Eighteen days…Has it really been eighteen days since I last posted here? I haven’t even reviewed that domehead story like I said! Argh!

I’m so sorry about this! (I’ve been told that I don’t need to apologize for taking time to review, but honestly, how do I manage to forget/procrastinate this long?!

) Unfortunately it seems that you’re a lot faster at creating stories and artwork than I am at reviewing them (but don’t stop or slow down on my account!), so it’s either going to be a long time before I get around to reviewing all the LBT fanart and fanfiction you have out right now, or I’m going to have to limit my reviewing to only certain pictures and stories.
Okay…now that that’s over with, I’m going to start with the picture of Clubbie, to which my first reaction was: “…:blink:…Whoa…Maybe Teryx’s feathers didn’t turn out perfect, but that armor is flawless!

” Okay, strictly speaking I can’t say anything is flawless, but that was what I thought, and the detail on Clubbie’s armor really is incredible! The snout plates, the horns, the spikes, the scutes, the segmentation; everything. I can see some spots where the lengths of the divisions between the plates and the positioning of the scutes aren’t perfectly even, but I swear, it probably would have taken me hours of drawing and tons of erasing to get it looking anywhere near that good if I were making the picture.
It occurs to me that it might be difficult (painful, even), for a LBT
Ankylosaurus to have its hind legs in the position that teenage Clubbie’s are in, given the spikes along its sides. I think a more realistic pose would be for the knees to be beneath the edges of the “shell”, with the thighs parallel to the ground at most (as opposed to the 45-degree angle they seem to be at in this picture).
I don’t have nearly as many comments for hatchling Clubbie; all I can say is that he looks great! I
love how his horns, left front foot, and left hind leg look, and his expression is excellent as well.

Now that’s a hilarious bio!

Trying to fly and walk on his front legs have to be my favorite crazy habits you described. I think that rumor circulating in Clubbie’s herd about the reason for his behavior might have something to it…

Though turning himself into a walking hors d'oeuvre platter makes sense if he gets hungry a lot.

: As usual, I love your descriptions of the character’s relationship to his/her friends. Though my reaction was “yikes!” :blink: to that little detail of Tero having once broken Clubbie’s leg…
Okay, now for a (very late) response to your response to my review of your picture of Teryx:
Another amazing picture. Teryx looks awesome. His colors kind of remind me of a scarlet macaw, but with purple instead of yellow. Also, I’m guessing it was unintentional, but the end of his tail looks sorta like a hand.
A Hand?! :blink: That's AWESOME!! I never noticed!! Now I probably won't be able to get the thought outta my head! 
Wow…I certainly didn't anticipate that response. :blink: Fortunately, it's pretty much the best one I could have hoped for.

Huh, I never thought of using a scarlet macaw for color refence.......Why didn't I?! It would've been awesome to have the yellow feathers!
Oh, well.
If you like that color scheme, you could always change the character's design.
My true inspiration for the colors came from a memory of the very first Archaeopteryx picture I've seen when I was little; one archaeopteryx flying in the background and one climbing through the branches of a tree in the foreground. I guess a lot of paintings have that, but I remember the red and blue color scheme and the yellow scales on the legs, hands, and face (of course without the purple feathers, which was an extra thing to keep the patterns of the LBT-style). To this day, I can't remember where I found that inspiring piece of art and ramsacked through my dinosaur books and through Google Images, with no success....
In fact, I'm still on the hunt for it even after this pic is done. Any chance you may have seen the pic I'm looking for in one of your dinosaur books?
I can't say I have, unfortunately. You say it was a painting? Was it a more “old-fashioned” picture (like something
Charles R. Knight or
Zdenek Burian might have made), or did it look like it was by a more recent artist? Anything you can recall about the picture or the book you saw it in would help; I might be able to find it for you.
You did a really incredible job on the legs and feet. (I especially admire how you drew his talons partially “clenched” in the same manner as a bird’s. And his head looks really good. Beak, teeth, eyes, crest, everything. The three furthermost feathers on his wings look a little floppy (feathers need to be stiff if they are to be useful for flight), and the one at the very end should be longer than those following it, but still, bird wings and feathers are hard to draw, and I think you did a decent job.
Tried to keep to the LBT design and still make him as bird-like as possible!
I personally don't like how any of the wing feathers came out, especially the 'floppy' ones you mentioned. I think one of the feathers suffered from 'unsteady-hand-during-outlining' syndrome and I curse myself for it. Anywho, yeah, the leading edge for Teryx's wings should be longer for his flying-style; guess I had the vague thought of vulture wings in my mind when I drew him (I love vultures so much....)!! 
As much as I agree with you that vultures are awesome,

they’re probably not a very good analogue for
Archaeopteryx, having long, broad wings adapted for nearly constant soaring, compared to
Archaeopteryx’s short, broad, rounded wings. I’ve read so many arguments on both sides of the debate on whether
Archaeopteryx was a flyer or just a glider that I’m not sure what to believe about its aerial aptitude, but one thing that seems to be pretty unanimously agreed upon is that if it could fly, it couldn’t do so as well as most modern birds.
I love back-stories to fit personalities and why they are the way they are. Gives me a chance to exercise my writing abilities to make up for my lack of drawing skills, which is made fun of in my family *again glares towards my artist sister*. It's the positive feedback from you guys here and in DA that keeps me from giving up on drawing altogether....
Lack of drawing skills?…
[size0][sarcasm]Seriously, what museum can I visit to see the rest of your family's artwork?
[size0][/sarcasm] <_< Seriously, they’re crazy to be disparaging your work like that. If they expect you to be a better artist, they should be more supportive of your work, telling you what you’re doing right andóin a civil and encouraging mannerówhat to focus on doing better. (That’s my reviewing style, anyway…the “sandwich critique”, someone called it once:

opening with first impressions and overall opinion, a filling of alternating compliments and notes on areas for improvement, topped with an encouraging message that the artist is doing well and should keep at it.)
By the way, it was discovered a few years ago that Archaeopteryx actually had feathered legs, a bit like Microraptor (though the feathers were shorter and only went down to the ankles); feathery “pants”, if you like.
Oh, dude! I never got that newsflash! That's awesome!! Wonder if it's as useful to them as it is for a glider like Microraptor... To me, it would seem like a bit of a hindrance for a flyer, unless it's used like the Great Blue Windrunner from the Future is Wild.
It's thought that the feathers on
Microraptor's feet protruded sideways, so that when it was in a gliding position with its wings spread and its hind legs tucked beneath its body, the feathers formed a second gliding surface, like the wings on a biplane. According to
this article on the subject, the smaller feathers on the shins probably faced backward, and served to reduce drag. I'm guessing
Archaeopteryx's leg feathers served the same function. (An interesting hypothesis put forward in the article is that the gliding ancestors of birds had “wings” on all four limbs like
Microraptor, but as the front pair became larger, stronger, and better adapted for flapping, the aerodynamic function of the hind pair was reduced.)