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This one's about testing whether dinosaurs or aquatic predators can actually hunt down a fish swarm that keeps growing in numbers throughout the encounter. The fish school starts out manageable, but their population scales up continuously. What begins as something both predator types can handle turns into a situation where they're dealing with overwhelming numbers that use pure mass and coordination to overwhelm anything in their way. The setup puts both dinosaurs and aquatic hunters in the same environment so I can see which predator type adapts better to this specific threat. Dinosaurs have size and power but they're operating in water where mobility is limited. Aquatic predators move naturally in this environment but they're facing prey that's smaller and faster, relying on numbers instead of individual strength. What makes this interesting is watching how the dynamic shifts as the fish population grows. Early on, the predators might be picking off targets easily. But as the swarm gets denser, it becomes harder to isolate individual fish, and the sheer volume starts creating problems — blocking vision, surrounding predators, and basically turning into a living obstacle that moves as one unit. I'm curious whether either predator type finds a strategy that works even as the numbers keep climbing, or if there's just a threshold where the swarm becomes too much regardless of what's hunting them. No predetermined outcome. Just letting the fish population scale naturally and seeing which predator approach — if either — can keep functioning effectively once the numbers get extreme. No real animals — testing how different predator types handle prey that uses overwhelming numerical advantage as its primary defense. The content here is aimed at a general audience interested in strategic battles, power comparisons, evolutionary stages, and realistic creature encounters. This channel does not use simplified themes or styles for very young audiences. #dinosaurs #dinosaurs Thumbnails are for illustrative purposes only and may not accurately represent the events or outcomes shown in the simulation.