For the next two days Sobek always went fishing in the inlet. At that time he had managed to capture four stethacanthus.
Freshwater sharks were particularly abundant in the inlet: the absence of larger predators due to the shallow water had favored their spread. Unfortunately, it couldn't be said that there were thousands of them: Sobek had only managed to take a couple each day.
That number was insufficient to satiate him. To make up for it, Sobek had fed on one of the onchopristis captured by his parents. It didn't provide any experience points, as it had been killed by another spinosaur, but at least his stomach was full.
However, the effort was not in vain: he had gained other 4 skill points from the sharks. In total, he now had 4.1 skill points. Just one more stethacanthus and he might have upgraded [Swim speed] one more time.
In addition, his experience points had also risen, even if much slower than before: he now had 6,180 points. Just a little longer and he would have reached level 7.
Unfortunately, no stethacanthus had shown up for more than half a day. Although the group of fishes below him wasn't small at all, Sobek hadn't seen anything of interest.
At least until the evening. There, illuminated by the light of the setting sun, a eight-legged figure had begun to approach walking on the bottom.
[Prey identified: Brontoscorpio anglicus, eoscorpiidae. Experience: 1,000 points]
Sobek froze at the sight. Brontoscorpio was a prehistoric one meter long scorpion!
Sobek was much larger than the arthropod, but his experience reminded him that most scorpions were very poisonous. He couldn't possibly get hit by its sting!
In fact, as well as scared he was also confused. From what he remembered from his past life knowledge, brontoscorpio was a sea scorpion: what was it doing in the river?
Then he understood. The brontoscorpio had probably go up the river from the ocean and arrive there.
The brontoscorpio was an almost absolute predator in the Silurian period, but in that messy world the sea was dominated by other much larger creatures. For monsters like dunkleosteus, megalodon, basilosaurus or mosasaurus the brontoscorpio was just an easy meal. Even non-apex predators like plesiosaurus or tanystropheus could capture it. The river was definitely a quieter environment, so the scoprion had been up it for miles.
Even though he was afraid of its sting, however, Sobek was also tempted. The brontoscorpio could get out of the water, so it was able to prey on small animals if it wanted to; that means it could provide skill points! It wasn't a stethacanthus, but by its size it probably wouldn't have been much different. However, he had to avoid the sting at all costs.
He had already prepared a plan. He just had to wait for the scorpion to go where he wanted.
Attracted by the group of fishes, the brontoscorpio crawled forward snapping its claws, trying to catch one or two of them. Sobek waited for the scorpion to be exactly under his forelimbs, then he lowered his entire body!
His forelegs fell straight over the brontoscorpio's body while his mouth grabbed the tail and pulled upward. Under normal circumstances the whole scorpion would have been thrown away; but since Sobek had trapped it with his paws, the brontoscorpio's tail ripped like a snack.
Once he had devoured it, Sobek reached down again to tear off the claws, but he discovered that there was no need to do it: his weight had literally crushed the brontoscorpio. It was already dead from the start.
Sobek realized that he had overestimated its opponent. He had assumed that the scorpion would have fought, but now that he thought better about it, there was no way the brontoscorpio could survive if a three-ton weight crashed on its back.
When he finished devouring the brontoscorpio, he discovered that it had given him 0.9 skill points! "Seriously? The exactly amount I needed? It seems a little too perfect as a coincidence..." he thought doubtfully.
Whatever that was, he could now upgrade [Swim speed] to level 3/5. He now received a x6 sprint every time he activated it; it meant that since his top speed was currently 7 km/h, he could reach 42 km/h in the water, enough to escape any predator, obviously assuming he was able to spotted it before it bite or catch him.
If he had leveled up two more times he could have reached 54 km/h. At that point he could also have beaten several fishes at speed, so he could have chased the preys instead of just waiting.
That wish was not too far from coming true: thanks to the brontoscorpio, he now only had to gain other 820 experience points to reach level 7.
Sobek set off on his way back to the nest, but as he did that he used [Swim speed] to prey on several small fishes in his way. Since each of them provided 50 to 100 experience points, they were still a good investment, even if not in the long term. Thanks to them, his experience rose to 7,600 points.
