The North Pole Had Its Very Own ‘T. Rex’

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  • Опубликовано: 26 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @biirdtator
    @biirdtator 2 месяца назад +5763

    wow, seeing my art in the thumbnail is really surreal lmao. i appreciate it, and i’m really glad actual paleoartists are here and not AI, but just please be sure to trace back where the art came from!
    thank you!

    • @cheesewrap
      @cheesewrap 2 месяца назад +347

      Yeah, you definitely need more credit!

    • @hamiltonsullivan6563
      @hamiltonsullivan6563 2 месяца назад +86

      What the time section where yours in shows.. im intrigued!

    • @AnAmericanMusician
      @AnAmericanMusician 2 месяца назад +116

      I actually tried to use AI to make dinosaur art once. Apparently AI absolutely sucks at making dinosaurs. It kept making the T-Rex look like a crocodile. 😂

    • @georgiabundick
      @georgiabundick 2 месяца назад +129

      glad i saw your comment because that thumbnail was entirely the reason im watching it now and its not on my watch later

    • @georgiabundick
      @georgiabundick 2 месяца назад +32

      YOOOOOOOOOOO i was checking out your tumblr and im gonna have to make one so i can follow your account and other artists in the future and looks like someone didnt give you credit again >:( but a couple days ago i saw your nedry art!!!! i remember when i saw it i had to stop the dumb youtube short to look at it and was like “oh shit a sick new one i’ve never seen before!” hats off to you and also love to see queer afab people in this community cause cishet men are not a monolith but in my short time in the paleo community i’ve already seen an IMPRESSIVE amount of sexism lmao

  • @C_In_Outlaw3817
    @C_In_Outlaw3817 2 месяца назад +8657

    Imagine being in an Alaskan snowstorm with very low visibility. All of a sudden you look behind you and there’s a tyrannosaur. Yea…I’m good G 😂

    • @RibsawTheAllo858
      @RibsawTheAllo858 2 месяца назад +16

      @@C_In_Outlaw3817 I'm sure your not good, your dead

    • @dragodracon7785
      @dragodracon7785 2 месяца назад

      @C_In_Outlaw3817 There’s a art called Krampus made by amorousdino on Deviantart which shows just that. It’s terrifying.😊

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 2 месяца назад +139

      Actually that should highlight that there were no snow storms for some reason

    • @C_In_Outlaw3817
      @C_In_Outlaw3817 2 месяца назад +71

      @@samsonsoturian6013
      There weren’t snowstorms during the Cretaceous? I thought there were

    • @dragodracon7785
      @dragodracon7785 2 месяца назад +132

      @@C_In_Outlaw3817 There could have been, but not nearly as bad as the ones we see in the Arctic or Antarctica where they last for months in end.

  • @1297skypred
    @1297skypred 2 месяца назад +228

    Tyrannosaurs are among some of the most adaptable and successful family to ever exist. They were truly some impressive beasts

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад +9

      All hail the king

    • @LeilaTheRose
      @LeilaTheRose 11 дней назад

      that'd explain why the fuckin anjanath is hard to kill in monster hunter

  • @tylerjohnson6230
    @tylerjohnson6230 2 месяца назад +906

    5:02 didnt think we would notice a dino bird getting smashed?? Lmaooo

    • @diqweed69
      @diqweed69 2 месяца назад +37

      Awwww yissssss

    • @AdamZimmerman-c6i
      @AdamZimmerman-c6i 2 месяца назад +70

      Giggity

    • @SphtSeven
      @SphtSeven 2 месяца назад +47

      honestly i respect the game

    • @mtsfmmm5521
      @mtsfmmm5521 2 месяца назад +11

      @@SphtSeven23 seconds ago

    • @PrinceVoider
      @PrinceVoider 2 месяца назад +63

      Yeah bro I was watching the vid and then it just cuts to that, WHO ANIMATED THAT?

  • @rooby30
    @rooby30 2 месяца назад +2682

    Nanuk in my language means popsicle. So this is popsiclesaurus.

    • @dogwithnobones906
      @dogwithnobones906 2 месяца назад +250

      Popsicle Lizard you forgot to translate saurus😂😂😂

    • @califelli
      @califelli 2 месяца назад +174

      ​@@dogwithnobones906popsicle lizard is my new fav dinossur

    • @christines.5241
      @christines.5241 2 месяца назад +23

      me too,💖 thank you

    • @hgriff14
      @hgriff14 2 месяца назад +76

      petition to call it the popsicles lizard but pronounce popsicles like it is ancient greek.

    • @ryannguyen2116
      @ryannguyen2116 2 месяца назад +42

      I think this makes sense because the Nanuqsaurus lives in cold environments.

  • @zandemen
    @zandemen 2 месяца назад +1267

    Archeologists find a fragment of bone, 0.0001% complete skeleton. "This dinosaur preferred country music, favorite color was blue, and his zodiac was was Pisces."

    • @zach_i-guess5137
      @zach_i-guess5137 Месяц назад +35

      Comment of the year

    • @twurtle12hd39
      @twurtle12hd39 Месяц назад +111

      It’s based off how it’s related to other dinosaurs body’s body type build etc that we know a lot more about. A lot of it is guessing but it’s educated guessing

    • @xXMOO-BLOOMXx
      @xXMOO-BLOOMXx Месяц назад +4

      😂😂

    • @Elijah_1_
      @Elijah_1_ Месяц назад +24

      Have you heard about God? If not:God loves you,please turn to Him. He came to earth;He lived a sinless life that we couldn’t and died on the cross and rose from the dead 3 days later. If you’ll turn to Him He will forgive you of all your sins. He is the father who always loves

    • @BRANDONNGUYEN-ge9pn
      @BRANDONNGUYEN-ge9pn Месяц назад +80

      @@Elijah_1_bro pls just don’t bring religion into a video that doesn’t talk about religion at all (we don’t all have to follow god if you belive in him then you can. Personally i don’t bc i’m buddist but i still respect your religion but pls don’t bring religion into this.) take this with a grain of salt bc this is. Coming from a 12 year old.

  • @bananajeff5316
    @bananajeff5316 2 месяца назад +241

    5:12 two birds going at it on a tree lmfao

  • @SmashBrosAssemble
    @SmashBrosAssemble 2 месяца назад +1867

    I think it’s perfectly reasonable to reconstruct Nanuqsaurus fully feathered, it’s about the same size as Yutyrannus, which we know was fully feathered & notably lived in a less colder environment than Nanuqsaurus.

