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This one puts dinosaurs and animals in an escape scenario where they're running from large carnivorous predators on narrow pathways, but they don't realize there are aquatic predators positioned in the water pools below waiting for anyone who falls or gets forced off the path. The setup creates a double threat that the prey doesn't fully see coming. The land-based carnivores are the obvious danger chasing from behind, pushing everything forward along the corridor. But the pathway sections have pools on either side or below, and those pools contain marine hunters that are just as dangerous if creatures end up in the water. What makes this tense is that prey species are making decisions based only on the threat they can see — the predators chasing them. Some might try risky maneuvers to avoid the land carnivores without realizing they're positioning themselves near the pool edges. Others might get forced off the pathway during the chase and drop straight into water where a completely different predator type is waiting. The aquatic hunters don't need to chase anyone. They just hold position in the pools and wait for the land chase above to deliver prey to them. It's efficient from their perspective — let the carnivores on land do the work of flushing targets toward the water. I'm tracking which animals successfully escape the land predators without falling into pools, which ones avoid the land threat but end up in water anyway, and how the aquatic predators respond when creatures enter their sections. No scripted outcomes. Just chase dynamics, pathway navigation, and two completely different predator types exploiting the same prey from different angles. No real animals — testing dual predator threat where prey only recognizes one danger. 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.