Tyrannosaurus Rex

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
A T. rex family. It's probably not a good idea to bother the baby.

As noted in Stock Dinosaurs, T. rex is by far the most common dinosaur that appears in fiction. While it may not have been the biggest carnivorous dinosaur ever, it was probably among the most powerful and dangerous. It is certainly the most famous, mainly because it looks Badass, and is also the only dinosaur popularly known for the whole scientific name (genus Tyrannosaurus, species rex) instead of just the first term.

In fiction, T. rex, like all dinosaurs, seems to really like the taste of humans, despite the fact that we're fricking tiny compared to it (imagine passing on a turkey dinner to run a mile for Chicken McNuggets and you have the idea, and we might not even taste as good as Chicken McNuggets). Expect to see T. rex roaring constantly and shaking the earth with every step. Rule of Cool always wins, but in Real Life predators will tread softly and shut up while hunting; otherwise how would they ambush their prey with success? It is also usually implied to be male, perhaps because Tyrannosaurus rex means "Tyrant Lizard King". Some scientists have suggested the females were larger; though this is plausible, solid scientific evidence for this hypothesis is not as strong as it used to be.

In earlier fiction especially, all carnivorous dinosaurs on the bigger-than-a-human side tend to be confused with T. rex, and T. rex itself will sometimes be depicted with non-tyrannosaur features, such as three fingered hands (tyrannosaurs only have two). Sometimes the authors will dismiss T. rex as "cliché" and use another large theropod as their Designated Villain. The attempt to be anti-cliché will usually be self-defeating, as the other theropod will tend to be used in such an inaccurate, Pseudo-Rex fashion that they might as well have just used the obligatory T. rex anyway. This tends to happen to poor Allosaurus most often, despite that fact that they really don't look that much like T. rex, aren't that closely related, and aren't nearly as large. Fortunately, as new fossil evidence helps us straighten out how the various Theropods are related, this is becoming a lost subtrope. (See that other Wiki for more information about this.)

In older fiction, tyrannosaurs and many other bipedal dinosaurs were typically portrayed in an upright "tripod stance" like a kangaroo (pretty much the only bipedal animal with a long tail early paleoartists could use as a model; see Godzilla). Science Marches On, however, and by the '70s, it was generally agreed by the paleontological community that dinosaurs did not drag their tails. However, it wasn't until Jurassic Park came along in 1992 that this view managed to filter into pop culture: just the scene of a group of humans in a jeep being chased by a T. rex with that proper anatomic structure, and looking like she had a real chance of catching them, was enough to lock it in the public imagination. Even then, newer works still sneak in the tripod stance every so often, usually by showing T. rex in a "triumphant" pose that resembles the stance.

If a work of fiction involves Time Travel, the probability of a T. rex appearing is directly proportional to the number of episodes. If the characters time-travel once in a series, they will either end up in a hilariously inaccurate version of the late Cretaceous and meet a T. rex or a hilariously inaccurate version of the old west—where they may meet a T. rex anyway. Likewise, a machine that merely pulls things out of the past, or other dimensions, seemingly has a 90% chance of grabbing a T. rex. If the work of fiction supposedly doesn't involve Time Travel, there's a good chance of the T. rex nevertheless encountering critters from wildly different eras, such as Stegosaurus, which predates T. rex by roughly as long as T. rex predates us.

Note -- While we're here, a word about spelling, punctuation, and Taxonomic Term Confusion: the correct way to refer to the species is Tyrannosaurus rex or T. rex—upper-case T, lower-case r, period after the T in the abbreviated version. And italicized. Not "T Rex", "T-Rex", "t-rex" and so on.

Also, there was far more than one kind of "tyrannosaur". The word "tyrannosaur" can be used to describe various relatives of T. rex belonging to the superfamily Tyrannosauroids. It turns out this group included members both large and powerful like the almost-identical Asian Tarbosaurus and the smaller North American Albertosaurus , Daspletosaurus and Gorgosaurus—and relatively small and quick, like the recently discovered Eotyrannus and Guanlong.

Another important note: T. rex lived only in what is now central North America (ranging from about Alberta to Texas), so don't expect your time traveler to bump into them if they take off from anywhere else in the world (unless it's one of those time machines that can go to a different location). This is partly due to Science Marches On - specifically, the Asian Tarbosaurus was long suggested to be a species of Tyrannosaurus.

In addition, Tyrannosaurus rex should never be confused for another T. rex.

Examples of Tyrannosaurus Rex include:

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Anime and Manga

  • The villains in Dinosaur King mainly use a T. rex for fighting. The word "King" isn't there for nothing.
  • In One Piece, former Rear Admiral X. Drake of The Eleven Supernovas has eaten a Ancient Zoan type Devil's Fruit that turns him into this. His is smaller than a real one, but like other Zoans, he has a yet-to-be seen half-man, half-T. Rex form, and can bite through a Mecha Mook whose head is harder than steel.
  • A large number of Dinosaur-type monsters, especially the more powerful ones, in the Yu-Gi-Oh card game are based on T. rex. The menacing looking Black Tyranno, the inaptly named Ultimate Tyranno whose effect could backfire, Super Conducter Tyranno, who currently holds the title of the most powerful monster that can be normal summoned, and finally, Tyranno Infinity, whose effect can make him the most powerful monster in the game.
  • While the Zoids franchise has mecha based off all sorts of animals, one of the most common appears to be Tyrannosaurus rex. Many of them are completely fantastic and bear no resemblance to the real animal (even accounting for their being huge robots), but even then they are supposedly "Tyrannosaurus-types". Oddly enough, several Zoids that aren't Tyrannosaurus-types, such as Deadborder, Gravity Saurer and Gojulas Giga are often mistakenly identified as Tyrannosauruses, both in English and Japanese (and, for the record, are Tarbosaurus, Suchomimus and Giganotosaurus, respectively).
  • The Digimon franchise really loves loves T. rex, specifically ones that breathe fire:
  • The title character from Gon is one.
  • In Mahou Sensei Negima, the overly elaborate School Festival includes a full-size T. rex robot built by the engineering club, apparently because "why the hell not?" It was so realistic that Negi briefly thought it was real.
  • The protagonist of the film You Are Umasou is a T. rex named "Heart", who raises a baby Ankylosaurus.
  • Kinnikuman: Sneagator's true form is a T. Rex foot. He proceeds to squish Kinnikuman during their match. Kinnikuman makes a comeback by placing Sneagator's middle finger into a bear hug and places it into a suplex.

Comic Books

  • Batman has a giant animatronic T. rex in the Batcave, a souvenir from one of his earliest adventures.
  • The Old Man Logan arc of Wolverine features a Tyrannosaurus. Which was infected by Venom.
  • The humorous The DCU character Major Bummer features a Nazi dinosaur from a parallel universe named "Tyrannosaurus Reich [dead link]".
  • 2000 AD has rich people riding "tame" (and anatomically inaccurate) T. rexes across Mars hunting poor people. Said T. rexes were sourced by time travellers who went back to hunt dinosaurs for their "flesh".
  • Monica's Gang: Horacio, a vegetarian T. rex created by Brazilian artist Maurício de Sousa (who is basically his Author Avatar, being the only of Mauricio's characters that continues to be only written by him).
  • Invoked in Empowered by villain King Tyrant Lizard (the literal translation of "Tyrannosaurus rex"), although he's "just" nine feet tall and also hasn't the short arms.
  • One of the many adversaries which Judge Dredd has to overcome during "The Cursed Earth" arc is cloned a T. rex named Satanus.
  • Although set in the paleolithic era, Rahan sometimes features throwback dinosaurs, including a Tyrannosaurus rex in one issue. Rahan manages to kill it by planting a metal spear on its head during a thunderstorm, which then attracts lightning, frying the T. rex.

Films -- Animation

  • One pops up in Meet the Robinsons. He's actually not so bad once the bowler hat comes off. He did hog up a lot of the ads, though. The focus on his only speaking scene lead to him becoming the Ensemble Darkhorse.
  • Fantasia features a fight between a T. rex and a Stegosaurus. Guess who wins? Though some fans mistake the creature for an Allosaurus, they pretty explicitly call it a Tyrannosaurus in the intro to the Rite of Spring sequence, and concept art also refers to it as a rex. It has three fingers simply because Walt thought it looked better that way.
  • Rex from Toy Story is an inversion of the usual depictions, as he is very timid and insecure. He does try to be fearsome, but he fears it might come across as annoying instead.
  • Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs features a mother T. rex, who turns out not to be that bad at all. In fact, even she is afraid of the film's real Big Bad, a huge white Baryonyx (related to Spinosaurus, but lacking a sail) that goes by the unlikely name of Rudy. That still doesn't stop her from coming back in the end and kicking his ass.
  • The Carnotaurus in Disney's Dinosaur is another (particularly banal) example of the "Pseudo-Rex" trope in action. While much smaller than T. rex in reality, the filmmakers beefed it up to tyrannosaur size in the film, resulting in something kids ended up calling a T. rex anyway. This issue is compounded by the fact that the animatics for the film depict a T. rex in place of the Carnotaurus, suggesting that the filmmakers merely shoehorned the Carno's into a role originally written for T. rex. Considering the film is set in North America, where the T. rex lived but not the Carnotaurus, the T. rex would actually be more accurate. Handwaved by Kron being surprised about the Carno being "this far North". No kidding.
  • Sharptooth is the antagonist in The Land Before Time, and is a terrifying, hungry menace of a Rex who obsessively stalks Littlefoot and his friends in hopes of eating them. The sequel would introduce Chomper, a baby Sharptooth who befriends the gang. His parents are the antagonists of that film, but aren't malevolent so much as they are violently protective of their baby and part ways with Littlefoot and friends on good terms.
    • Both characters, unsurprisingly, are the franchise's premier Ensemble Darkhorses. This would lead to Chomper becoming one of the main characters in the TV show spinoff, and Sharptooth becoming a Fountain of Expies to the series as a whole. Many villains in the sequels and show are some flavor of Sharptooth, looking far more like T. Rex than the dinosaurs they're supposed to represent while boasting a "Kill and eat EVERYTHING" personality in the vein of their inspiration.