When he arrived at the nest he also realized something else: he had to find his own territory. The inlet of the river was his parents' fishing ground: he could only go there because he was their son. But sooner or later he would have had to look for a corner of the river and make it his own hunt territory.
Very soon he would have reached 7 meters in length. By then he would have been larger than several other carnivores. That would have been the time to go on his way.
He would obviously have continued to enjoy the protection of the herd while he slept, but he had to learn to fend for himself. This for a very specific reason: once he had evolved he would have become a different species, so he would no longer have been able to stay with the herd. It was therefore essential to learn the laws of the river before that moment came, so that he already knew how to survive on his own when he should have go away.
With this thought in his head, the next day he didn't even wait for his father to wake up: he got up early in the morning and he dove into the river alone.
The river was large and full of strategic points: Sobek didn't doubt that he would have found a suitable area for him. The key was to avoid areas that were too deep: the chances of finding a prehistoric crocodile or snake were very high there. As long as he remained in shallow water, however, he would at least have been able to spot the predator early and then flee.
He swam for about four kilometers, until he reached a place that looked promising. It was a reservoir formed in the middle of the river, no more than a couple of meters deep, where he could easily touch the bottom. The water was clear, so he could spot any predators. There was also an abundance of fish and many of them were quite large.
Sobek's first thought was obviously to level up, that's why just as the day before he used [Swim speed] to eat several small fishes and get the 400 experience points he was missing. Moreover, in that way he was able to completely map the seabed, making sure of the absence of hidden dangers.
However, he wasn't able to avoid getting a good fright: at a certain point a shadow passed in front of his eyes and for a moment his heart stopped, fearing he had met a crocodile. Fortunately, the System reassured him.
[Prey identified: Acanthostega gunnari, acanthostegidae. Experience: 800 points]
The acanthostega was an ancient amphibian lived in the Carboniferous period similar to a salamander. It was about twice as long as a brontoscorpio or a stethacanthus, but unlike them it was basically harmless (that was probably the motivation for the few experience points it provided). It was still able to yield 0.5 skill points.
After devouring it, Sobek was able to level up. After the typical stretching sensation he immediately opened the main interface of the System.
[Spinosaurus aegyptiacus]
Level: 7
Length: 7 m
Height: 2.7 m
Weight: 3.5 ton
Diet: carnivore, fishivore
Strength: 901
Agility: 830
Defense: 302
Maximum speed: 8 km/h
Experience points: 410/10,000
Skill points: 0.5
Fame points: 0/1,000,000
Bonus money: 950
One of the most famous predatory dinosaurs was the carnotaur and its minimum length was estimated to be 7 meters. Sobek had reached that size by now, even though he was nowhere near its lethality. It was a milestone!
His next goal was to improve [Ambush]. And fortunately that little reservoir seemed full of preys suitable for use.
It was unlikely that the acanthostega was alone. If he searched hard, he was sure to find other large amphibians that could provide him skill points.
Sobek had seen it right. Over the next five days he relentlessly hunted the amphibians that inhabited his new fishing area. He spent the whole day there and only returned to the nest in the evening.There were amphibians of all kinds: acanthostega, ichthyostega, crassigyrinus, eriops... each of them was just one and a half meters or at most two meters long, but they had a high nutritional value and there were plenty of them, consequently they were enough to satisfy Sobek.He currently had 7 skill points. Each amphibian had provided him with 0.5 skill points at most, but with so many of them he had accumulated several. He also found a torpedo fish hidden in the mud which gave him 1 more skill point.Thanks to [Swim speed] it was enough for him to sneak up on his prey and charge once he got close enough. Sobek was counting that once [Ambush] was improved, the hunt would have become even easier.Unfortunately, on the contrary the experience points provided by the amphibians weren't much.
