
Some plastic toys, the plastic behaves a bit strangely to a grinder.

But being, what looks like resin, i imagine it will be easy to grind down (dremel). I dont like the underbelly that much BUT i'm guessing its more natural for an animal of that size, compared to some toys that make Trex's look more lean. Robin/Stargate/paintingdinos - i'm leaning towards the Pegasus trex. This may be the only occasion I would ever recommend the largest JP/// Tyrannosaurus, it's already in a fairly dynamic pose that could make for a very cool piece if you fixed it up, and the harder plastic is better suited to customization than the rubber Kenner counterparts.ĭinolord - thanks that pose would be too much extra work for me to refigure it how i want hehe Since you're going to be heavily customizing it you may actually find some of the larger Jurassic Park Tyrannosaurus make a good starting point. (I don't play a lot of tabletop games as I'm sure you can tell ) you will probably be moving or transporting it fairly often, so resin might be a poor choice of material.

If you want to use it as a game piece or perhaps as a "map piece"/display/etc. IE: if D&D miniatures are in 1:40th scale you could probably use a 1:20th or maybe even 1:30th scale Tyrannosaurus to get one in that size range. What scale are D&D miniatures in typically? You can probably use that scale and up it by about 1.5 or 2 times and then use a Tyrannosaurus in that scale.
