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The Dino-Riders apparently have nothing like the Prime Directive in their society. They have absolutely no problem interfering in a war taking place in a different time period, using futuristic weapons in front of a primitive culture, and transporting animals to an unfamiliar environment.
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Among the animals the commandos enlist and arm with weaponry from the command center are two Wooly Mammoths. Just when exactly did those two get recruited? Considering the state Glyde was in after the stampede, it seems unlikely the commandos would deliberately seek them out.
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The fact that these primitive Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons speak English well enough to easily talk to the commandos is ridiculous. The few words that they choose to have difficulty with are laughable.
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The sound effect for the amps is really odd.
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Exactly what kind of dinosaur is Kameelian riding anyway? It looks like a gray Triceratops with a really large rhino horn.
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At one point during the opening battle, a Rulon Triceratops looks to be the same size as the T-Rex.
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Krulos, Gunner, and Icon are back to the coloring they had in the first two episodes. Kameelian has gotten a makeover as well.
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It looks like a small T-Rex is among the dinosaurs in the Dino-Riders' stalls. It was most likely a Deinonychus whose coloring was off.
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Although Lokus was tied up by Kameelian during the escape, he's shown in the command center with Krulos when Rasp runs in a few moments later. Very odd, since he's the only one of his kind we've ever seen.
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Lokus has a dramatically different voice in this episode. It went from being high and raspy to being low and resonant.
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Tagg and Ayce are seen with Serena, Icon, and Vector hiding from the Rulons, but when they run out to jump on their mounts it's Turret who rides off with them. Tagg and Ayce are later seen among the prisoners at Dreadlock.
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Someone confused the Diplodoctus with the Brontosaurus - he's shown to be brown instead of green.
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It seems very strange that Kameelian didn't hear the Brontosaurus walk into the water. It IS the largest animal in the world, after all.
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How did the good guys figure out which eggs belonged to which mothers? Did the Triceratops sniff them out?
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The Triceratops eggs go from being placed in individual storage units within the trays to rolling around in a loose jumble.
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Why does Rock refer to the others back at the camp as "the Dino-Riders"? Isn't he a Dino-Rider too?
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The flashbacks of the Dreadlock's pursuit of the Valorian vessel play out differently than the pilot shows. The most noticeable change is that Krulos willingly follows the Valorians through the time portal when in the first episode he was ordering the tractor beam to be disengaged.
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Why is Krulos looking at the viewers when he is ordering Antor to launch a defensive assault? He should be looking at Antor, who's behind and below him.
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Krulos - a frog alien - somehow gulps down and chokes on water through his exo-suit when Yungstar dumps him in the river.
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If Valoria had been at peace for 20,000 years, then why are there commandos and characters like Questar, Gunner, and Icon with obvious military expertise? I guess you can explain it by saying the Valorians were not stupid and knew that at least part of their society had to be prepared to fight if their world was ever threatened. It was probably the small part of their society that was trained in warfare that made the cut to man the space ship.