Dunkleosteus
Toy, Toys R Us™
Review by
Matt Bille
I ordered
this toy secondhand – it usually comes with a (modern day!) sea exploration
playset. It is what you’d expect, a hard plastic toy with a lot of shortcomings
in the realism department, but there are a couple of cool things about it
anyway.
It’s big,
about 28cm. It’s clearly modeled on the
Schleich Dunk (shown below with it for comparison.) It looks like a tank. The front armor is
really impressive, like something Jaws’
Chief Brody could shoot at all day with his .357 without being more than a
nuisance. There are armor plates (or platelike markings) all over the body, like a swimming ankylosaur.
This certainly isn’t right, although this design would explain the Dunk’s
disappearance from the fossil record: it couldn’t move. I assume the body armor
is there just to keep the skin from looking flat and boring, There are scutes
here and there, down the sides but also, weirdly, on the leading edges of the
pectoral fins. The choppers on the
business end are appropriately scary-looking. The eyes are yellow with a small
pupil (jaundice, or just the age of the toy?) The anal fin was not modeled, presumably to
save a couple of cents in production.
Anyway,
things I like. I like the tail: the
strong upper lobe indicates development in the direction of a full heteroceral
tail, which I think is what they were, at the least, evolving toward. The
coolest thing, though, is the action. The toy comes with the jaws wide open (of
course), but if you press down on the dorsal fin, the cheek armor swings
outward, creating a suction while the jaws close. We know the Dunk did feed
this way, at least much of the time (some prey might have been too big), and
kudos to the toymaker for including here.
So there we
have it. It’s an interesting toy, not accurate but with some redeeming
features. I would have LOVED this as a kid.
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