Saturday, May 2, 2026

Terrosaur Badlands - Part 6 - Non Dinosaur Fauna and other dangers

 

Ashwing Teal


 “Don’t spook the fire duck unless you like your eyebrows cooked off.”
— Stumpy MacGee, fanning his singed tendrils

Species: Anas cinerispyra
Common Name: Fire Duck, Ashwing Teal
Habitat: Geothermal marshes, fossil steam vents, volcanic seep wetlands

Now here’s a bird with the good manners to look ridiculous right before it sets the scenery on edge. The Ashwing Teal, known to every sensible Badlands traveller as the Fire Duck, is a compact wetland bird found haunting the hotter corners of the Terrorsaur Badlands—those steamy reedbeds, bubbling seep-pools, and mineral marshes where the ground hisses if you stand still too long. Its feathers are laced with strange geothermal salts and trace arcane minerals, giving the plumage a permanent scorched-cinnamon sheen and causing it to smoulder rather than burn when the bird is alarmed, courting, or in a particularly foul mood. This trick helps regulate body heat in the steaming wetlands, but it also makes the Ashwing Teal a surprisingly effective little terror: when threatened, it can flare its feathers in a sudden burst of smokeless heat and blinding shimmer, startling predators, boiling off mites and leeches, and reminding everyone present that evolution has a wicked sense of humour.

Bone Beasts


“Ain’t nothin’ natural about a centaur made of ceratopsian bones that screams in your brain before it charges. I once saw a hydra made of femurs try to swallow itself to add heads. These things are dead wrong.” — Stumpy MacGee, field cryptonaturalist

Bone Beasts are what happen when the Badlands stop keeping their dead buried. Born from leyline misfires, rogue psionic surges, or the busy hands of fossil-cults with far too much free time, these reanimated dinosaur skeletons are not tidy undead restored to proper form—they’re broken, reassembled nightmares built with artistic cruelty and geological spite. Some still move with fragments of ancient instinct, stalking like hunters or bunching like herds, but most have been twisted into impossible arrangements of horn, rib, claw, and shrieking bone that weaponize terror as readily as tooth and talon. Worse, they don’t just attack the body. Bone Beasts radiate psychic echoes of the extinction events that made them, flooding nearby minds with flashes of comet-fire, choking ash, trampling panic, and the deep, ancestral certainty that something enormous is about to kill everything. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, a fresh Bone Beast outbreak is less a haunting than a geological panic attack with legs.

Bonepiper Plover (“Death Pipers”)



 “Now that’s a bird with a song you don’t forget. I once heard one whistle up a whole ribcage choir!” — Stumpy MacGee, nature host and part-time cryptkeeper

In the Terrorsaur Badlands, the Bonepiper Plover—or Death Piper, if you’ve got any sense—haunts fossil beds, dried river deltas, and old bonefields where the land is more skeleton than soil. These pale little shorebirds are marked with shifting, rune-like feather patterns, and their eerie piping calls carry a nasty necromantic resonance that sets nearby bones to trembling like they’ve just remembered an appointment. Bonepipers don’t merely scavenge a dead place; they conduct it. When alarmed or defending a nest, their song can rattle loose bone piles into snapping skeletal guardians, and a whole flock can turn a quiet fossil flat into a clattering miniature apocalypse. Worse still, their music sometimes calls up strange bone-constructs from no known species at all, as though the song itself remembers creatures older than the fossil record bothered to keep.  

Burrowjackers


“They ain't just badgers anymore. They're landmines with fur and opinions.” — Stumpy MacGee, after falling into a badger-dug oubliette

The Burrowjackers are what became of the humble American badger after too many generations spent digging through tainted soil, fossil seams, and the psychic leftovers of a broken world. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, these broad-clawed little nightmares no longer think entirely as individuals. Whole warrens link together through a low, ugly hum of shared instinct and echo-memory, forming sprawling underground mind-webs that remember vibrations, scents, grudges, and the exact location of every fool who ever stomped over their ceiling. The result is less a colony than a buried conspiracy: a maze of tunnels, bolt-holes, trap chambers, and sudden collapses directed by something very close to a collective will.