    • @yusufg6998
      @yusufg6998 2 месяца назад +29

      I agree

    • @CCNorse
      @CCNorse 2 месяца назад +36

      Yutyrannus was significantly smaller than the original reconstruction of Nanuqsaurus, and the difference has only widened as the size estimates for Nanuqsaurus have been revised upwards. Yutyrannus is also much less closely related to the giant North American tyrannosaurids than Nanuqsaurus, and all of the other animals in that crown lineage have only ever preserved scaly skin. I wouldn't be shocked if Nanqusaurus had a feathery integument, but I also wouldn't be terribly surprised if it didn't. A lot of this animal is still unknown to science, and a lot of often wild speculation has filled in these gaps.

    • @SmashBrosAssemble
      @SmashBrosAssemble 2 месяца назад +17

      @
      Significantly Smaller?
      They’re both estimated to be around 8 to 9 meters long & weigh 2 or 3 tons.

    • @CCNorse
      @CCNorse 2 месяца назад +15

      @@SmashBrosAssemble under a ton and a half for Yutyrannus, newer estimates have been shrinking him in kind of an inverse of what's happening to Nanuq

    • @nightlasher
      @nightlasher 2 месяца назад +3

      @@CCNorsebecause we know Trex might not have feathers or might have some feathers but not much doesn’t mean Nanuqsaurus didn’t have feathers at all we haven’t found skin or feather impressions of Nanuq so we don’t 100 percent know if Nanuq was feathered or not but we know it lived in a cold and snowy environment so unless proven wrong most people think Nanuq had feathers

  • @brassbuckles
    @brassbuckles 2 месяца назад +942

    If it was feathered, I can easily picture feathers moulting out in thick clumps in spring, making a big downy mess everywhere. Basically like modern mammals shedding their winter coats. And I can also imagine that the spring/summer coat and winter coat of feathers would differ in coloration.

    • @clowntown3
      @clowntown3 2 месяца назад +94

      The chicks would probably be a brownish colour until they got old enough, like arctic foxes. They were probably insanely fluffy like most chicks in general, although the high mortality rate may say otherwise

    • @C_In_Outlaw3817
      @C_In_Outlaw3817 2 месяца назад +24

      @@clowntown3 🥺 why is that cute

    • @fowziairfan4898
      @fowziairfan4898 2 месяца назад +10

      Like ptarmigans

    • @AdhiniZulu
      @AdhiniZulu 2 месяца назад +2

      Bro same

    • @freddymcguinness
      @freddymcguinness 2 месяца назад

      yeah! 6 meter long carnivorous ptarmingans.​@@fowziairfan4898

  • @joshuab4586
    @joshuab4586 2 месяца назад +87

    5:30 that’s such a cool idea for a story, somehow a guy crash lands and ends up in the Arctic, sees a white fuzzy mass moving in the distance heading towards a seal or something, then you see it’s shape become clearer and notice it’s a giant raptor

  • @BanilyaGorilya
    @BanilyaGorilya 2 месяца назад +455

    Imagine my father’s silence when I learned him that the T.Rex for the sake of filmmaking was made slow and essentially dumb for its visual acuity and sense of smell but if made science accurate, potentially we’d have Rex stalking the characters, ambushing the protagonists through bushes, low pulsating growl, and can sense our characters for miles keeping pace at every turn. No velociraptors needed. Dr. Hammond would have signed the death warrant of everyone on the island when he mentioned “We have a T.Rex😂”

    • @WarrantOfficerWill22
      @WarrantOfficerWill22 2 месяца назад +78

      I mean, in Jurassic Park, the T-rex was suffering from a sinus infection during the breakout and that's why it's sense of smell was off.
      the T-rex in the movie was also much faster then in reality.

    • @silence6408
      @silence6408 2 месяца назад +43

      That's assuming it would even be interested in humans considering all the other dinosaurs on the island it would naturally prey on.

    • @lewisdogdson416
      @lewisdogdson416 2 месяца назад +18

      Ironically, that’s kinda closer to how she was in the book. Minus the vision and pulsating growl but everything else was there.

    • @charlottewalnut3118
      @charlottewalnut3118 2 месяца назад +21

      Not true actually a full-grown T-Rex would probably never even bother with humans unless we were doing something really stupid like messing with its nest. We literally aren’t even big enough to bother with.

    • @taylorhoge4378
      @taylorhoge4378 2 месяца назад +18

      Your not wrong its the juvenile t-rex's you'd need to worry about. Humans would be a good sized snack for them .

  • @kemorein56
    @kemorein56 2 месяца назад +39

    1:11 that transition was almost smooth

  • @CrazyBookCat
    @CrazyBookCat 2 месяца назад +1032

    The animation at 3:26 was done by Dead Sound here on youtube, and comes from his animated short called "Our Frozen Past." Please remember to properly credit the artists who's art you use! (I also saw other parts of his animation and art here, it would just be a lot to list them all. If you enjoyed this video I def recommend checking out the short).

    • @BFree-ge6ms
      @BFree-ge6ms 2 месяца назад +30

      @@CrazyBookCat , big thanks for this, I'll sub to Dead Sound

    • @Rokume
      @Rokume 2 месяца назад +47

      I noticed his animations here too. I don't know why he didn't credit him despite crediting other artists. Dead Sound does amazing work!

    • @Sharky-Rex
      @Sharky-Rex 2 месяца назад +12

      YES, i cme down here to comment about this!! i love Dead Sounds animations.
      this would be a good video if it was'nt for that

    • @prod183
      @prod183 2 месяца назад +8

      unemployed

    • @Sharky-Rex
      @Sharky-Rex 2 месяца назад +8

      @@prod183 ???

  • @jessehutchings
    @jessehutchings 2 месяца назад +39

    This is why I want to see more videos on dinosaur age polar animals. We hear all about the warm weather regions but freezing temperature regions seem more interesting to me because they are more niche and extreme

    • @brussy1
      @brussy1 25 дней назад

      This is a curious topic to me. While i agree it is very interesting this was many millions of years ago.
      Landmasses were in wildly different locations and temperature levels were also much higher.
      Unless i am mistaken we are technically still in an ice age currently, compared to what they think the majority of history was like.