Films -- Live-Action

  • Jurassic Park
    • The first movie has a T. rex chasing the heroes all over the place—though it's somewhat of a subversion, as the real threat is the Velociraptors. Additionally, in the original film, she is seen hunting actual dinosaurs, and at one point gives up on chasing the protagonists when they outrun her in a jeep. And finally, she comes back at the climax of the film to save the protagonists from the raptors.
    • The sequel upped this by having three, including a baby, and the Papa Rex goes on a rampage in southern California.
    • The third one has the T. rex killed by the larger Spinosaurus, which is more likely a fish eater or generalist carnivore than the unstoppable Big Bad the film made it out to be. The JP 3 Spinosaurus, arguably, falls under the "Pseudo-Rex" trope mentioned above. Somewhat justified, as Grant mentions, since these aren't real dinosaurs, but mutations. The animals were bred by InGen using non-dinosaur filler-DNA and raised in environments (and with other animals) they may have never otherwise encountered. This would lead to strange behavior at best, and outright mutation into new species at worst (which is essentially what happened).
  • In Blackadder Back and Forth, Blackadder and Baldrick briefly end up in the late Cretaceous period. Guess what's waiting for them.
  • King Kong
    • The original (1933) King Kong battles a T. rex.
    • The 2005 version, and its various merchandise, actually subverted this trope. There, the family of T. rex-like dinosaurs were called Vastatosaurus rex, apparently a kind of Tyrannosaur that had been evolving for all the 65 million years the rest of the dinosaurs were dead, into the forms seen in the film. However it does have Kong fighting no less than three of them at once, all over one tiny little human. Who one of them chased for several hundred metres, despite carrying a perfectly good dead animal in its mouth most of the way. It tore half of it off in the process, the half it lost being BIGGER than the human it was chasing. The fight scene was wrong on so many levels, but it was AWESOME.
  • Godzilla's design was based on a T. rex, with the dorsal plates of a Stegosaurus and the forelimbs of an Iguanodon. In the films, however, depending on the continuity, he is either a huge, prehistoric sea monster, or a mutated specimen of the fictional "Godzillasaurus". Incidentally, a theropod from the Triassic period was later named Gojirasaurus, after the movie monster, though it bears no resemblance to Godzilla behind being a large, bipedal reptile.
  • The Ray Harryhausen film The Valley of Gwangi featured the title dinosaur, Gwangi, who was billed as an Allosaurus but was modelled after a Tyrannosaurus.
  • The T. rex is the Designated Villain in the B-movie Planet of the Dinosaurs.
  • The So Bad It's Good Aztec Rex featured what the Aztec In Name Only local tribe called "Thunder Lizards", worshipping them and leaving sacrifices because they keep the valley free of intruders.
  • Night at the Museum has the skeleton of a T. Rex coming to life at night. It likes drinking water out of a fountain, play fetch with its own bone, and generally behave like a dog.
  • One T. rex appears in the 2009 Land of the Lost, nicknamed "Grumpy". Will Ferrell's character, Dr. Rick Marshall, insults him, by claiming that his brain is the size of a walnut, causing a personal grudge to develop between them. Grumpy later tosses a huge walnut at the group during the night, bigger than a baby carriage, before slinking off into the jungle with a sinister smirk on his face. After a few further chases, Grumpy swallows Marshall whole, before returning at the end of the film with Marshall on his back to save the others. Turns out, whilst Marshall was in Grumpy's stomach, he dislodged some sort of intestinal blockage, causing Grumpy to literally poop him out and be in a much better mood afterwards. The walnut joke is perhaps made funnier in that it is actually false that Tyrannosaurus had a brain that size (it was actually almost as large as a human brain).
  • The Super Mario Bros. movie featured King Koopa, a tyrannical ruler whose ancestry dated back to the prehistoric T. rex. This heritage gives Koopa a feeling of entitlement and divine right, which was the pretense under which he took control of the government. After a brief stint in a devo chamber, Koopa periodically "flicks" in and out of a reptilian appearance before finally de-evolving backwards through four different stages of T. rex and then primordial sludge.
    • Subverted for Bowser from the main game series (whom King Koopa is an incarnation of). He's mostly based on a turtle crossed with an ox, but possesses a few rex-like features (such as his protruding snout with sharp teeth).
  • The 2008 version of Journey to the Center of the Earth has a T. rex chasing the protagonists.
  • The little-seen movie Tammy and the T. rex has the brain of Tammy's boyfriend put into a robotic T. rex by a Mad Scientist for... some reason. Never really explained.