Coal Wight (Mineral Revenant)



 “You ever seen a shadow weep smoke? Ever smelled sorrow that burns? If you hear coughin' in the dark and the walls start sweatin’ tar — leave. That ain’t no echo.” — Stumpy MacGee, field cryptonaturalist

The Coal Wight is what happens when a mine keeps the dead on shift. Born from cave-ins, underground fires, bad air, broken promises, and the sort of greed that usually ends with someone saying “we should’ve listened,” these soot-weeping revenants haunt the collapsed seams and buried shafts of the Terrorsaur Badlands like walking industrial curses. Their bones glow faintly from within, their eye sockets smolder ember-red, and every movement leaves behind the stink of ash, tar, and old grief cooked into stone. Some lash out at anything living with blind furnace-rage, but others keep to their posts like grim sentries, guarding ley-veins, fossil vaults, or forgotten gateways to the Hallowed World with the dutiful misery of men who never got to clock out.

Laser Gopher



“prairie dogs with the confidence of dragons and the civic spirit of saboteurs.”

The Laser Gopher is what happens when an ordinary prairie tunneler gets exposed to too much Badlands weirdness and comes out the other side convinced that agriculture is a personal insult. These glossy golden pests live in sprawling underground colonies beneath grasslands, ruins, and especially crop fields, where they chew roots, undermine wagon paths, and pop out of nowhere to loose little bursts of psychic light at anything larger than themselves. One by itself is mostly a nuisance with delusions of grandeur; a whole colony is a blinking, chirping, hole-riddled menace that can turn a peaceful field into a deathtrap for livestock, vehicles, and the inattentive.

Merlynix (aka “Spellhawk”)



“I saw one swoop down over a broken hoodoo and steal the incantation right out of a wizard’s mouth. Left him sputtering like a bad kettle!” — Stumpy MacGee

The Merlynix, better known across the Badlands as the Spellhawk, is a twitchy little terror of cliff edges, ley ridges, and fossil thermals, built like a bird of prey and tempered by raw sorcery. Its plumage shifts in subtle flashes of colour when magic is near, as though the creature were reading the air for arcane weather, and woe betide the careless caster who mistakes it for decorative wildlife. Spellhawks don’t merely sense magic—they peck at it, swallow it, and sometimes spit it back out in ways the original wizard never intended. Most are clever, elusive, and only as troublesome as a clever flying weasel with a graduate degree in spell interference, but the tainted ones are another matter entirely, becoming ragged omens of corrupted arcana and necrotic sky-madness. Ranchers, outriders, and hedge-mages prize bonded Merlynix as scouts and warning birds.

Shrike-Giant



“Never trust a songbird that decorates. If you find a tree covered in bones, jerky, belt buckles, and one boot with the foot still in it, congratulations — you’ve found a shrike pantry.” — Stumpy MacGee

The Giant Shrike is what happens when the already unsettling logic of the loggerhead shrike gets promoted from “tiny horror” to “full-sized airborne serial problem.” Still grey, sharp-eyed, and deceptively handsome in that clean predatory way, this oversized butcher bird haunts the Badlands as a territorial hunter, trophy-staker, and professional impaler of anything it considers edible, threatening, or just worth making a point about. Like its smaller cousins, it pins prey on thorns, spikes, broken rebar, fence wire, cactus spines, and whatever else the wasteland offers, partly to tear it apart more easily and partly, Stumpy suspects, because some creatures simply enjoy interior decorating. Worse, Giant Shrikes often hunt in mated pairs, using quick feints, ambush dives, and the psychological warfare of letting you notice the previous victims before they go for your kidneys. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, a patch of ground that looks like a ritual site may in fact be something much worse: a bird’s idea of organization.

Shuffalo


“You ain’t truly respected the prairie till you’ve seen three tons of teleporting bad attitude appear where your fence used to be.” — Sparky Smith

The Shuffalo is one of those magnificent Badlands beasts that looks like nature lost a bet and accidentally won anyway: part buffalo, part elephant, all prairie catastrophe. With the trunk, tusks, and broad-footed heft of an elephant married to the shoulders, horns, and storm-herd temper of a buffalo, these hulking grazers roam the grasslands in enormous herds that can turn a peaceful horizon into a dust cloud, a thunder roll, and then a property damage report. Worse—or better, depending on how far away you’re standing—Shuffalo don’t just stampede. They skip, vanishing and reappearing in short-range bursts among bison, deer, and whatever else is unlucky enough to be nearby, turning an ordinary herd panic into the kind of prairie quake that makes even big predators reconsider their life choices. Smarter than they look and nosier than they ought to be, Shuffalo are notorious for opening gates, stealing feed, hiding tools, and somehow materializing in places no beast that size has any business standing. Out in the Hodgepocalypse, a Shuffalo herd isn’t just wildlife — it’s weather with tusks.