When the leveling up finished Sobek opened the main interface to check his attributes.[Spinosaurus aegyptiacus]Level: 9Length: 9 mHeight: 3.3 mWeight: 4.5 tonDiet: carnivore, fishivoreStrength: 1,120Agility: 1,085Defense: 560Maximum speed: 10 km/hExperience points: 3,600/30,000Skill points: 2Fame points: 0/1,000,000Bonus money: 1,250"30,000 experience points to the next level up..." Sobek grumbled in his head. He had hoped he could reach level 10 more quickly.If he found another baryonyx he could have gained a lot of experience very fast, but it was difficult. Even if in that world all the dinosaurs of all ages existed together, that didn't mean that he could found one of them every twenty meters.Like spinosaurs, each baryonyx established its own territory and stayed there. Tramps who had still not find their own place were rare.It was also unlikely that the baryonyx would have settled too close to the spinosaurs pod. If he wanted to find one he had to go further, but
The first thing Sobek had to do was find a suitable place for him. Not exactly a territory where he could fish, but more a place full of preys and with not many predators, possibly with some kind of refuge that he could use as his outpost.Unfortunately, for several kilometers the river continued normally, without offering any safe point. No covered area, no hiding place, not even a denser zone where it would have been easy to camouflage. After several wanderings, however, he finally arrived in a place where the river bed widened and the water became lower.He had arrived in a swamp; the water of the river poured into some kind of marsh, slowing the current and allowing the birth of small islets. Large mangroves grew everywhere and in the areas where the water was lower there were huge reeds. Sobek could see several fishbirds perched in trees or intent on fishing. Not only them: there were also numerous pterosaurs, some of them very large; Sobek was able to see a flock of tapejara, fly
THUMP.Sobek was awakened by a vibration.THUMP.Memory reminded him of the t-rex's footsteps, which made him shiver. However, he quickly understood that it couldn't be the case: a tyrannosaurus wasn't that heavy. Those footsteps seemed to have been produced directly by a mountain that had been magically given legs and had begun to walk.THUMP.Sobek stood up, eager to find out what was causing that sound. However, when sleep completely abandoned his eyes and he was able to focus, he almost jumped back!Next to the islet tha he had turned into his home there were a group of real behemoths that were peacefully crossing the swamp. They had huge necks at least nine meters long and just one of their legs was taller than him![Prey identified: Dreadnoughtus schrani, titanosauridae. Experience: 200,000 points]Sobek was stuck. For the first time he met the giants of prehistory: the sauropods!Sauropods were the largest land animals ever to appear on Earth. Elephants and mammoths were just li
The following day Sobek immediately resumed the hunt. This time, nothing would have stopped him from moving to a new area. The day before he had gained some skill points, but this time he was desperate to find another large predatory dinosaur to defeat and devour.He swam for kilometers, keeping clear of any spot where crocodiles or snakes might hide. He noticed several freshwater sharks on the way, but he completely ignored them: he had no intention of stopping and risking being attacked again. He had learned from what had happened to him with the alligator, and while he had been lucky that time, he was not going to risk it again; after all, if the alligator had hit him even a little, it could have damaged his delicate sail irreparably, which meant causing severe blood loss. Sobek would not have risked that much: some small sharks weren't worth it.Eventually he came to an area where the mangroves were slightly denser, forming a real forest above the swamp. He was far enough away from
[Spinosaurus aegyptiacus]Level: 12Length: 12 mHeight: 4.2 mWeight: 6 tonDiet: carnivore, fishivoreStrength: 1,680Agility: 1,430Defense: 950Maximum speed: 13 km/hExperience points: 1,900/60,000Skill points: 0Fame points: 0/1,000,000Bonus Money: 1,830By now Sobek's length had become equal to the one of a t-rex. However, his height was still less: a tyrannosaurus generally was 5.5 to 6 meters tall. This is for a simple matter of skeletal structure: the body shape of the spinosaurus was more horizontal, favoring the quadrupedal gait, while that of the t-rex was diagonal, allowing a bipedal gait.Even leaving out that detail, the difference between him and a tyrannosaurus was glaring. A t-rex had dozens of times his strength, ran at least twice his speed, and most importantly had a muzzle designed to bite and tear. Quite the opposite of him, in short. Not to mention that a t-rex was at least two tons heavier than him. He still had a long way to go before he could reach the top