Literature

  • Sue, the T. rex at the Chicago Field Museum shows up in The Dresden Files book Dead Beat, though mostly only as the display of bones you'd expect in a museum. Until the climax, where Harry reanimates it and rides it into battle against a horde of zombies and necromancers. Because the number one rule of necromancy is, "the longer it's been dead, the more powerful it is when you raise it."
  • T. rexes are featured in the Dinotopia books, obviously. The spinoff novel Dinotopia Lost explores the full implications of T. rex parents going Mama Bear! James Gurney does his homework, though, and numerous other large theropods appear as well, including Allosaurus and Giganotosaurus. (How the narrator knows to call it Giganotosaurus over a century before the species was described by science, though, is anyone's guess. Translation Convention?)
    • In fact, the story is set in the 1860s, and Tyrannosaurus rex itself wasn't named until 1905, from bones discovered around the turn of the century. For that matter, most of the Stock Dinosaurs weren't discovered until the 1870s-1890s, so the narrator should have known almost none of them!
    • Journey to Chandra also portrays some T. rexes who are scavengers, and don't actually hassle the unarmored human and tiny ceratopsian passing through. Given that many smaller carnivores are apparently able to live in civilization and eat fish, one wonders if these might join them.
  • Robert Sawyer's End of an Era featured T. rexes.
  • As did his Quintaglio Ascension Trilogy. Not only is the "Blackdeath" clearly a tyrannosaur, the Quintaglios themselves are Humanoid Animals descended from the smaller Tyrannosauroids.
  • The Animorphs encountered T. rex in the time-traveling Megamorphs special, and, of course, used it as their go-to battle morph once they managed to acquire one (that morph was lost in the transition back to the present). Two of them, however, only had Deinonychus morphs. Rachel complains about this.
  • In A Sound of Thunder, hunters go back in time to shoot a T. rex.
  • L Sprague De Camp's "A Gun for Dinosaur" (more time-traveling big game hunters) features Tyrannosaurus trionyches, a fictional cousin of "the famous rex."
  • The first book of Steve Alten's Meg series, has a Tyrannosaurus being killed by a Megalodon (a really big prehistoric shark supposedly related to the Great White) whilst chasing Hadrosaurs in the shallow sea. This scene is case of Did Not Do the Research, as not only did Megalodon not even live in the same time period as any dinosaur (try almost 50 million years after they went extinct), but the scene was clearly thrown in purely to try and present Megalodon as a more lethal predator (an oceanic predator being more effective in its element than a land predator? Never!). No prizes for guessing what would happen if (in Alten's version of prehistory) a Megalodon beached itself on the shore whilst a hungry Rex was passing by.
  • Nina Bangs's Gods of the Night series features 11 immortal men, 10 of which are fused with the souls of the ultimate prehistoric predators, among them (of course), a T. rex called Ty. It's worth noting that each of these characters were referred to by some shortened form of the dinosaur or predator they were fused with.
  • In the first set of Dinoverse books, a boy ends up inhabiting the body of a Tyrannosaurus rex, while three others ended up possessing different prehistoric creatures. On their quest to get back to their own time and bodies, they are menaced by a "Tyrannosaurus imperator", a fictional dino even bigger than the rex but otherwise identical. Other books feature different kids in the bodies of different dinosaurs from other periods of time, but there's always someone in each group in a huge theropod which gets compared to T. rex.

Live-Action TV

  • There were T. rexes in all versions of Land of the Lost.
  • Super Sentai
  • In Mr. Bean our hero sees a Nativity set in a department store and stages a special drama. Guess what menaces the Holy Family before being driven off by tanks and a Dalek? See it to believe.
  • In Sliders, the heroes sometimes slide into Earths where dinosaurs have survived (alongside humans or not). Initially averted, as the first big predator to chase them is an Allosaurus (and described as such). In a later episode, of course, they meet the obligatory Tyrannosaurus rex.
  • The last episode of Walking with Dinosaurs focused on a mother Tyrannosaurus rex trying to raise her three babies in the unforgiving Late Cretaceous. A meteorite fell, and everyone died.
  • The first episode of Prehistoric Park centers on Nigel's attempts to obtain a Tyrannosaurus rex for the park. He does -- two juveniles who grow up over the course of the series.
  • Speaking of Impossible Pictures and dinosaurs... it was refreshingly Averted in Primeval... except for one of the novels. Finally makes an onscreen appearance in the penultimate episode of series 5. Of course, by this point the show had already dealt with other large predators like Giganotosaurus and Spinosaurus, so the T. rex feels much less egregious.
  • Referenced, but not seen, in an episode of Stargate Atlantis. One particular member of the expedition have begun to suspect Teyla of leading the Wraith to her team because of how often they seem to show up. When Sheppard's team is yet again running for their lives back to the gate, he immediately assumes this is the case again... when Sheppard and Ford inform him the Wraith had nothing to do with it, and they were just chased by something very much like a T. rex.
  • Doctor Who's "Invasion of the Dinosaurs" has a T. rex brought to London via Time Travel.
  • The final episode of Dinosaur Revolution focussed on a family of T.rexes and an antagonistic T.rex. They all die.

Music

Someone let T. rex out of his pen
I'm afraid those things'll harm me
'Cause they sure don't act like Barney...

Newspaper Comics

Calvin: This is so cool!
Hobbes: This is so stupid.

Puppet Shows

  • Although many are loath to acknowledge it, Barney is (supposedly) a T. rex. Indeed, the sight of one of the most Badass animals ever being turned into a cuddly giant plush toy who is friend to children everywhere is certainly one of the reasons why Barney is so despised.
    • Some artists set out to make things right, however.
    • Lampshaded in Ian McDowell's short story "Bernie". A cloned (and very well-trained, and sedated) mini-theropod is created to do public appearances as a Barney-Expy. It does not end well....
    • It says something about America that, when brainstorming what creatures would be suitable hosts for a show aimed at the pre-Sesame Street demographic, Barney's creator thought a gigantic bloodthirsty carnivore was a perfectly rational choice.
  • In Dinosaurs, Earl's best friend is a bachelor T. rex named Roy. He was not ferocious at all, a bit on the dumb side, and had a tendency to angst about his tiny little arms (which, like most of the show's dinosaurs, have an extra, opposable digit).

