Fossils from the polar regions are a rarity, and it often boggles the mind to think of dinosaurs in the ice and snow of places like Antarctica. During the Late Jurassic, Antarctica was part of Gondwanaland, so was warmer and host to a large number of dinosaurs, such as the theropod Cryolophosaurus, nicknamed “Elvisaurus” for its phenomenal crest.
Review: Parasaurolophus (Mini)(Chap Mei)

Review and photographs by Funk, edited by Suspsy
While many companies that produce dinosaur toys strive to make their figures scientifically accurate (though often failing), some completely disregard science, preferring instead to use dinosaurs as simple pop culture monsters. This is true for Chap Mei, whose Dino Valley line toys are often imitations of dinosaurs appearing in pop culture rather than what is actually known about them.
Video: Dinosaur Toy Forum Diorama Contest 2019, sponsored by Urzeitshop – all 45 entries
Video showing all 45 entries in the Dinosaur Toy Forum Diorama Contest 2019, sponsored by Urzeitshop.
View the entries in detail and vote in the poll: https://dinotoyblog.com/forum/index.php?topic=8241.0
Visit Urzeitshop: http://urzeitshop.eu
Review: Set of Dinosaurs by Linde
Review: Plateosaurus (Bullyland Museum Line)

EU government could still not agree on aborting the change to summer time, so this very day is an hour longer and so gives me some time to wirte another review after quite a long break…..
Today we gonna take a look on a probably not very popular figure, though the species is known by anyone who ever had a look into a dinosaur book.
Video: Wind-up swimming plesiosaur, plus margarine figures
I’m back after a short break, with a new unboxing In which I take a wind-up plesiosaur for a swim and inspect some margarine figures, the latter a gift from Libraraptor.
Title graphics by Patrx
Review: Anchiceratops (Kaiyodo Dinoland Natural History)

Review and photos by Bokisaurus
Part 4 of Kaiyodo Dinoland Natural History review series
Anchiceratops is one of those dinosaurs that seems to have been forgotten in today’s popular culture. Despite being large and having a unique frill, you don’t really hear much about it, let alone see it in documentaries about dinosaurs, or even a short cameo in movies.
Review: Dino Skulls (Toob by Safari Ltd.)

From the savage teeth of tyrannosaurs to the intimidating horns of ceratopsians to the endearing crests of hadrosaurs and to the peculiar noggins of pachycephalosaurs, dinosaur skulls truly are stupendous. I previously reviewed Safari’s toob of prehistoric mammal skulls; now I’ll be looking at their Dino Skulls toob.
Review: Brachiosaurus (DinoWaurs Survival)
Review: Brachiosaurus (Jurassic World Legacy Collection by Mattel)
Review: Brachiosaurus (Procon/Collecta)

In this review, I am going back to the mid-2000’s, to a time when Collecta was not the producer of high quality models they are now. They weren’t even called Collecta, but Procon. Many know of the fairly awful examples put out by the company then, but I am going to review one of the figures that showed genuine potential.
Review: Plesiosaurus (Animal World Dinosaurs by Bullyland)

Review and photographs by Funk, edited by Suspsy
To the general population, plesiosaurs are mainly known as “that prehistoric animal which the Loch Ness Monster might be,” though they were, of course, a very distinct group of reptiles with a long and important role in the history of palaeontology.