Tricktail Echo



“Now I know what yer thinkin'. That wasn’t your voice callin’ from the dry creekbed. Or maybe it was. ‘Cause these ain’t just coyotes… they’re mirrors with teeth.” — Stumpy MacGee, holding his breath on a moonless ridge

The Tricktail Echo is the Badlands coyote after the land itself taught it how to lie properly. Lean, clever, and mean in that hungry prairie way, these psychic scavenger-predators haunt coulees, canyon rims, and abandoned trail lines where old emotions seem to stick in the stone. A Tricktail doesn’t merely howl — it replays, pulling scraps of fear, grief, longing, or memory out of the land and casting them back in borrowed voices to lure prey off the path and into ambush ground. Sometimes it sounds like a lost friend, sometimes a crying dog, sometimes your own voice asking a question you haven’t said aloud yet. Stumpy MacGee insists that ordinary coyotes are already smart enough to make a man feel judged, but Tricktails add theatre to the insult, hunting with all the patience of a ghost story and all the practicality of something that fully intends to eat whoever comes looking.

Whip-Tail Whisperer


If you hear that tail a’tappin’, best plug your ears and run. That ain’t a warning—it’s an invitation.” — Stumpy MacGee

The Whip-Tail Whisperer is the Badlands’ answer to the prairie rattlesnake: low to the ground, beautifully patterned, cool as a tax collector, and possessed of the deeply unfair ability to frighten you with both biology and psychic sabotage at once. Like real rattlesnakes, it warns before it strikes, senses heat with eerie precision, and favours dry coulees, rocky washes, and sun-baked hiding places where an unwary boot might wander too close. But          the Whisperer’s tail does more than buzz. Its rattle throbs at a brain-deep frequency that slips past the ears and rattles the memory itself, leaving victims reeling with false recollections, ancestral terror, or visions of ancient things thrashing in mud long before people ever learned to scream properly.


Widow’s Choir



“They don’t sing with voices, mind you. They hum in code. And they remember.” — Stumpy MacGee, whispering through a torn-up flyscreen

The Widow’s Choir is what happens when a black widow stops being content with venom and decides to get into communications infrastructure. These glossy, red-marked little horrors string their webs through under bridges, wrecked vehicles, relay towers, culverts, and any other place where metal, tension, and bad decisions tend to collect, spinning not just traps but living signal nets that carry vibration like haunted telegraph wire. A whole brood can lace a ruin into a humming lattice of stolen sound, replaying old radio calls, emergency broadcasts, engine noise, arguments, prayers, and half-heard pleas for help with unnerving clarity and absolutely no respect for context. They don’t claw around in your head as some Badlands nasties do; they tamper with your sense of what’s real, which is honestly ruder.


#Worldbuilding #FantasyWriting #Scifi #PostApocalyptic #CreativeWriting #Storytelling #IndieCreator #SpeculativeFiction #TTRPG #DnD #DnD5e #TabletopRPG #GameMaster #DungeonMaster #RPGCommunity #Homebrew #Hodgepocalypse #TerrorsaurBadlands #DinosaurHorror #WeirdWest #CosmicHorror #MonsterDesign #ApocalypseWorld #DarkFantasy #Alberta #ExploreAlberta #CanadianCreator #Drumheller #Badlands #canada #dinosaurs

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Terrosaur Badlands - Part 5 - Flora

 


Welcome back to another episode of Wild & Weird with Stumpy MacGee — where the critters bite, the magic burns, and the survival rate’s just high enough to make you cocky.”

Beyond the Beasts with Beaks: Non-Dinosaur Life in the Terrorsaur Badlands

While most eyes drift to the towering tyrants and feathered sprinters of the Badlands, it’s often the smaller wildlife that’ll get you killed faster than a preacher in a raptor pit. The Terrorsaur Badlands are teeming with creatures not born from fossils, but forged by centuries of arcane fallout, tainted dreamstuff, and sheer spiteful adaptation. These are the scavengers, burrowers, flyers, and lurkers that learned to survive in a land of bone storms, psychic tremors, and things with too many teeth.