Roy: Why am I always picked last on the bowling team?


Tabletop Games

  • Partially subverted (like many things) in Exalted, where a Tyrant Lizard, while a seriously dangerous creature to mortals, is not only not the toughest of the animals in the world, it's not even a real challenge for an Exalt (you play an Exalt in most games). However, if you are one of the said mortals, then run. Run as fast as you can, 'cause this thing will eat you and your house and your village.
  • Warhammer 40,000: While technically belonging to a birdlike species, there is no denying a Kroot Greater Knarloc is just as badass.
  • The Lizardmen of Warhammer Fantasy can use a Carnosaur as a mount, which is essentially a T. Rex in all but name.
  • Magic: The Gathering
    • T. rex's Badass status is parodied with their joke set card Old Fogey.
    • But in a "serious" set, they have Imperiosaur, who is an obvious Expy of the T. rex, down to the name.


Video Games

  • Dead or Alive 4 has a stage filled with dinosaurs, including a T. rex, despite taking place in the modern day. A story-mode cutscene that takes place in the stage has the dino terrorize Hitomi before Jann Lee kicks it in the face and knocks it out with one punch, saving her life. Hitomi chastises him for hurting it, the ungrateful bitch.
  • Star Fox Adventures
    • The RedEye tribe is an entire tribe of T. rexes.
    • The SharpClaw tribe is based slightly more on Allosaurus. Their leader, General Scales even seems to resemble a Giganotosaurus a bit more than a T. rex.
    • Then there was the only enemy of the "Walled City"', the "Red Eye" tribe, and Tricky's Father was to be sacrificed to "King Red Eye", who lived under the city. Both were Nightmare Fuel, and unbeatable until one learned how to kill them properly. Fox Used: Earthquake! It's Super Effective!
  • The appearance of Rexy in the first Tomb Raider game was so iconic that he even made a cameo appearance in Tomb Raider II, III and Golden Mask, later returning in Anniversary. Three guesses who's on the menu each time.
  • A common enemy type in Final Fantasy. See also Dinosaurs Are Dragons. To name a few:
    • The Allosaurus from Final Fantasy I, as well as the Tyrannosaur.
    • Tyrannosaurs from Final Fantasy VI. The Earth Dragon also took on this form.
    • T-Rexaurs from Final Fantasy VIII. You will occasionally find one roaming the Training Area in Balamb Garden if you walk around long enough, which tends to be fatal if you attempt this at the start of the game.
    • The Tyrant enemy class in Final Fantasy XII definitely count. Notably, the Earth Wyrm, which is larger than all the other T. rex types, and the T. rex boss from the demo.
  • One of the more awesome segments of Parasite Eve takes place in a museum with a dinosaur exhibit. Her nemesis has control over a large quantity of mitochondrial goo that can apparently bring the fossilized dinosaurs back to life. The boss of the area is, of course, a T. rex. That breathes fire.
  • A recurring boss from Joe and Mac Caveman Ninja. The last level took place inside it, even.
  • Chrono Trigger has the heroes square off against a T. rex that breathes fire in the prehistoric era. Its descendent shows up in a later optional dungeon.
  • Primal Rage has two Tyrannosaurus rex-shaped gods named Diablo and Sauron.
  • Pokémon introduced Tyrunt and Tyrantrum in Gen 6 as the franchise's first true Tyrannosaurus Pokemon. Being badass Rock/Dragon types with a kingly motif to them, saying that fans liked them is a hell of an understatement. Before they were introduced, they had a few Pokemon with tyrannosaurus-like features to fill the void the best they could, which are as follows:
    • Tyranitar, which is obviously named after good ol' T. rex, though it looks more like Godzilla. Still, it being a big badass lizard with short arms definitiely brings them to mind.
    • There's also Groudon, which happens to be the Pokeverse's version of the mythical Behemoth. It's also the heaviest of all Pokémon, weighing in at over 2 tons, meaning that the Pokémon based on larger dinosaurs (mostly sauropods) are lighter than it (and usually much shorter too).
    • The Charmander line also have some distinctly Tyrannosaurish traits to them: Charmander in particular looks like an adorable baby T. Rex (albeit with the wrong number of fingers) while Charmeleon looks more like one in its adolescence, albeit with long arms. Charizard however loses all Tyrannosaurus-like traits in favor of looking more like a stereotypical western dragon.
  • The Tyrant Rex dream eater in Kingdom Hearts 3D. Aside from a special one fought as a miniboss, it's not particularly large (Though still large by normal enemy standards), being only a head or two taller then Sora and Riku, doesn't sound nearly as fearsome as you might expect (Its "roars" resemble the sounds a stepped-on cat might make), and is flamboyantly colored, as is the norm for dream eaters. They are, however, as dangerous as they look, as they possess a great deal of HP and attack power, can breathe fire, and won't budge if hit by weak attacks.
  • Kingdom of Loathing has a Tyrannosaurus "Tex" as a boss.
  • In World of Warcraft, beware of the Devilsaurs in Un'goro Crater. Unless of course you're a hunter who has learned the "Tame Exotic Beasts" skill.
  • Turok: Dinosaur Hunter. The second-to-last boss is a Hollywood Cyborg T. rex with armed Frickin' Laser Beams.
  • Burn Dinorex/Mattrex from Mega Man X 5, which is yet another fire-breather. Well, he is a robot.
    • Another robot one shows up as a Mid Boss in Mega Man 7 in Slashman's stage. And the fossils (again, robotic?) appear in Freezeman's stage in the same game.
  • Both Dino Crisis 1 and 2 (think Resident Evil meets Jurassic Park) have the protagonists being pursued by Super-Persistent Predator T. rexes.
  • Both Freedom Force games feature T. rexes.
