Haolonggood’s latest product reveal is a 1:20 scale statue of Daspletosaurus torosus. Mounted atop a rocky base and sculpted in a different pose from the smaller figures, it looks like a truly terrifying and savage predator.
Review: Triceratops (Jurassic World: Roar Strikers by Mattel)
Review: Tianzhenosaurus (1:35 Scientific Art Model by Haolonggood)

Review and images by bmathison1972, edited by Suspsy
OK, here we are folks. My first review on the Dinosaur Toy Blog that is, well, actually a dinosaur! My previous reviews have consisted of a primate, a tortoise, and a bunch of invertebrates. I have to admit, despite collecting a wide variety of eukaryotic taxa, dinosaurs are the largest group for which I am least familiar.
News: Upcoming releases from Haolonggood (New for 2023)(Pt. 8)
Review: Wuerhosaurus (Haolonggood)

Wuerhosaurus is a genus of stegosaurid that lived during the early Cretaceous in China. Being from the early Cretaceous makes it notable as it means it’s one of the last living stegosaurid genera. While stegosaurids as a group flourished during the late Jurassic, they went completely extinct by the end of the early Cretaceous.
Review: Quetzalcoatlus (Field Museum plush, Wild Republic)
News: Upcoming releases from Mattel (New for 2024)(Pt. 2)
Review: Orkoraptor (Jurassic World: Wild Roar by Mattel)

Review and images by Cretaceous Crab, edited by Suspsy
Since the release of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom in 2018, Mattel has practically exploded in terms of the diversity of prehistoric genera it has offered, many of which are the first of their kind to be represented in toy or figure form.
News: Upcoming release from PNSO (New for 2023)(Pt. 10)
News: Upcoming release from Haolonggood (New for 2023)(Pt. 7)
News: Upcoming releases from Schleich (New for 2024)
Review: Herrerasaurus (Jurassic World Dino-Trackers, Strike Attack by Mattel)

The late Triassic Herrerasaurus is one of the oldest dinosaurs known from the fossil record. So old and primitive is Herrerasaurus that there is still debate about where it fits in the dinosaur family tree. At various times it has been proposed that Herrerasaurus was a basal theropod, a basal sauropodomorph, a basal saurischian, or not a dinosaur at all.