But I tried it to an unconscious dodo which I punched it myself, and my parasaur still killed this unconscious dodo, isn't the purpose of it is Only target conscious when attacking ? meaning the damage won't register to an unconscious dino around my dino or cmiiw.
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Because I was trying to tame a lv 150 pteranodon, then a dilo was attacking it, but when i attacked this dilo using my parasaur, it also seemed to attack my unconscious 150 ptera or cmiiw , that's why I am looking into this behavior option but it is not what thought it was.
It does pretty much what it says; it will only target conscious dinos. For example, if your creature is on aggressive, it will target and attack everything regardless if they are unconscious or not. However, if that behaviour is set to only target conscious, it won't attack them if they are sleeping. It can still damage them though, if they target something else and an unconscious dinos is in its AOE it will take collateral damage. If I remember correctly, this behaviour was added in EA after players requested it so they can tame Quetzal while carrying an aggressive Scorpion with an Argentavis without losing effectiveness for extra hits, etc.
Imo it should be added too like how other tribe cannot kill unconscious dino knocked out by other tribe because why would I want to hurt my own tame in progress, but it is what it is, the game still has limitation.
There's only so much the game can do to protect you from your own mistakes (and I don't just mean you, personally, I mean the big "you" as in you, me and everyone else). If you're mounted on your parasaur and make the parasaur attach the dodo that's on you. This is a survival game after all, it's not WoW or Borderlands, at some point it's your job to make sure that you don't do things like punching or attacking unconscious animals. You have to learn how to be careful so things like that don't happen.
I believe the default setting is the one that keeps them from attacking your KOd taming dinos. I have accidentally pushed the attack button before and they didnt and I have never messed with that setting.
I've bought a zoomer dino on Ebay, but I think its faulty. I cannot control his movements - he moves a few times and then goes full speed backwards. It doesn't stop, inevitavly bumps into something and then keeps on spinning his wheels (while upside down) on max speed. I also have problems getting it into gesture mode. I tried pushing the button on his back but without success. My son loves his dino, but it's no fun with it being completely out of control and racing backwards all the time. Any help appreciated!
This is a traction issue, not a circuit issue. The dino moves a slight amount forward then races backward. Without proper traction, the dino can't get into the balanced position. Once the dino is upright, the rearward motion stops and the dino balances and operates normally. Unfortunately, the plastic "tires" need to be replaced.
@pvh, P Vanhemert, stefanie powers, If able to return it as defective for exchange/refund. There is probably an internal problem with the circuitry. If not returnable, 1st link below is a disassembly guide that can get you inside the zoomer dino to check for loose wires/connections/damaged components on board/etc. 2nd link is a troubleshooting link. Good luck. I hope this helped you out, if so let me know by pressing the helpful button.
I found that if you hold the base of his tail while he stands up and steady him until he's balancing by himself, it helps him get into a more stable mode of operation, and I get fewer reversing issues.
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At Jurassic Farm, visitors encounter a 16-foot-tall animatronic T-Rex, as well as realistic velociraptor costumes, cute baby Parasaurolophus puppets, and more, drawing crowds with their charm and realism.
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A lot of storytelling in speculative genres on the other hand, seems to feel the need to introduce dinosaurs. By which I mean any outlandish stakes-increasing element. Time travel, FTL space travel, aliens, magic, wizards, and so on. Occasionally literary writers do this too, though they seem to feel more of a need to code in symbolism projecting back to ordinary life.
Equally, despite the god-like scale of the action, the show is not about actual religion-style Gods. Doctor Who is neither a Christian Jesus figure suffering resurrections, nor a series of incarnations of a Vishnu-like karmic God. The Doctor agonizes about this stuff on occasion, but mostly just plays the fool with a blue box, trying his best to do good but more often than not causing mayhem and rationalizing the results with little sermons. A fact his adversaries keep reminding him of. Beneath its idealistic veneer, the show actually has a nihilistic subtext similar to Rick and Morty, one that suggests a dark, universe.
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Birds evolved from a group of meat-eating dinosaurs called theropods. That's the same group that Tyrannosaurus rex belonged to, although birds evolved from small theropods, not huge ones like T. rex.
The oldest bird fossils are about 150 million years old. These ancient birds looked quite a lot like small, feathered dinosaurs and they had much in common. Their mouths still contained sharp teeth. But over time, birds lost their teeth and evolved beaks. Can you imagine coming face-to-face with a toothy pigeon?
After more than 140 million years in charge, the reign of the dinosaurs came to an abrupt end when a huge asteroid strike and massive volcanic eruptions caused disastrous changes to the environment. Most dinosaurs went extinct. Only birds remained.
Unravel the epic story of birds, from surviving a mass extinction event to inhabiting every continent on Earth. Discover the secrets to their success and their surprising and often shocking tactics for survival.
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In U.S. politics, Democrat in Name Only (DINO) is a pejorative used to describe politicians of the Democratic Party to indicate that their governing or legislating style is more like a member of the Republican Party.[1]
The phrase was used in 1908 by Alven B. Goodbar, a Democrat and president of the Goodbar Shoe Manufacturing Company of St. Louis, who replied to a request from the Democratic National Committee to make a donation to the Democratic Party candidate, William Jennings Bryan, by saying "I do not recognize Mr Bryan as a Democrat or as a true expounder of Democratic doctrines and principles. He is a Democrat in name only, while in fact he was originally a populist and by process of evolution has become a socialist."[3]
In his 1920 run for one of Georgia's seats in the United States Senate, Thomas E. Watson was denounced by the Valdosta Times newspaper as a "Democrat in name only.".[4] When William DeWitt Mitchell was appointed United States Attorney General in 1928 by President Herbert Hoover, the Chicago Tribune described Mitchell as a "Democrat in name only," arguing that "his record of the last few years has been Republican."[5] In 1936 United States Senator Edward R. Burke of Nebraska resigned his position as a member of the Democratic National Committee stating that he could not support "any candidate masquerading as a Democrat but who was a Democrat in name only," referring to Terry Carpenter, a Representative from Nebraska then running for the Senate.[6]
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