All Triceratops Reviews


Review: Xtractaurs (Mattel)

3.3 (6 votes)

Review and photos by Charles Peckham, edited by Suspsy

I don’t own all the Xtractaurs, and I’m not sure if anyone does, but I feel I’ve been able to amass enough to give a decent overview of the series. Anyone who wants to review an individual Xtractaur for the Dinosaur Toy Blog, included in this review or otherwise, has my blessing.

Review: Triceratops (Marx)

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4 (8 votes)

No line of toy dinosaurs would be complete without a Triceratops and that’s a fact that has remained true since the beginning of dinosaur toy production with Marx in the 1950’s. Sure, many other elaborately horned dinosaurs have come onto the scene over the subsequent years but Triceratops is a classic and like Tyrannosaurus can never be dethroned.

Review: Triceratops (2020)(Mojo Fun)

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3.3 (7 votes)

Review and images by PhilSauria, edited by Suspsy

At the risk of stating the obvious, Triceratops is a very iconic animal. One of a handful of of prehistoric animals that some members of the general public can probably put a name to, along with Tyrannosaurus rex, Brontosaurus, and Stegosaurus, I’d wager.

Review: Triceratops (Repaint)(Wendy’s Exclusive from Definitely Dinosaurs by Playskool)

1.3 (3 votes)

Review and photos by Charles Peckham, edited by Suspsy

The Wendy’s Triceratops that Definitely Dinosaurs put out in 1988 was a very odd, scientifically implausible little toy. Still, in my humble opinion, it had panache. The foremost reason for this was its striking neon colour choices.

Review: Triceratops (Wendy’s Exclusive from Definitely Dinosaurs by Playskool)

1.5 (4 votes)

Review and photos by Charles Peckham, edited by Suspsy

Definitely Dinosaurs is a toy line I’ve written about on here before. To reiterate my thoughts on it succinctly, it was a great bridge between durable, cutesy kids’ toys and scientifically accurate (for the time) models.

Review: Herbivore dinosaur set (Wenno)

2.5 (8 votes)

Cheap dinosaur sets are fairly common on the market, offering a variety of creatures for a reasonable price (though usually picked from a very select group of species), something to keep kids entertained for a few hours. Wenno are a prime example of this, having released a few sets for ancient and modern species.

Review: Triceratops (Jurassic World Dino-Rivals, Duel Attack by Mattel)

3.4 (10 votes)

This review might come across as being a tad redundant because the toy we’re looking at today is basically a re-tool of another toy already reviewed, the Roarivores Triceratops. There are oodles of other Jurassic World toys that still need reviews and this one is admittedly not terribly exciting.

Review: Triceratops (Remote Controlled)(The Lost World: Jurassic Park by Toy Biz)

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3.8 (9 votes)

Review and photographs by Funk, edited by Suspsy

After so many years of the DinoToyBlog examining every obscure corner of the dinosaur toy landscape, you’d think all older products in the Jurassic Park franchise to have been fully covered. That mainly seems to be the case for the beloved Kenner lines, but there are still many strange toys by other companies left unexamined, including the subject of this review.

Review: Set of Dinosaurs by Linde

4.6 (8 votes)

Right to begin with, yes, three figures by Linde are already thoroughly represented on this blog, the Tyrannosaurus, Sphenacodon and Dimetrodon. But for the sake of completeness I include those three in this review aswell.

Review: Dino Skulls (Toob by Safari Ltd.)

4.2 (29 votes)

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: Triceratops (Scientific Toys Ltd.)

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3.6 (5 votes)

Review and photographs by Charles H. Peckham V, edited by Suspsy

Scientific Toys Limited is a Hong Kong company that makes a variety of toys that mostly have nothing to do with paleontology. Among things like remote control cars and drum sets, they have a dinosaur game named Interactive 3D Dino Adventure.

Review: Prehistoric Animals (Panini, review part 1)

panini prehistoric animals playset

3.4 (9 votes)
Sticker albums are a staple of many a childhood and they were certainly a part of mine. However, unlike my school  contemporaries in the early 1990s, I didn’t deal with stickers of footballers or garbage pail kids, all my swapsies were dinosaur stickers of course!
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