  • In the end of the Soviet campaign in Red Alert: Yuri's Revenge, the defeated villain Yuri highjacks a time machine and attempts to escape. Soviets manage to override the controls of the machine and overload its core and send Yuri one-way straight to prehistoric times. Gues who's waiting for him there. Note that in this case the T. rex is actually a Chekhov's Gunman, as in the first Soviet mission if you move really quickly when you're accidentally sent back there you can capture one and return it to the present—where you can send it on a rampage in present-day San Francisco. It seems to have gained much tougher skin in the time travel tripe than the dozens you have no choice but to slaughter before you make the return trip—you can take out most of the enemy base with "Rexy" alone.
  • 3-D Ultra Pinball: The Lost Continent has at least one, who can eat the pinball whole. To make matters worse, the protagonist is named Rex, leading a scientist to this: "That's interesting... Rex meets T. rex."
  • Lineage II has an entire island of dinosaurs. The T. rex is a raid-boss like, aggressive mob that will, occasionally, eat other dinosaurs and be surrounded by a glowing blue effect. They normally wander around a set area (per 'rex) but there's one or two that walk around the whole Primeval Forest. And they're also aggro. The developers actually kept the poor eyesight of the T. rex, and have given players a chance to run away: if you see the T. rex say "?" it means you have been noticed.
  • Fossil Fighters uses T. rex as its mascot. However, the only way to obtain one without trading is during the Playable Epilogue, after beating the game! It's also the hardest single dinosaur to find. The game treats it as an Infinity+1 Sword, but it is much less so in comparison to the likes of King Dynal. The sequel, Fossil Fighters: Champions, makes it available much earlier in the game but its Infinity+1 attributes only emerge with leveling now, and it's been made only a secondary mascot after Triceratops.
  • The original Ape Escape has our protagonist travel through many different eras from pre-history through to the far future... in order to catch rogue monkeys with a net. One early level featured a mini-boss monkey astride a T. rex.
  • Banjo-Tooie features the Baby T-Rex and Daddy T-Rex transformations. The latter has a roar powerful enough to frighten cavemen.
  • Culdcept games feature a T. rex card as well as the "Mesozoic Song" spell which causes all of your placed monsters to become T. rexes in battle!
  • Prehistoric Isle in 1930 features a Godzilla-sized T. rex as the final boss, the sequel has (sorta) normal sized ones as sub-bosses.
  • Tyrannosaurus is one of the playable dinosaurs in Primal Carnage, and the toughest of any class.
  • In the PC-88 version of Dragon Slayer, one of the enemies sort of looks like a Tyrannosaurus, and apparently is supposed to be one. Oddly enough, it's the second weakest enemy.
  • In Adventures of Dino Riki, the second boss is a fire-breathing Tyrannosaurus.
  • The Thunderjaws of Horizon Zero Dawn are some of the coolest Tyrannosaurs in fiction. Why? Because they're gigantic robot Tyrannosaurs equipped with rocket launchers and laser cannons! However, as cool as they are they're also some of the most dangerous machines for that exact same reason, meaning that any player looking to tackle one better make damn-well sure that they're prepared.
  • A photo-realistic Tyrannosaurus Rex that looks like it stepped right off the set of Jurassic Park is a rare, but memorable enemy in Super Mario Odyssey. And guess what? Like many things in the game, you can possess and play as it!
  • Monster Hunter has a lot of monsters that borrow aesthetics from prehistoric creatures, and that naturally includes monsters inspired by the Tyrannosaurus.
    • The most famous one would be Deviljho, a.k.a the Murderpickle. Take a T. Rex, fuse it with a pickle and Godzilla, and make it an unstoppable force of nature with an appetite that can wipe out entire ecosystems, and you've got one of the most dangerous monsters in the setting. It's so powerful that it's considered to be just as dangerous as most Elder Dragons, and was introduced in the third generation as an unstoppable menace who would invade hunts against weaker monsters and would force players to run for their lives since its debut happens long before you can reasonably fight it and survive.
    • Anjanath from Monster Hunter World isn't just a monster that looks like a T. Rex, but practically is a T. Rex: specifically a pink T. Rex with feathery down similar to that of a vulture and the ability to sneeze (yep, sneeze) fire thanks to its superheated mucus. Once it's enraged however, it stands out a bit more thanks to the way it unfurls a pair of large Spinosaurus-style sails on its back, as well as an odd crest-like nose bone for its mucus attacks. It also has a yellow/black/purple variant called Fulgur Anjanath that trades its fire attacks for electric breath.
    • While its face invokes the Carnotaurus thanks to the horns and overall structure, Glavenus has the arms and stance of a T. Rex... specifically, a T. Rex with a superheated sword for a tail. While some fans accuse it of being a Creator's Pet thanks to the ridiculous amount of exposure it gets at the expense of the rest of the Fated Four, can you really blame Capcom for wanting to show it off?
    • While its body is closer to that of a generic Flying Wyvern as opposed to Brute Wyverns like Deviljho, Tigrex is the OG Tyrannosaurus Rex monster of the series, debuting in Gen 2 and becoming one of the series' mascots in the process. It's a spastic, ridiculously aggressive dragon with a T. Rex head, and has a ton of subspecies and offshoots that are more dangerous than the last, such as Brute Tigrex and its painful hypersonic roars, or the gigantic Molten Tigrex that scatters explosive powder everywhere.