So before we get back to the big thunder-lizards, let’s spare a little respect for the rest of the food chain. From smouldering waterfowl to whispering spiders and golden gophers with a grudge against agriculture, the non-dinosaur life of the Badlands is every bit as strange, dangerous, and ecologically important as the great saurians themselves. And today’s specimen is a fine example of that principle: a bird that already looked halfway magical before the Hodgepocalypse got its claws into it.

Absolutely — let’s give the Cinnamon Teal the Hodgepocalypse glow-up it deserves.

Flora

Fangroot


Now this nasty customer looks like what happens when a respectable Badlands shrub decides it’s tired of being stepped on. Likely descended from tough prairie riverbank plants with aggressive root systems—something in the cottonwood-and-silverberry school of botanical grudge-holding—Fangroot thrives in eroded slopes, coulee walls, and old washouts where its roots get exposed to open air. Over time, those roots harden into pale, curved structures like buried tusks or a half-open jaw, turning an innocent bit of ground into something that looks hungry even before it starts moving. Most patches just snag boots, trip pack animals, and make a nuisance of themselves, but the older growths have a habit of tightening, twitching, or snapping shut on anything warm that strays too close. Stumpy MacGee describes Fangroot as “nature’s way of adding teeth to the landscape,” which is funny right up until the landscape bites back.

Ghostsage


Now this is the smell of the prairie right here—real sagebrush, all dusty resilience and sharp perfume, the sort of plant that survives drought, wind, neglect, and the general bad attitude of the open plains. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, it becomes Ghostsage, a wiry grey-green shrub whose scent doesn’t just freshen the air—it rattles the mind. Crush it underfoot or catch a hot wind blowing through a patch, and you might find yourself knee-deep in somebody else’s memory: a buffalo run, a bone storm, a long-dead ranch road, or the unpleasant sensation that the land itself is remembering you back. Most of the time it’s harmless, if unsettling. Other times it creates full-blown psychic interference zones where trackers lose direction, mounts get nervous, and sensible folk start talking to the horizon. Stumpy MacGee, naturally, loves the stuff, though he does recommend taking notes in a hurry before the vision wears off and you forget whether you were following a trail or being politely haunted by a bush.

Glintweed


Now here’s a proper Badlands charmer: based on wild buckwheat (Eriogonum flavum), a tough little plant that hugs dry slopes and gravelly ground where softer greenery gives up and dies dramatic. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, it’s become Glintweed, a low creeping patch of warm gold blossoms and faintly luminous stems that shimmer like buried treasure at dusk. Ranchers and trail scouts use it to mark safe paths through coulees, while less honest folk plant it to lure curious beasts exactly where they want them. The roots are the real prize, mind you—boiled right, they make a handy little field tonic for cuts, strain, and the general condition of being trampled by prehistoric nonsense. Of course, Stumpy MacGee will tell you any plant that glows in the dark is either helpful, hungry, or trying to introduce you to something with more teeth than manners.

Mindfescue


Now this unassuming little brute is based on rough fescue, one of the true backbone grasses of the prairie—the sort of plant nobody writes songs about until they realize half the ecosystem falls over without it. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, that humble foundation species has become Mindfescue, a dense blue-green living carpet that doesn’t just bind soil and feed grazers, but quietly stores impressions, energies, and the occasional bad idea like a botanical memory bank. Step through a thick patch and you may feel a flicker of someone else’s thoughts, a passing herd-route, or the land itself trying to remember what used to live there. Most of the time it just hums beneath the world, tied into fungal threads, root webs, and old psychic spoor like nature’s own buried switchboard. But when disturbed in quantity—or riled by blood, magic, or stampede—it can lash up in twitching, cutting waves that make a body regret ever underestimating grass.

Rift Crocus


Now there’s a flower with a sense of timing. Based on the prairie crocus, that fuzzy little early bloomer that has the nerve to shove through cold ground before the rest of the prairie’s even awake, the Terrorsaur Badlands version is known as Rift Crocus. It’s a small violet blossom with silver hairs and a stubborn streak a mile wide, popping up in the most unlikely places—snowmelt, cracked clay, old bonefields, even the edge of places sensible people describes as “mildly dimensionally unstable.” Folks in the Badlands say when Rift Crocus starts blooming somewhere new, either hope is returning or trouble’s about to arrive wearing a very dramatic hat. Some trackers use it as a sign of safe water or ambient magic, while others know it marks thin places where visions, portals, or stranger things may soon follow. Stumpy MacGee, of course, loves the little thing on principle: any flower that blooms through hardship and still manages to look cheerful is either a hero, a warning, or both.

