There's something so saddening to the Lystrosaurus here. In Walking with Monsters, we see Lystrosaurus at the bell end of their reign in a recultivated world. They survived the worst possible threat to all life through simple tenacity from their small ancestors of dictodonts. Meanwhile, here is the opposite. We're still in the Late Permian, and the Lystrosaurus are lone wanderers in a wasteland.
I’ve seen Lystrosaurus before in Walking with Monsters, but I haven’t seen one or any on a very long time, until recently in Jurassic World: Dominion and this.
There's something so saddening to the Lystrosaurus here.
In Walking with Monsters, we see Lystrosaurus at the bell end of their reign in a recultivated world. They survived the worst possible threat to all life through simple tenacity from their small ancestors of dictodonts. Meanwhile, here is the opposite. We're still in the Late Permian, and the Lystrosaurus are lone wanderers in a wasteland.
POV: You're the last remaining person on Earth after a nuclear war, and everything you're used to seeing is now a lifeless desert.
I’ve seen Lystrosaurus before in Walking with Monsters, but I haven’t seen one or any on a very long time, until recently in Jurassic World: Dominion and this.
In animal Armageddon it was present for most of the episode the great dying. In that series it too thrived in a world without gorgonopsids.
"Life found a way", nice
My favorite design of the Permian