Web Comics

Web Original

  • The Tyrannosaur Chronicles: Several show up in Traumador's adventures, especially his cousin Larry. Traumador himself turns out to be a distinct species of Tyrannosaurus, T. traumadori.
  • The website "T. Rex Trying..." highlights the numerous problems of having such tiny arms.
  • Loading Ready Run: The titular Dinosaur.
  • Grarrls from Neopets, which have the distinct ability (shared with Skeiths) to eat any item the user wishes.


Western Animation

  • The main villain of The Land Before Time series is Red Claw, the "biggest, meanest, most ferocious Sharptooth of all". Which is a HUGE example of an Informed Ability as Red Claw is probably among the least dangerous Sharpteeth to appear in the entire series (he retreated after having fruit catapulted at him), especially in comparison with the first film's antagonist, who actually caused the death of Littlefoot's mother.
  • "Me Grimlock most famous Transformer to have T. rex alt mode!"
  • There was a cartoon called The Adventures Of T-Rex, about a group of anthropomorphic T. rexes that fight crime. Yeah.
  • Naturally, there is a T. rex in Cadillacs and Dinosaurs.
  • In Dino Riders, Big Bad Krulos rides a Tyrannosaurus rex into battle. In one episode, the Rulons plopped a young T. rex in the middle of the Valorians' camp and let its parents wreak havoc.
  • The Big Bad of Dinosaucers was a T. rex named "Genghis Rex". Funnily enough, the leader of the heroes was an Allosaurus, the first of many Ryu and Ken-ish counterparts that make up the cast, and the show also features Teryx, a very rare heroic maniraptor.
  • Futurama
    • "The Scary Door" segment in Bender's Game features "the humblest of God's creatures: The Tyrannosaurus rex" taking down alien saucers.
    • Fry rides one in a kiddie park in "I Dated a Robot". He even feeds it a live pig (from a food dispenser). It eats his hands.
  • Watch Teen Titans, Justice League, and several other animated series set in the DC universe and you'll eventually come to the conclusion that all the animal-specific shapeshifters had a meeting and decided that T. rex would be their go-to One-Winged Angel equivalent.
  • Batman the Brave And The Bold has an episode set in Dinosaur Island. Guess what's the first species Bats and Plastic Man encounter?
  • The one and only time-travelling episode of The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest features Jonny and Jessie spending a short time in the late Cretaceous being chased by a T. rex, of course.
  • Schoolhouse Rock depictes the National Debt as a hungry Godzilla-sized Tyrannosaurus that sits on Capitol Hill, constantly eating money received from taxpayers. And "Tyrannosaurus Debt" is still growing.
  • In X-Men, Xavier and Magneto find themselves trapped in the Savage Land, an island that contains dinosaurs, among other oddities. Of course the two wind up being chased around by a T. rex.
  • T-Bone from Extreme Dinosaurs is an anthropomorpic T. rex and is the leader of the heroes.
  • Because it lampshades on the idea of Secret Hero Mutant Team, Kung Fu Dino Posse has one being the leader.
  • Tina from The Amazing World of Gumball.
  • Completely subverted in Dinosaur Train where all of the T. rex characters are friendly.
  • In the Phineas and Ferb episode "It's About Time" (not the only time travel episode, but the only one where they go into prehistoric times), Phineas, Ferb, Candace, and eventually Isabella's entire Fireside Girl troop go back to 300 million BC and almost get eaten by a T. rex. 300M BC is waaaaaay too early to meet a tyrannosaur, but Danville... might be in Central North America...
  • Tyrannor from Dink the Little Dinosaur.
  • Generator Rex follows the Time Travel corollary. In the episode "Lions and Lambs", Providence faces off against an EVO with Time Travel powers. She opens a portal and brings forth, yeah, you guessed it. Our hero, not knowing yet that he's facing a Time Master, assumes that what looks like a Tyrant Lizard King is actually an EVO, and tries to Bring It Down To Normal. Yeah, that's not going to work, because it's a real Tyrannosaurus, Rex.
  • A T. rex wearing a wristwatch and sipping tea makes an appearance in one episode of Bonkers.
  • One episode of Xiaolin Showdown featured a T. rex that spoke with a British accent.