Sawblade Grama



Now this innocent-looking patch is based on blue grama, one of the great workhorse grasses of the prairie—drought-tough, grazer-friendly, and stubborn enough to outlive weather, hooves, and human optimism. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, though, it’s become Sawblade Grama, a wiry blue-green grass whose edges harden into razor-fine mineral sheens sharp enough to slice a boot, score leather, or leave an unwary beast looking mighty embarrassed. It grows fast after rain, ley surges, or blood in the soil, and whole stands of it can turn a simple crossing into a slow, careful dance of swearing and bandaging. Grazing herds still feed around it, mind you—they’ve just learned to part it with horn, claw, or sheer stubborn bulk, carving little game trails through the blades like living plows.

Singeberry


Now here’s a shrub with a mean little sense of humour. Based on buffaloberry (Shepherdia canadensis), a native berry-bearing plant long valued by wildlife and people alike, the Badlands version is known as Singeberry—a scrubby silver-leafed bush with bright red-orange fruit that looks inviting right up until it lights your insides like a forge. Eaten raw, the berries send a flush of heat through the body strong enough to warm a rancher on a cold watch, wake up a sluggish mutant, or leave an unprepared fool panting smoke and regretting every life choice that led to berry theft. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, they’re prized by pyrokinetic drifters, IsoChamps, and anyone who thinks “medicinal” should include the possibility of mild internal combustion. Stumpy MacGee, being a responsible naturalist, will tell you Singeberries are useful in careful doses and memorable in careless ones—which is about as glowing a review as you’ll get from a plant that can season your supper and cauterize your dignity at the same time.

Spikeheart Bloom


Now there’s a proper Badlands survivor: the prickly pear cactus (Opuntia polyacantha), a squat, spiny brute that can handle blazing summers, freezing winters, and still throw up a crown of bright yellow flowers like it’s attending a garden party out of spite. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, it becomes Spikeheart Bloom, a thick-padded cactus that stores precious moisture in its flesh—along with a nasty reserve of acidic sap, alchemical sludge, or whatever else the land’s been stewing into it lately. Disturb one carelessly, and it can burst like a grudge with spines, juice, and regret in every direction, which is why clever ranchers use it as a living trap against raiders, scavengers, and anything small enough to learn a painful lesson. Stumpy MacGee respects the sort of plant that looks mean, survives everything, and still finds time to bloom pretty—though he’ll also warn you that anything in the Badlands storing liquid is either useful, poisonous, explosive, or all three at once.

Whisper Sage


Now this scraggly little wonder is based on prairie sagewort—Artemisia frigida—a hardy silver-green plant of the plains and badlands, prized for its sharp scent and long practical use. Sage and related plants hold deep significance across the prairies, including among the Blackfoot, where they’re treated with respect in cleansing and ceremony. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, that stubborn little herb has become Whisper Sage, a grey-green shrub that trembles without wind and releases silver spores when disturbed. Ranchers say it can calm a spooked herd; trackers say the wrong patch will leave you lost, confused, and arguing with stones. Around Whisper Sage, dinosaurs slow down, psychic predators go glassy-eyed, and Stumpy MacGee will tell you the same thing every time: anything that whispers in the Badlands is either useful, dangerous, or both.

#Worldbuilding #FantasyWriting #Scifi #PostApocalyptic #CreativeWriting #Storytelling #IndieCreator #SpeculativeFiction #TTRPG #DnD #DnD5e #TabletopRPG #GameMaster #DungeonMaster #RPGCommunity #Homebrew #Hodgepocalypse #TerrorsaurBadlands #DinosaurHorror #WeirdWest #CosmicHorror #MonsterDesign #ApocalypseWorld #DarkFantasy #Alberta #ExploreAlberta #CanadianCreator #Drumheller #Badlands #canada #dinosaurs

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Terrosaur Badlands - Part 4 - Dinosaur Ranching

 


 The dinosaurs of the Badlands don’t arrive gently.

They erupt.

First as tainted horrors clawing their way out of fossil beds and blood-soaked coulees—then, slowly, painfully, as something else. Something understood. Something tamed.

What began as desperate survival has become one of the most iconic industries in post-Manaclysm North America:

Dino-Ranching.



