Wild hell-chickens are the most difficult dinos to break to the saddle if not raised by humans from a chick.
Wild hell-chickens are the most difficult dinos to break to the saddle if not raised by humans from a chick. But it can be done. Watch out for that beak and those talons though. #rotpl
It's fun to look at Frederick Remington paintings and put dinosaurs in them.
I like the cut of your jib. Is this material all going to be collected into something?
ReplyDeleteTheoretically, yes. Kinda waiting to see what Wizards 5e license looks like before I decide if I want to go the OSR route or not.
ReplyDeleteOviraptor?
ReplyDeleteMy own imaginary take on Anzu, which is related to Oviraptor.
ReplyDeleteWas always more of a Citipati man, myself.
ReplyDeleteYeah, that's a good one.
ReplyDeleteI recommend howdahs on big dinosaurs as a potential alternative to wagon trains. You could have flank gantries and a winch lift system.
ReplyDeleteAnd for safari! Hanging some shooting platforms on the flanks of a big herbivore would be a great way to hunt, then you could climb up to the back for tea and crumpets.
Maybe you could have some muscled herbivores with "plow beards" which are plows hung under the head, connected to the shoulders, for farming.
ReplyDeleteDinos won't stand to have mammals around, so nodosaurs are used in place of oxen and other beasts of burden.
ReplyDeleteCould the reptile men use the bigger dinos?
ReplyDeleteSome of my background :
ReplyDeleteSauropods are too slow and stupid and ornery to be trained. Ceratopsians can be herded, but not trained. Farms are small and have to be walled or the crops will be eaten. This makes settling the Frontier really hard. The hybrids used to be normal humans until exposed to ancient snake-man serums found in the ruins that dot the Frontier.