The game's dinosaur AI also tends to bug when a creature is trapped in structures and the creature may lose functions such as attacking or aggroing the player and other creatures. When trapped around structures the Carcharodontosaurus can have a hard time eating the food you bring it because the structures get in the way of it reaching the food. Trapping Carcharodontosaurus might not be an ideal strategy to initiate taming. To tame such a magnificently strong creature, one must show trust by offering it food. The Carcharodontosaurus can only be tamed non-violently rather than through knockout methods. Additionally, tamed Carchardontosaurus will gain stacks of Bloodrage for each kill it gets, increasing its damage and health regeneration. Survivors utilizing tamed Carcharodontosaurus may use its Tail Whip attack which boasts great knockback to even the largest creatures. The best way to take down a Carcharodontosaurus is to use a similar strategy as the Giga and lead it into water and attack it from below with a strong aquatic tame.Īlternatively, powerful flyers such as the Fire Wyvern and Lightning Wyvern (with points into melee damage) can safely kill a Carcharodontosaurus with their special attacks as they can avoid getting hit. Once it scores a kill, it will enter a temporary Killing Frenzy, drastically increasing its already great movement speed. Its bite attack will apply the Shredding debuff which is indicated by a blue smoke effect. In the wild, Carcharodontosaurus will mercilessly roam the lands, killing everything it sees. They are significantly stronger than most Alpha creatures such as Alpha Rex and even an Alpha Wyvern and can decimate dozens of tames if a survivor is unprepared. Hence, engaging one directly is suicide unless you have an exceptionally powerful tame with an ascendant saddle. Level 1 wild Carcharodontosaurus is powerful enough to kill even Bosses such as the Broodmother and Megapithecus in their Gamma forms, and a Level 150 can kill the Beta Broodmother and lose just half its health. The Carcharodontosaurus is a ferocious fighter comparable to the likes of the Giganotosaurus itself. On application, Incited gives a temporary boost to movement speed, with an increased duration for every stack of Bloodrage converted to apply it capping out at 55 seconds for 100 stacks of Bloodrage. On roaring, any and all stacks of Bloodrage are consumed to provide the Incited buff to all nearby allies, but not the Carcha itself (other allied Carchas can provide the buff to each other, however). The higher the base health of the enemy killed, the more stacks gained per kill. Bloodrage degrades slowly at first, but if the Carcha goes so long without a kill, it begins to degrade faster until either 0 stacks are reached or the effect is refreshed by a new kill. Unlike Killing Frenzy, Bloodrage is not locked to a timer and grows progressively stronger and longer-lasting stacking on itself up to 100 times. Gained alongside Killing Frenzy by landing fatal blows, Bloodrage similarly provides two buffs boosting the Carcha's healing rate and melee damage by 1.75% per stack. Every kill the Carcha lands refreshes Killing Frenzy's timer, but does not extend it. On landing a fatal blow, the Carcha gains the Killing Frenzy buff for 10 seconds which boosts movement speed and makes the Carcha immune to stuns for the duration. Provides both the Killing Frenzy and Bloodrage buffs on fatal blows. Can be aimed to the left or right to spin clockwise or counter-clockwise respectively. The Carcha spins, lashing all opponents around it with its tail and knocking them back.The more tactical tribes will let their Carcharodontosaurus tear through the mid-sized creatures in their enemy’s ranks, thereby building up its bloodrage to take on the largest threats. There’s something about this monster’s roar that drives others to fight - a war cry for Hell’s own army. DomesticatedĪnyone that manages to tame a Carcharodontosaurus will gain a new way to rally their tribe for battle. Each kill seems to give these monsters a rush and drive it into a berserker frenzy. Like its namesake the great white shark, Carcharodontosaurus gets more dangerous once it tastes blood. Even a near-miss will carve you up, but good. It has teeth like steak knives, set in jaws strong enough to shred most prey. Just one of these bruisers held its own against an army of us, and that encounter cost us dearly.Ĭarcharodontosaurus can sweep aside attackers with its tail, but it’s the other end you’ll really want to avoid. Though I’m not sure if this predator grows bigger than a Giganotosaurus, I hope never to find out. I feel lucky to have crossed paths with Carcharodontosaurus medicupestis and lived to tell the tale.
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