From featherback outriders to hornback plough teams, the Badlands are among the few places on Earth where humanity breeds, rides, and works alongside dinosaurs—turning extinction into an economy and terror into tradition.

Culture and Customs

Dino-ranching isn’t just a job. It’s a belief system.

The Three Tenets of the Ranchers:

  1. “Never turn your back on a raptor.”
    Even domesticated ones need daily respect rituals.
  2. “Feathers mean feelings.”
    Ranchers learn to read the mood via feather movement and colour.
  3. “Every corral is a cathedral.”
    These aren't just pens—they’re sacred spaces where man and beast bond.

Common Domesticated Dinosaurs

Species

Role

Notes

Featherback Runners (Dromaeosaurid)

Mounts / Scouts

Fast, intelligent, and bond strongly to one rider.

Beakmaws (Hadrosaurs)

Livestock

Used for meat, milk, and hides. “Cowosaurs.”

Hornbacks (Ceratopsians)

Labor / Ploughing

Used like oxen; often with embedded ritual armour.

Screecher-Chicks (Small Ornithomimids)

Alarm Pets

Sing when danger or demons approach.

Shellback Juggernauts (Ankylosaurs)

Mobile Walls

Rare. Used in caravan defence or to break sieges.

Factions & Rivalries


The Bone Spurs



Nomadic ranch-barons roaming in mobile caravan forts.
They trade in meat, blood, and hatchlings—and aren’t above rustling or egg theft to stay ahead.

The Ember Brand



A ritual guild that binds dinosaurs through flame and glyph-scar branding.
Their marks ensure loyalty—but at a cost few beasts would choose willingly

The Feathered Circle



Riders who claim to speak with the first dinosaurs through dreamtime.
They calm even terrorsaurs through song, whisper, and psychic resonance.

Anti-Dinosaur Survival Techniques in the Terrorsaur Badlands

In the wake of the Hodgepocalypse, survival in the Badlands demanded more than grit — it demanded innovation. Drawing on ancient instincts and prairie wisdom, the ranchers and settlers of southern Alberta have developed practical methods to defend themselves from the thunder of claw and horn.

1.     Stink Bombs



Crude chemical blends (or fermented gland extracts) confuse a dinosaur's magneto-receptive and scent-based tracking systems. Ranchers often keep them loaded in clay pots near entrances or stitched into saddlebags for quick dispersal.

Alberta Variant: Coal tar & sagebrush mix, mimicking volcanic sulphur emissions — particularly repellent to tainted species.

2.     Noise Weapons



Sharp cracks from percussion staves, thunderclapshells, or even electrified branding rods can disorient a charging predator — but must be used sparingly. A startled Beakmaw herd might stampede straight through a fence line.

Tip from the Bone Spurs: “Use sound to steer, not scare.”

3.     Raised Housing & Coulee Cabins



Most dinosaurs don’t look up. Homesteads are often built on raised stilts, grain silos, or even atop fossil dig berms. Coulee-ridge bunkers are also popular — blending elevation with natural stone outcrops for passive defence.

Rural Trick: Use broken silo domes as elevated watch perches and nesting deterrents.

4.     Layered Perimeter Defences



Traditional Alberta ranching used fencing, windbreaks, and corral gates — but in the Badlands, these evolve into mudbrick palisades, bone-embedded walls, and trap-lane kill funnels.

Effective designs use interlocking buffalo bone, rebar stakes, and calcified hide panels from fallen dinos.

5.     Warding Posts



Every ranch maintains feathered posts daubed with scent sigils and prey-mimic gestures. These totems warn off wild saurians or redirect them away from the scent of domesticated kin.

Superstition or science? The Feathered Circle claims these mimic dreamtime “non-prey zones.”

Bonus: The Feather Wall Ritual

Some ranches hang moulted feathers of bonded dinosaurs along fences. This calms feral types, suggesting claimed territory and a stable hierarchy.

Dino-Ranch Layout in the Terrorsaur Badlands


Design Philosophy

“Defend in layers. Bond in trust. And never look a raptor in the eyes unless you mean it.”

The layout of these ranches reflects both practical survival and a growing symbiosis between humanity and dinosaurkind, even in the face of mutation, demonic corruption, and Badlands entropy.