  • @joaopedrobaggio4475
    @joaopedrobaggio4475 2 месяца назад +430

    The world of dinosaurs amazes me since that i was a 5 years old boy. Thanks Steven Spielberg for the movie Jurassic Park.

    • @ValerieSolanas420
      @ValerieSolanas420 2 месяца назад +16

      Same. I've wanted to be a paleontologist since I was a a toddler thanks to that movie. And all the Land Before Time movies. Too bad I majored in linguistics and became an artist instead.

    • @ridleyroid9060
      @ridleyroid9060 2 месяца назад +13

      While I appreciate that it has invigorated interest, it has also caused immeasurable damage on peoples knowledge and public perception of dinosaurs. The fact that we still see dinosaurs depicted with broken wristed pronated hands is testament to that, absolutely atrocious.

    • @ArianaRaven
      @ArianaRaven 2 месяца назад

      Thank Michael Criton for writing the book first before the movie.

    • @JackRogers-x9e
      @JackRogers-x9e 2 месяца назад

      @@ridleyroid9060cool > accurate
      also frog dna blah blah blah

    • @PalozachSSJ
      @PalozachSSJ 2 месяца назад +4

      @@JackRogers-x9eI don’t know some of the stuff we have found is stranger than most fiction

  • @alizuhayrbinazmadymoe8862
    @alizuhayrbinazmadymoe8862 2 месяца назад +73

    This is actually quite underrated. Good content keep it up👍

  • @deppo436
    @deppo436 2 месяца назад +125

    After learning there was yet another artic Tyrannosaurid aside from Yutyrannus, I think it's safe to say this was absolutely one of the most successful lines of theropod generas throughout the entire late cretaceous period.
    I can't really think of another line that had that many relatives existing all at once.

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад +9

      The crocodile morphs may have been a close second (but no snow crocs have ever been discovered)

    • @dionjaywoollaston1349
      @dionjaywoollaston1349 2 месяца назад +1

      @@srobeck77you never know, scientists might drill through the ice and find the fossil of one

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад +4

      @@dionjaywoollaston1349 i dont think so because modern crocs are over 100 million years old and they are all cold blooded which wouldnt survive in cold climates

    • @dionjaywoollaston1349
      @dionjaywoollaston1349 2 месяца назад

      @ and people thought the same thing about dinosaurs till they discovered the bones, when it comes to terra’s past there’s no such thing as absolutes

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад

      @@dionjaywoollaston1349 ok but dinos are dead and bones mostly buried deep underground or in tar pits. That wouldnt be nearly as interesting as another planet with actual life. This is absolutely true that living would be wayyy more interesting than just bones.

  • @raptor2265
    @raptor2265 2 месяца назад +127

    It's nuts how paleontologists can look at 2-3 small fragments and figure out what type of dinosaur it is down to the species. Just how on earth do you extrapolate that much out of so little!?

    • @jamesaron1967
      @jamesaron1967 2 месяца назад +27

      A lot of it is conjectural.

    • @hooktraining3966
      @hooktraining3966 2 месяца назад +55

      most of it is just educated guesses, which is why years later it will look completely different. We see this all the time in this region of science.

    • @alijankhan3330
      @alijankhan3330 2 месяца назад +13

      Ancient animals are similar to modern animals in some ways. By studying the anatomy of modern animals, we can recognize similar structures in dinosaur bones. For example, we know Spinosaurus was likely aquatic because it had dense bones just like modern aquatic animals. We know that the flying dinosaurs flew because they have hollow bones like modern flying creatures.

    • @raptor2265
      @raptor2265 2 месяца назад +4

      @@alijankhan3330 I mean, yeah, you can figure out what general type of animal it is by things like bone density, but being able to find out the exact species that it belonged to just by a few fragments of a bone is absolutely wild! Hell, being able to figure out the species with a full bone is already pretty impressive (even more so if it's not a highly distinct bone like a skull, but a more generic one like a femur that has less unique details), but just a piece of a bone is insane!

    • @minowilovemypet
      @minowilovemypet 29 дней назад

      @@raptor2265 the issues is there a thing call fossil bias remember that these fossil if ideals in ideals temp and ground etc would make the remains last longer again fossil is older than you and me and bones don't last that long in unideals enviroment and temp that's why even trying to find pre historic tools and wood tool is hard to find or why we only find some animal part that is just broken pieces again the artic is kinda ideal because of it's temp but.... it's also near to the artic ice sheet so any anaimal remains that may die there wellt they gone either into the deep artic sea so no way to recovery it or gone with the ice sheet itself again trying to find fossil remain of extint animals is hard and it's more harder to find middle stone ages wood tools or even the stone tool i'self and the fact you can't know what context these tool use for again trying to find the complete fossil is liek trying to find a new gold mines: it's simply hard

  • @Jonathan.Rodriguez-g9n
    @Jonathan.Rodriguez-g9n Месяц назад +32

    5:50 Willy Wonka for scale

  • @channelgrantito7662
    @channelgrantito7662 2 месяца назад +157

    Nanuqsaurus has been one of my favorite Tyrannosauruds ever since its discovery. Its like a Trex and Polar bear did a dragon ball fusion dance and im all for it

    • @DeliveryMcGee
      @DeliveryMcGee 2 месяца назад +5

      Basically the same ecological niche. Don't pet that dawg/birb.

    • @GippsClouds
      @GippsClouds 2 месяца назад

      That’s why it’s called nanuqsaurus. Nanuq or nanuk (my dialect) means polar bear in inuttitut/inuktitut.

  • @juliancain6128
    @juliancain6128 2 месяца назад +11

    It really paints a great picture to hear the details of the featured species, and the various creatures that lived alongside it. This channel is gold!

  • @ret5343
    @ret5343 2 месяца назад +265

    there's so many beautiful paleo art pieces shown throughout the video, in future videos it would be awesome to include artist names/credits on the background art so i can find more of their work EDIT: i see the names on some of them thanks

    • @broomwielder
      @broomwielder 2 месяца назад +33

      I know who one of the uncredited artists are! Dead Sound is the one who made some of the 3d animation shown. A shame there's no credit for him as his work is phenomenal. He makes a journal for each animation project he makes, it's really cool

    • @stephenmeier4658
      @stephenmeier4658 2 месяца назад +14

      Isn't it necessary to give credit when using others' work? Extinct Zoo is about to lose a viewer. Enjoy the comment, algorithm

    • @ik1437
      @ik1437 2 месяца назад +15

      Yeah, it’s not awesome, but necessary. Can’t just use someone’s work and property without crediting them.

