evidence suggests little to no feathers as @Steampunkette suggests and you can't go from having feathers as young to no feathers but scales as an adult (just skin) according to the integument experts.males having a crest I could see, the females would be plane as anything.
I would put money on rex in colder areas being fluffier than others but in the warm land near pure scale.
that would be kind of cool.Nope, I am defying the experts. In my campaigns, T-Rex sports a giant tail of covert feathers like a peacock. Beautiful plumage! Instead of eye-like patterns, they will be tiny skulls and their vocalizations will be old school Metallica...
On the other hand, the short-faced bear, Arctodus spp., was larger than a polar bear and is largely interpreted as a likely scavenger.trex was likely a carnivore adapting to the bio meta of everything being a mini tank half its prey were armoured brutes that others could not touch, plus the nearest land carnivore of that size today is the polar bear and that is a hyper carnivore.
There are papers about the potential plumage of T. rex that are little more than that, honestly. "I don't want T. rex to be feathered, because Big Bird isn't cool." I've literally seen professional paleontologists admit, somewhat ruefully, that the idea of a feathery T. rex ruins their childhood.And here we have Calvin's take on the "predator vs. scavenger" argument:
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Johnathan
it would depends on what it looked like with feathers as it is not going to be some rainbow monster that is unlikely, plus tigers are fuffy and people still fear them so fluffy Trex could still look cool.There are papers about the potential plumage of T. rex that are little more than that, honestly. "I don't want T. rex to be feathered, because Big Bird isn't cool." I've literally seen professional paleontologists admit, somewhat ruefully, that the idea of a feathery T. rex ruins their childhood.
I imagine that the T-Rex was an opportunistic predator. It is much easier to simply bully a smaller predator away from its kill than waste all that energy actively hunting.