1.     The Perch (Ranch House & Watchtower)



Perched high atop an outcropping, fossil ridge, or artificial plateau, the ranch house—often called the Perch—is built from scavenged steel, fossilcrete, and stone to withstand both storm and stampede. It serves as more than a home, combining living quarters with a watchtower and sniper nest, because in the Badlands you sleep with one eye open. From its elevated vantage, weathervanes, feather flags, and magneto-compass relays turn constantly in the wind, tracking migrating herds, shifting weather, and the ominous drift of taintstorms across the horizon.

Inspiration: Alberta ranch homes with wraparound porches—except these overlook ceratopsian corrals, not cattle pastures.

2.     Kill Funnel Corrals



The kill funnel corrals are multi-layered defensive enclosures built from fossilized log palisades, barbed bone fencing, and mud-brick bunkers etched with flamethrower runes. Designed to control the chaos of the Badlands, these structures channel predators into narrow, deliberate pathways where trained dinosaurs, mounted riders, and carefully placed traps lie in wait. Along the perimeter, totem poles and feather-wards mark the boundaries, signalling territory and dominance to more intelligent or magically attuned saurians—sometimes deterring them, sometimes merely warning them what they’re about to face.

Modern Parallel: Think cattle chutes for managing herds—but with landmines and psychic wards.

3.     The Branding Pit (Control & Bonding Zone)



The Branding Pit is a sacred and volatile space where ranchers forge the bond between human and dinosaur through ritual, fire, and will. Set beside geothermal vents, magically infused furnaces, or even captured spell-fire, it serves as the site for brand-scar ceremonies, pheromone imprinting, and other acts of dominance and trust. Here, branding is more than control—it is a spiritual act, marking allegiance, consent, and, in many cases, a beast’s resistance to demonic corruption. Most commonly associated with the Ember Brand faction, these pits are overseen by ritualists and glyph-mages who understand that every mark burned into flesh carries both power and consequence.

Analogue: Branding corrals in cowboy culture, but laced with arcane dread and psychic residue.

4.     Mobile Herding Units (Rover Stables)


Mobile herding units are the backbone of nomadic dino-handling, with crews traveling in rugged wagon-forts or track-mounted sheds that follow the shifting paths of migratory herds. Built for flexibility and survival, these units are outfitted with modular containment pods, directional noise emitters for steering or scattering beasts, and molting comb racks to manage feathers and maintain herd health on the move. Most are staffed by Bone Spurs caravans or hardened freelance rustlers—people who live their lives in motion, chasing profit, survival, and the ever-moving thunder of the herds.

Real-world basis: The mobile chuckwagons and trapper camps of Alberta’s past.

5.     Nest Fields & Foraging Gardens



Nest fields and foraging grounds are carefully managed spaces where rotational grazing is essential to prevent land overuse and the spread of mutagenic contamination. Certain species, such as beakmaws, are given room to dig wallows or shape shallow nesting sites, reinforcing natural behaviours that keep the herd stable and healthy. To protect these areas, ranchers cultivate hardy guard herbs like hellroot and barbed thistle, whose scents and properties help deter invasive threats such as demon-wasps and parasitic monkeyleeches.

Agrarian Parallel: Alberta’s rotational grazing and “back-to-the-land” permaculture movements, updated for arcane resilience.

6.     Defence Stations



Defence stations are strategically placed throughout the ranch to monitor and respond to tainted incursions or rogue terrorsaurs, taking the form of turret towers, concealed sniper blinds, and clicker-signal nests that relay warnings across the property. Rangers and sharpshooters coordinate from these positions, using trained featherback signalers and scent-mimics to divert or mislead incoming threats before they reach the herds. Many stations are equipped with additional safeguards, including emergency moulting shelters to calm panicked dinosaurs, salt pits designed to absorb blood-taint or necrotic bile, and glyph mines keyed to psionic movement—ensuring that even unseen dangers can be detected and dealt with swiftly.

Parallel: RCMP-era outposts but crossed with Monster Hunter bunkers.

Plot Hooks

Egg Heist! A rival ranch has smuggled a clutch of hornback eggs—what’s growing inside isn’t natural.

Mating Season Madness: A wild fea

therback herd in heat has wandered near town, and they’ve attracted a tainted alpha.

The Stampede Oracle: A molting dino leaves prophetic symbols in its shed feathers. Locals interpret it as a sign of apocalypse—or power.

A Demon in the Corrals: One of the ranch dinos has started whispering. It knows your name.

 


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