    • @vewyscawymonsta
      @vewyscawymonsta 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@stephenmeier4658 No, it's not necessary. Fair use doesn't require credit.

    • @vewyscawymonsta
      @vewyscawymonsta 2 месяца назад

      ​​@@ik1437 Yes you can. That's the point of the Fair Use Doctrine. Nowhere in it does it state that credit is required.

  • @sphere7158
    @sphere7158 2 месяца назад +130

    How adaptable are Tyrannosaur?
    Me: "Yes"

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад +1

      That wasnt a yes or no question. Try this one on for size: Are Tyrannosaurs adaptable?

    • @ionicman2908
      @ionicman2908 2 месяца назад +14

      ​@@srobeck77its a joke where a person is presented with a question without "yes" as an option or a question they need to answer in their own words without guidance, and instead of answering in accordance to the question, they simply answer "yes".

    • @MrAlko911
      @MrAlko911 2 месяца назад +6

      ​@ionicman2908 You don't have to explain it. Just let it go over their head

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад

      @@MrAlko911 if it's a joke where no one laughs from the childish kindergarten level of english, it really isnt a joke....unless your high on drugs, then everything is funny.

    • @JayJay-z4z2p
      @JayJay-z4z2p 2 месяца назад +4

      They couldnt adapt to a existential apocalypse lmao

  • @NavaneethSuresh-q8l
    @NavaneethSuresh-q8l 2 месяца назад +79

    5:04 not those freaky lil dinos, freaking on the tree

  • @griltsuu
    @griltsuu Месяц назад +14

    7:49 original artist of the painting is Tuomas Koivurinne. It was credited wrong

    • @unnamed1004
      @unnamed1004 Месяц назад +1

      this comment needs more attention

  • @amystubby
    @amystubby 2 месяца назад +96

    I'm just so bummed I only found you last week but HOLY CRAP DO I GET A BACKLOG TO BINGE. WOOT WOOT.

    • @dogwithnobones906
      @dogwithnobones906 2 месяца назад +3

      I'm jealous of you😢 enjoy the ride

    • @kilawen
      @kilawen 2 месяца назад +4

      I did the same thing a couple months ago lol

  • @suddieo1
    @suddieo1 2 месяца назад +34

    You finally gave nanuqsaurus a time to truly shine. Especially with the title and thumbnail many people will see this. You have been to make videos of obscure extinct fauna and their enviornments such as prehistoric australia viral. Many people saw those vids doing those exrinct animals justice as it brought them more fame. I hope you will talk about other animals from prince creek like dromaeosaurus and especially pachyrinosaurus :).

  • @guyfriend7411
    @guyfriend7411 Месяц назад +3

    I'm an Alaskan, and it makes me happy to see that we have a T. Rex of our own! Very informative video, keep up the awesome work!

  • @esterhammerfic
    @esterhammerfic 2 месяца назад +83

    Wouldn't the Cretaceous arctic temperature be ~60°f (~15°c), and without snow? That's what many sources available online seem to say for this time period

    • @raritica8409
      @raritica8409 2 месяца назад

      You’re absolutely correct. There is just blatant misinformation.

    • @isaacthedestroyerofstuped7676
      @isaacthedestroyerofstuped7676 2 месяца назад +26

      That's an average estimate. Short timescale weather is really hard to determine, so I wouldn't be surprised if it occasionally snowed during the arctic winter nights.

    • @frumpkin9282
      @frumpkin9282 2 месяца назад +18

      You're looking at the estimated Arctic Ocean temperatures, which would fluctuate a lot less than land temperatures and remain a lot warmer in the winter. The Prince Creek formation seemed to have had a mean annual temperature of 5-13°c from what I can find, depending on the source. With mean winter temperatures being around 2-4°c.

    • @Freshbott2
      @Freshbott2 2 месяца назад +6

      Average temperatures aren’t a good indication of range sometimes though. The climate shifted a lot over a huge time frame and at the very least places inland or at higher elevation would have experienced true winters at least some times. The same was true for the southern landmasses which would have been persistently cool-cold and sometimes extremely cold. Both the extant hot sclerophyllous and wet temperate southern biomes are descended of it. That much is undisputed. That it would be the same in the north doesn’t seem too far fetched even if not as extensive. I don’t know whether the plant fossil record in the north suggests the same but it would be a better indication. They tell us a lot more than the animal record but are often overlooked.

    • @willychan4290
      @willychan4290 2 месяца назад +2

      Lack of ectotherm vertebrates suggests to me that the climate at least as cold as today’s Scandinavia or Calgary, Canada

  • @Trippin_Out
    @Trippin_Out 24 дня назад +2

    big props to cameraman for filming these dangerous dinosaurs

  • @Stan_in_Shelton_WA
    @Stan_in_Shelton_WA 2 месяца назад +47

    0:50 - "less scary dinosaurs" fewer of the scary dinos or ones that are less scary?

  • @RibsawTheAllo858
    @RibsawTheAllo858 2 месяца назад +136

    When the dino 'polar bears' were more dangerous than the biggest bear alive today:

    • @GlennKurusu
      @GlennKurusu 2 месяца назад +8

      That said, polar bears would (hypothetically) flee from both Kodiak and Grizzlies, while also (occasionally) creating Pizzly/Grolar bears with the latter.

    • @dogwithnobones906
      @dogwithnobones906 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@GlennKurusuThat's incredible! I feel like polar bears are longer but less robust. Like the difference between a basketball player and an offensive lineman

    • @WIAProductionsofficial
      @WIAProductionsofficial 2 месяца назад +1

      Polar bear are taller meanwhile grizzly is more muscular

    • @GlennKurusu
      @GlennKurusu 2 месяца назад +2

      @@WIAProductionsofficial
      That explains why Polar bears often flee from Grizzly bears.