Real Life

  • Recently, the science of paleontology has begun to march on, and has discovered many new predators who were either bigger or more Badass than T. rex. Among these the most likely contenders for next top Badass are the allosauroids (yes those allosauroids). These include Allosaurus (duh), who could reach sizes larger that the average tyrannosaur, probably hunted in packs, used its head as a hatchet to take chunks of flesh from a living prey, and could take on sauropods (at least weaker ones) many times their size. Their carcharodontosaurid relatives, like Giganotosaurus and Mapusaurus, matched in size or even surpassed the largest tyrannosaurs, had 2-meter long skulls that worked like giant serrated scissors, and were specialized on taking down giant sauropods. In packs. Then, we have spinosaurs like the eponymous Spinosaurus, which, despite being often taken lightly due to their fish-catching lifestyle, were able to outcompete SuperCroc in its own game (better at being crocodiles that crocodiles themselves, Suchomimus was aptly named), and dealt with freshwater coelacanths and sharks like storks do with trout. Not to mention that Spinosaurus reached almost 1.5 times the size of T. rex or Giga, despite a lighter and more awkward build. Pretty useful when you live in a hot, muggy swamp with two rex-sized predator species running around.
    • Ultimately, it's an exercise in futility to argue which dinosaur was truly the most Badass; paleontologists only ever get into the question when doing shows like Jurassic Fight Club, and we should probably remember that all these theropods were probably pretty successful at what they had evolved to do. That being said, T. rex was a very sophisticated predator very well suited to taking out prey animals quickly and efficiently. Tyrannosaurs as a group were also pretty Badass, outcompeting all other predators wherever they went; by the time the meteor was just about to hit, the allosaurs were virtually extinct in North America and Asia, and even the dromaeosaurs were mostly reduced to being coyote-analogues, the bigger raptors having been outcompeted in the big game niche by the tyrannosaurs and carcharodontosaurs. We may make fun of T. rex and tyrannosaurs as being old news, but they were the ultimate upstarts of their time, starting out as lowly coelurosaurs and methodically making their way up to the top.
      • Largest carnivore from the Hell Creek formation: Elephant-sized Tyrannosaurus. Second largest (dinosaurian[1]) carnivore from said formation: Beaver-sized Saurornitholestes. Draw your own conclusion.
    • There is evidence that T. rex and other tyrannosaurs hunted in packs as well. Specifically, two relatives of T. rex, Albertosaurus and Daspletosaurus, have a few bonebeds consisting of multiple individuals fossilized together, and the most famous Tyrannosaurus specimen, Sue, was found with the fragmentary remains of another T. rex. Also the largest known Mapusaurus skeleton has a frame quite lighter that that of Tyrannosaurus.
    • While it IS true that there were bigger carnivores like the Spinosaurus and Giganotosaurus, the T. rex was unmatched for the sheer strength it had with its jaw. In fact, the scene in JP3, where the spinosaur slips out of the T. rex's jaw would never have happened had they actually fought; the T. rex jaw evolved specifically to crush the bones of other large dinosaurs and even penetrate the natural body armor of creatures like Triceratops. A real-life confrontation would have the spinosaur's neck crushed as soon as Rex got its jaws around it. For a long time, T. rex was believed to have the strongest bite force of all time, only recently being dethroned by an enormous sea-dwelling reptile nicknamed "Predator X".
    • Also T. rex had probably the biggest brain to body size ratio out of all the similar and slightly larger sized carnivorous dinosaurs. It was, in fact, likely one of the smarter dinosaurs, though not the smartest of all (that would be the much smaller Troodon), and definitely one of the smartest large dinosaurs, which has led some to speculate that it possessed a more complex suite of hunting and fighting behaviors that might have given it an advantage in a hypothetical one-on-one battle with another large theropod. That's right, T. rex was a Genius Bruiser among dinosaurs.
      • Other large theropods were no pushovers when it came to intelligence, either. While not as smart as T. rex, they were still more intelligent than crocodiles, which are not stupid, contrary to popular belief. Crocodiles are just little less intelligent than dogs. You can actually teach them tricks (if you're badass enough to teach tricks to animal that can freaking eat you that is). Most theropods being smarter than that and T.rex being smarter than other theropods...
      • Dinosaur intelligence gets overstated a lot. Even the smartest dinosaurs probably only got about as smart as ostriches, not very brainy compared to modern animals, only about half as smart as a cat or dog. This is one of the reasons the hunting in packs is still very controversial. Birdbrains are, at least in some aspects, better "designed" than those of mammals, but even then T. Rex, while smarter than most earlier large theropods, was no supergenius.
    • There's also evidence that T. rex had exceptional sensory perception, including an absurdly good sense of smell, meaning it could have been able to find and track prey from miles away without the prey even knowing it was being followed.
    • It's recently been determined through computer analysis of their body structure that T. rex probably grew much faster and to greater weight than was previously believed. Which actually matches up pretty well with its on-screen depiction in Jurassic Park.
  • A primitive Tyrannosauroid named Yutyrannus was discovered in China, which was found to have had feathers. It lived 50 million years before T. rex in a cool climate, and had a more extensive feathery coat than smaller basal coelurosaurs. Though smaller than Albertosaurus, at around a ton it's still the largest dinosaur confirmed to have had feathers.
  1. The pterosaur Quetzalcoatlus was larger than Saurornitholestes and had a wingspan as long as T.rex's entire body, but no one cares because it's not a dinosaur. Nonetheless, there was a lack of medium-sized predatory dinosaurs at the end of the Late Cretaceous wherever tyrannosaurids roamed.