    • @raritica8409
      @raritica8409 2 месяца назад +10

      @@WIAProductionsofficial What?? Polar bears are literally larger with more muscle mass..? What are you people smoking? I live in Alaska, polar bears are stealth hunters. Completely different than the grizzly. Kodiak bears live on Kodiak Island and Polar bears don’t ever go there…

  • @motorhead2003
    @motorhead2003 2 месяца назад +18

    So glad to get up this morning and see a video from you. I'm having coffee and listening.

  • @OrengeOrengers
    @OrengeOrengers 2 месяца назад +12

    Nah "Magic eraser and straight up erase a huge chunk of your body" is a crazy line

  • @dannya1854
    @dannya1854 2 месяца назад +8

    I can only imagine the large but graceful silhouettes of these things lurking across the tundra on a moonlit night.

  • @eugenekhoo465
    @eugenekhoo465 2 месяца назад +51

    So the Gorgosaurus from Walking with Dinosaurs (3D) is in fact this snowy guy

    • @GlennKurusu
      @GlennKurusu 2 месяца назад +4

      Yes. The documentary version of that film addresses it as such. Even though, Nanuqsaurus was named after its release.

    • @katyusha9319
      @katyusha9319 2 месяца назад +3

      Yes, new genus entirely just wasn't named yet

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 2 месяца назад +38

    10:10 I have a different spin. The young left the nursery as soon as they could and moved northward to avoid their elders until they had enough mass to compete with them. Larger prey and milder weather to the south; smaller prey and rougher conditions to the north.

    • @hgriff14
      @hgriff14 2 месяца назад +2

      if they moved north from the south that way they would have frozen almost immediately. it had to be a more gradual move than that.

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад +1

      It's not a very good theory. Being that small would have been easy to hide or outrun adults. Kinda like how Komodo dragons do it despite being on a small island.

    • @natureboy1281
      @natureboy1281 2 месяца назад +1

      I like the way you’re thinking!!🧐🤓

  • @cctaryn576
    @cctaryn576 2 месяца назад +13

    hell yeah extinct zoo back with another banger

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад

      Crocodile morphs with long legs that chased down prey on land was pretty bangin too

  • @radmanstan413
    @radmanstan413 2 месяца назад +8

    I came here thinking this was a dinosaur cryptid video, stayed for the dino knowledge

    • @spindoggytheexplorer2915
      @spindoggytheexplorer2915 2 месяца назад +1

      Same, I was expecting this video to be about the Partridge Creek Monster.

  • @castle54027
    @castle54027 2 месяца назад +6

    Thats an impressive amount of research for only having 4 pieces of bone

  • @rumatadestora
    @rumatadestora 2 месяца назад +6

    Recently found your channel and I'm enjoying these videos so much!

  • @CrocBite.P.T
    @CrocBite.P.T 2 месяца назад +25

    2:05 is that a Path of Titans loading screen I see?

  • @severalwolves
    @severalwolves 26 дней назад +9

    0:14 what is with the cursed image?? it looks like the artwork for like Warhammer or Trench Crusade or something haha

  • @NatureZone101
    @NatureZone101 2 месяца назад +47

    Maybe I'm wrong, but given only 3 bones have been found it seems almost all of this is just hypothesis.

    • @trustworthydan
      @trustworthydan Месяц назад +7

      Right? They can draw conclusions, but I wouldn't call it facts. That's what bothers me about modern science. It's always more leaning towards a theory, but is presented as fact, and it is not to be questioned. Kind of anti science.

    • @byzantineroman2407
      @byzantineroman2407 Месяц назад +1

      Don't question the science

    • @Forty-K
      @Forty-K Месяц назад +6

      ​@@byzantineroman2407actually questioning science is how new science has always been discovered 😭

    • @byzantineroman2407
      @byzantineroman2407 Месяц назад +8

      @@Forty-K we live in the modern era. No need to concern yourself with those silly, out-dated traditions like questioning things. That'd be totally backwards and silly. Now, be a good citizen, be content with the narrative, and remember: never question authority. That's dangerous to the science

    • @minowilovemypet
      @minowilovemypet 29 дней назад +1

      ​@@Forty-K ignore that guys below he trying to make you distrust science is exchange for something like Atlantis being real or Human living with dinasour etc pls read the source the video share in the description

  • @ZeFroz3n0ne907
    @ZeFroz3n0ne907 2 месяца назад +5

    Been hoping you'd do a vid on this guy! From Alaska and it is one of my favorite dinos since it's discovery! Thank you ExtinctZoo!! Love your videos!!

  • @CMitchell808
    @CMitchell808 19 дней назад +2

    Imagine if 1 out of every 10,000 dinos were perfectly fossilized. We’d be up to our necks in fossils.

  • @RPcropland
    @RPcropland 2 месяца назад +8

    The remains seem very scant to create a whole new genus from just the front part of a jawbone seems weird

    • @hitmanx200
      @hitmanx200 2 месяца назад +4

      A lot of fossilized remains are like this.

  • @pbandpudge
    @pbandpudge 2 месяца назад +3

    I clocked that Sauria clip! 6:13 this totally made me think of it

  • @dragodracon7785
    @dragodracon7785 2 месяца назад +12

    Nanuqsaurus is one of my favorite Tyrannosaurus beside T.Rex. I would love to see Jurassic World Rebirth use Nanuqsaurus in a blizzard like setting where you can’t see it, but it sees you. That would be a awesome scene.

    • @The_editor_0.1
      @The_editor_0.1 2 месяца назад +3

      Same

    • @bradwhite5884
      @bradwhite5884 2 месяца назад

      Yeah, but from what the synopsis of the movie, most of the dinosaurs have died off and moved to warmer climate even though some of the dinosaurs could survive colder climate, but the writers or such don't know much of dinosaurs and this dinosaur would go against that, but love to see it tbh

    • @dragodracon7785
      @dragodracon7785 2 месяца назад

      @@bradwhite5884 True, also, how much you wanna bet that the from the synopsis of the movie, they aren’t gonna use the actual largest animals we know of and just use Spino or something lame like that to appease the mouth breathing JP fans?

    • @bradwhite5884
      @bradwhite5884 2 месяца назад

      @dragodracon7785 Yeah, I am not a huge fan of the synopsis or where they are taking the movie or the plot of the movie either, taking a massive step back from the last movie, u undoing everything and going back to the island for another "run from X dinosaur on an island" movie that can only do it so many times before it goes stale, we have the same plot 5 or 6 times tbh, we need better original movie tbh, a waste on Gareth Edwards talents tbh

  • @dp6447
    @dp6447 Месяц назад +2

    I need a Sci Fi movie where a team gets stuck in the North Pole and slowly picked off by one of these.

  • @Yaboibenl
    @Yaboibenl 2 месяца назад +18

    Yutyrannus vs Nanuqsaurus who wins?

    • @YaBoyCrystalLink
      @YaBoyCrystalLink 2 месяца назад +12

      Yutyrannus hands down, they were bigger, stronger, and has extremely sharp claws on their usable arms that they are thought to have actually used.
      The yutyrannus was thought to be at least 30 feet long where as they nanuqsaurus was only though to be between 12 and 22 feet long
      I may or may not be a paleontology student who specializes in the yutyrannus 😂

    • @Zenocius
      @Zenocius 2 месяца назад

      There's always a better asian

    • @HogBurger
      @HogBurger 2 месяца назад

      @@usernotfound-m5elol

    • @YaBoyCrystalLink
      @YaBoyCrystalLink 2 месяца назад

      @@Zenocius lol

  • @Mandlebrot_rot
    @Mandlebrot_rot 2 месяца назад +1

    Nanuqsaurus hoglundi is my all-time favorite dinosaur, and I've been obsessed with dinosaurs for most of my life. I've had such a hard time finding information on it, so I really appreciate this video!

  • @lokitus
    @lokitus 2 месяца назад +12

    I thought the Arctic was warmer in n the Cretaceous than it is today.

    • @FirstDagger
      @FirstDagger 2 месяца назад +5

      Still slightly below freezing in winter.

    • @lokitus
      @lokitus 2 месяца назад

      @FirstDagger Finding it hard to find this range in a Google search. I'm finding lows around 40 - 50 F. Any links you can provide?

    • @DecodedDodo
      @DecodedDodo 2 месяца назад +5

      You are right. There was little or no ice in both poles during the Cretaceous period. Also narrator mentions the Bering strait which is impossible for dinosaurs to have walked through it since it was formed during the last ice age.

    • @topsecret1837
      @topsecret1837 2 месяца назад +5

      @@DecodedDodo
      The reason why it’s called the last ice age is because it’s the last one before human civilization. Ice ages happen every 40,000 years.

  • @stoobidfrog
    @stoobidfrog 2 месяца назад +2

    santa claus be throwing hands with a dinosaur

  • @justinpritchard4508
    @justinpritchard4508 2 месяца назад +6

    Surely you can deduce a lot about a dinosaur from skull fragments, BUT... when the fragments are THIS small of a portion of the overall skull, how much straight-up guess work actually goes into it? Obviously the overall skull size would be easy enough to give a definitive answer for, but (for example) the unique features at the 4:30 mark couldn't possibly be more than vague hypothesis, right?

    • @minowilovemypet
      @minowilovemypet 29 дней назад +1

      mine you this is artic so tryign to find more bones while not dying due to coldness is hard plus if we presume that the artic t rex or whatever it's name isn't going often into the ice sheet or dies is place that is hard to even research and find bones for human and machine so please just because we have few bones don't denied it think of how hard the artic is to survive even today with today tech and also there is a wikipedia articles about it and there are alot of citation links there to find so please if you are curious just try to search it and i can't share the link because yt don't like links anymore

  • @ultrakillfanatichere
    @ultrakillfanatichere 2 месяца назад +2

    this guy’s upload schedule makes me like this channel even more

  • @CYMotorsport
    @CYMotorsport 2 месяца назад +45

    Why is there snow? I’ve never seen anything peer reviewed who recognize the late Cretaceous as mild.. maybe even “warm” by most accounts.

    • @Borgslop
      @Borgslop 2 месяца назад +17

      About to write that. This video is misleading click bait at best. How are you going to make a simplified video about this without making sure people understand plate tectonics and the difference in climates from different paleo logical periods. Dishonest

    • @FirstDagger
      @FirstDagger 2 месяца назад +18

      Polar region, slightly below freezing in winter, with low light for 120 days, lat. 80°-85°N. Think where the tip of Greenland is now.

    • @mb8787
      @mb8787 2 месяца назад +7

      ​@FirstDagger do you mean one of the tips of *Greenland* ..?

    • @FirstDagger
      @FirstDagger 2 месяца назад +1

      @@mb8787 Thank you, corrected.

    • @jamesaron1967
      @jamesaron1967 2 месяца назад +7

      Yes, everything I've ever read about the Cretaceous suggests a considerably warmer earth than we have today. Not as hot as the Permian or Triassic but much warmer than this inter-glacial period and believe the polar regions were ice-free at that time.

  • @joehill800
    @joehill800 7 дней назад +1

    If reptiles are exothermic, how could a reptile survive in such an environment?

  • @Nitrogen-Philips
    @Nitrogen-Philips 2 месяца назад +3

    The ad i got from clicking on this vid was an ad about lego t-rexes😂 maybe that was the real t-rex northpole had😅

  • @Mrstarwars541
    @Mrstarwars541 7 дней назад +1

    Imagine walking along in Alaska or something and you see THAT

  • @kaiaw8507
    @kaiaw8507 2 месяца назад +6

    I literally said "that's not that bad" 😂
    Living in Iowa, those temps are nothing lol 10:37

  • @chainer1918
    @chainer1918 2 месяца назад +1

    It is currently 1:09AM and I am out of my mind on Jim Beam. This is exactly what I needed to finish my night

  • @jeko32
    @jeko32 2 месяца назад +3

    If I ever woke up in Late Cretaceous North America the first thing I would do is swear off the LSD

  • @ExtinctWorld-b3x
    @ExtinctWorld-b3x 2 месяца назад +1

    I can't believe that such a terrifying dinosaur could exist in such a cold place. It's truly amazing!

  • @zhcultivator
    @zhcultivator 2 месяца назад +3

    Please make a video about the Prehistoric South Pole too.

  • @ANGSHUMANKALITA-v2b
    @ANGSHUMANKALITA-v2b Месяц назад +1

    The only more terrifying you can see in the north pole than a polar bear , is a freaking tyranisourus disguised as a polar bear

  • @stevew6138
    @stevew6138 2 месяца назад +5

    Gigantothermy was for many years the theory of the day and has some merit still. However, the connection with birds and feathers is compelling. And who knows, maybe Nanu could partially regulate its body temp like a great white shark. Or burrowed, perhaps in groups. Great stuff to learn and think about, Thanx.

    • @4thdimensionalexplorer
      @4thdimensionalexplorer 2 месяца назад

      I wouldn't be surprised if feathers and being able to adapt to diverse biomes are more linked than we currently think. Clearly some dinosaurs were able to handle the coldest regions of their time. Obviously that makes sense, nature fills vacuums. Where there is prey, a predator will adapt to pursue them. Birds Today live in the hottest and coldest places life exists. Perhaps feathers played a roll in all of that?

    • @stevew6138
      @stevew6138 2 месяца назад

      @@4thdimensionalexplorer Agree.

  • @denzemenn9717
    @denzemenn9717 Месяц назад +1

    I am absolutely terrified every time this creature looks straight at the camera. It's horrifying.

  • @davidc5191
    @davidc5191 2 месяца назад +3

    Climate at the North Pole in the Cretaceous was much warmer than today, about 10 degrees C warmer, giving it a temperate climate, more like what we find in Montreal Canada today. Yes you'll get blizzards like shown in the video, but only on the coldest days of the year.

  • @williamgordon5708
    @williamgordon5708 20 дней назад +1

    With that fluffy white coat, I'm surprised the scientists didn't name it the YeTi-Rex...

  • @austinmccullough7521
    @austinmccullough7521 2 месяца назад +5

    So we all just gonna ignore the two birds fucking on a tree at 5:04

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад

      it was foreshadowing, like in a Quentin Tarantino movie

  • @tabbychan516
    @tabbychan516 2 месяца назад

    Love ur Videos 🤘🏼keep up the good work. Greetings from Germany :)

  • @volcolackinfinity
    @volcolackinfinity 2 месяца назад +4

    2:42 that Manuqsaurus is from the AMAZING animation channel @DeadSound

  • @fallinginside3001
    @fallinginside3001 2 месяца назад +1

    I like your presentation style. You sir have earned a ‘scribe outta me.

  • @Exzell0123
    @Exzell0123 2 месяца назад +6

    4:56 ark survival evolved reference 🗣️

  • @JimD-o9j
    @JimD-o9j 2 месяца назад +2

    Watched this the day before I saw an exhibit on the Nanuqsaurus! I was spittin’ facts after watching this!

  • @noot7109
    @noot7109 Месяц назад +3

    5:04 bruh you thought nobody would notice

  • @Demothedestroyer
    @Demothedestroyer 21 день назад +1

    OK, who asked for a dinosaur for Christmas because it clearly escaped

  • @Gonedonttakeitseriouslyguys
    @Gonedonttakeitseriouslyguys 2 месяца назад +3

    I thought it was gonna be Yutyrannus😂I did not know Nanuqsaurus even existed😂😂

  • @skyhigh9474
    @skyhigh9474 Месяц назад +1

    Thought it would be scary from the thumbnail but by the end of video it appeared cute. As I grow old all animals are looking cute being appreciative and understanding of how great life is and only earth has it currently.

  • @LordJimsworth
    @LordJimsworth 2 месяца назад +6

    Just realised im so quick here that i have no life

    • @soapsatellite
      @soapsatellite 2 месяца назад +3

      Hey, give yourself some credit: At least you're watching something good

    • @SassyCassie89
      @SassyCassie89 2 месяца назад

      Acknowledgement is the first step, step two is to do something about it!
      No shame in being in a slump, its staying there that does it. You can change things 💪

  • @ShadowRosea
    @ShadowRosea Месяц назад

    This has been my favorite theropod ever for a long time and I’m very happy it’s gained popularity

  • @mhdfrb9971
    @mhdfrb9971 2 месяца назад +3

    I really have to wonder if Nanuqsaurus was descended from a northern population of Daspletosaurus (especially now that it’s been upsized to be around the same size).

  • @FreAKy-aHH-eminen
    @FreAKy-aHH-eminen 2 месяца назад +1

    I love watching your videos cause I like history especially Dinosaurs 👍

  • @williamszwarc8557
    @williamszwarc8557 2 месяца назад +12

    I clicked before I saw the tittle accidently on the notif saw the title and was immediately hooked

  • @crazyguy0_0
    @crazyguy0_0 Месяц назад +2

    0:26 imagine turning a corner and you just see this.

  • @cynicalbuddha1660
    @cynicalbuddha1660 2 месяца назад +5

    You have to presume the North Pole was where it is today and the earth had polar icecaps at all.

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад

      you also have to presume that the Earths tilt was the same as it is today (it wasnt btw)

  • @danileon7005
    @danileon7005 Месяц назад +2

    so, wherever i go, im getting absolutely flatlined by a big ahh carnivore no matter if i go to Asia (Tarbosaurus) South America (Giganotosaurus) North America (T-Rex) Artic (Nanuqsaurus) or even Africa (Spinosaurus or Carcharodontosaurus)

  • @tuxedoduck4242
    @tuxedoduck4242 2 месяца назад +6

    I barely even care about the video but that thumbnail is so badass

  • @corinneaggar9755
    @corinneaggar9755 2 месяца назад

    Most enlightening thank you for putting this together 👍

  • @Deadfishyboi
    @Deadfishyboi 2 месяца назад +3

    I wonder if it’s feet could have a similar circulation to geese and other birds that live in colder environments year round

    • @Mukti0033
      @Mukti0033 2 месяца назад

      I was thinking something very similar. Could it have been warm-blooded similar to how certain sharks.

    • @blazesalamancer8767
      @blazesalamancer8767 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@Mukti0033Most dinos are already warm-blooded...its an ancestral archosaur trait that crocodilians lost

    • @Mukti0033
      @Mukti0033 2 месяца назад

      @@blazesalamancer8767 thanks for clearing this up for me. I appreciate it.

  • @RiniUsagi
    @RiniUsagi 2 месяца назад +1

    Me, who lives somewhere where the winter temps regularly hit -30C and we get at least two weeks a year where it drops to -40C-45C: I could have been this dinosaur

  • @cerboris521
    @cerboris521 2 месяца назад +14

    If large theropods were feathered, I'd love an explanation as to how they kept themselves clean. With those muscular necks it seems unlikely they could groom themselves as birds do. I've never seen anyone talk about dinosaur self hygiene.

    • @predabot__6778
      @predabot__6778 2 месяца назад +4

      Hmm...! Good question! I've never thought about that... Perhaps that would make pack-life more likely, even? Since it'd be easier to clean each other instead of doing it yourself, in that case. ( a bit like how cats clean their young)
      This also gets me wondering... if there were other feathered Ornithischians than Kulindadromeus (it seems rather likely), then would they have had the need to clean themselves? What if they were more thick-necked and stiff, like a Ceratopsian? What on Earth do they do then??

    • @patriciaaturner289
      @patriciaaturner289 2 месяца назад +2

      Ever see a vulture?

    • @cerboris521
      @cerboris521 2 месяца назад +1

      @@patriciaaturner289 Not personally but on videos. What about them.

    • @amazinness4131
      @amazinness4131 2 месяца назад

      ​@@cerboris521 They don't have feathers on their necks

    • @jamesaron1967
      @jamesaron1967 2 месяца назад +1

      Feathering, if there was any substantial amount of it, would have been composed of the simplest structures, not the complex kind seen on most modern birds. Something that cassowaries or emus have. If ratites can clean themselves then so could Nanuqsaurus.

  • @TheDisturbedguy1989
    @TheDisturbedguy1989 Месяц назад +1

    You earned another subscriber

  • @posticusmaximus1739
    @posticusmaximus1739 2 месяца назад +7

    Polarsaurus Rex!

  • @Nukonghimself
    @Nukonghimself Месяц назад +1

    Nah bro Santa Claus fighting a T. rex is crazy 🙏😭

  • @wolfmanradio
    @wolfmanradio 2 месяца назад +13

    During the time this animal lived (the late cretaceous), the weather in the Arctic region was quite mild. According to sediment core and dendrochronological samples, the average Arctic temperature was around 59°F (15°C). Based on what we now know, the icy landscape imagery in this video is inaccurate to this animal’s contemporary environment.

    • @predabot__6778
      @predabot__6778 2 месяца назад +4

      Interesting! That's actually a pretty big miss. So, since he mentioned an average summer-temp of around +10C, and you mention +15C, then the -30C in winter would be more like -25C, right? Or did you mean an average such temperature of +15C all-year round? So, the summers could have gotten as hot as +30, and the winters only as cold as -5C??
      Anyways, would you happen to know if this means Yutyrrannus actually lived in a COLDER climate than Nanuqsaurus? Hence, the feathering on Yutyrrannus makes sense, but it's less likely that Nanuqsaurus would have been feathered? Or was the climate in both environments about the same, and it's still possible that Nanuqsaurus could have been fully feathered?

    • @Ispeakthetruthify
      @Ispeakthetruthify 2 месяца назад +6

      It's amazing that people continue to portray these inaccurate climates for these dinosaurs. There were no snowy landscapes, or winter wonderlands, anywhere on the planet during the Cretaceous.
      In fact: During this time period, the poles were so warm, that they supported swamps, bogs, wetlands, woodlands, and subtropical forests. So warm, that crocodilians were able to thrive at the poles. This is all supported by fossil evidence.
      The Antarctic didn't begin to cool down and freeze until around 30 million years ago, and the Arctic didn't experience the same thing until much later.
      The planet was truly a Greenhouse Planet during the Triassic, Jurassic, and the Cretaceous periods. And for nearly 20 million years after the extinction of the dinosaurs, the planet was still in a Greenhouse state. The planet didn't begin to cool, and see drastic climactic shifts, until around 35-40 million years ago.

    • @jamesaron1967
      @jamesaron1967 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Ispeakthetruthify Yes, indeed.

    • @predabot__6778
      @predabot__6778 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Ispeakthetruthify Hmm... I started looking into this, and it seems as if you're correct that the temperature was quite a bit higher, but some of the research in the last 10 years or so don't entirely agree on just how cold it could get.
      I see some articles mentioning that the average temp for Yutyrannus was actually around +10C, which makes their floofy-ness quite remarkable - if it's that warm, why do they need THIS much covering?? An animal that size will get quite hot. The fluffy down on Yutyrannus is unanimously real though, so that can't be discredited - but there are some intriguing questions here, regarding what other purpose so much covering would serve.
      However, there does appear to be some evidence that even with this massive green-house effect (it had started to slope off though - the peak was 100 MYA, so late Cretaceous wasn't as hot at all, but hotter than it is today) there were some below-freezing temperatures in the Late Cretaceous Arctic:
      Spicer et. all (2016) claim that there were regions as cold as -2 to -5C in their paper;
      "Environmental constraints on terrestrial vertebrate behaviour and reproduction in the high Arctic of the Late Cretaceous".
      This implies that yes, the scenes in this video are very unlikely - it's not going to get THIS snowy in a region that only goes to -5C on average (during cold season), but there's probably going to be a little bit of snow and frost will be a recurring event.
      This probably answers my question - was it likely that Nanuqsaurus had downy covering? Yes - because it at least could get below freezing, and since Yutyrrannus which lived in a non-freezing environment, had covering; -2 is plenty colder than +10.
      However, this is just one article, and it's 8 years old - has their data here been disproven?

  • @HassanMohamed-rm1cb
    @HassanMohamed-rm1cb 2 месяца назад +4

    Why don’t you get to think and make a suggestion creating another RUclips Videos Shows that’s all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Extinct Zoo coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍

  • @slownightss
    @slownightss 2 месяца назад

    Half way there. 500K! Congratulations man

  • @MrWanapon
    @MrWanapon 2 месяца назад +7

    2:35 that reconstruction looks like Deadsound's reconstruction.

    • @Jesusesfanboy
      @Jesusesfanboy 2 месяца назад

      Is it stolen from deadsound?

    • @MrWanapon
      @MrWanapon 2 месяца назад

      @@Jesusesfanboy I'm NOT saying it's stolen I'm just saying it looks like it

    • @Jesusesfanboy
      @Jesusesfanboy 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MrWanapon ok I was ready to have front row seats to drama good thing it probably isn’t though

    • @MrWanapon
      @MrWanapon 2 месяца назад

      @@Jesusesfanboy 😤

    • @dreadqueen_
      @dreadqueen_ 2 месяца назад +4

      Glad someone else noticed - Dead Sound’s work is incredible!