The following days were the easiest of all for Sobek. Each day he caught at least one oxalaia, which, in addition to satisfying his hunger, earned him 33,000 experience points.After a day he had already been able to climb to level 13, reaching 13 meters in length and 4.5 meters in height. In three days he was able to reach the level 14, obtaining a length of 14 meters and a height of 4.8 meters. In a week he finally reached level 15, reaching 15 meters in length and 5.1 meters in height.By now he was bigger than many adult spinosaurs, but he was planning to become even more: the herd of oxalaia in fact had been reduced by very few in number. Despite his soaring level up, Sobek hadn't killed more than six oxalaia in total.Even so, he had gained an immense amount of skill points!Since an adult oxalaia granted 5 skill points, he had earned the titanic amount of 30 skill points. Sobek estimated that under normal circumstances he wouldn't have reached such quantity in less than a couple
By the time he got close enough to the poachers, Sobek understood two things.The first was that he could understand their language. He didn't know how it was possible: perhaps it was the same as one present on Earth in his previous life? Yet it didn't sound like English, French, Italian or any other language he knew. Furthermore, at the level of probability it was basically impossible for humans to develop the same language in a different world, because language wasn't a fixed thing, it evolved according to history and society. It was like expecting that somewhere in the universe existed a perfectly identical planet to Earth, where every single action of every lifeform happened the same way. It was simply impossible.The second thing he realized was that the poachers didn't have too strong weapons: if they did, they wouldn't have been in a hurry to leave before the oxalaia herd woke up. Dinosaurs were still animals, so they could be killed by human weapons, but they had characteristic
It took Sobek a few moments before he realized he was back in the room where it all began. That room where time and space ceased to exist, and where everything and nothing seemed to have changed at the same time. He already knew where he had to go; walking through the infinitely large (or perhaps infinitely small) room, in a few minutes (or perhaps a few centuries, who knows) he reached the familiar armchair on which was seated a woman with white skin and light hair.God didn't even seem to move since she sent him to Eden. Even her expression didn't seem to have changed at all. She was still the same, beautiful and terrible at the same time, whose gaze was both magnetic and loving on him. “Welcome back, son,” she greeted him in her crystal clear voice.Sobek advanced on her. This time there wasn't an armchair waiting for him, but a large mattress wide enough to allow him to lie down. She lay back on it and gazed intently at God. Even now, after he'd grown i
On the continent of Maakanar, near a river that was once a typical spinosaurus nesting place, something immense could be seen. A huge creature was lying on its belly, but nevertheless it was so tall that its dorsal sail towered over the surrounding masts.Sobek was now thirty-three years old. To say he had grown into a behemoth was an understatement: he now measured 150 meters from head to tail and reached 45.6 meters in height. Even without activating the mutation he was now larger than Godzilla: the gigantic atomic reptile was a tiny lizard compared to him. All kaiju would be small compared to him. Even King Ghidorah would have been forced to acknowledge its superiority.In the last five years he had hardly moved. After the death of his last loyalist he returned to his birthplace and settled there. He ate what was provided to him from the [Personal Manger] and drank the water from the river. Otherwise, he remained calm, warming himself in the sun or admiring the star
After a few days Nefertiti settled at the lake together with her father and her last remaining uncle. With the help and indications of Sobek she built a comfortable nest and there she laid her egg.Thus began the brood. The female spinosaurus never moved from above her little egg, keeping it constantly warm. Sobek and Buck brought her food and water. When Nefertiti was hot, Sobek used her huge wing as a parasol and Buck fanned her with his tail. In the rare moments when it was cold, the two of her huddled to help her warm up.That routine went on for three months. Finally, at the end of the third month, a familiar clicking sound came from under Nefertiti's paws.The female spinosaurus reared up and looked down. A small crack was opening on the egg. With a smile she moved from above it. The crack widened more and more and finally a large piece of egg broke off, showing a lively green eye that stared intently at Nefertiti.“Hello, baby. I'm your mothe
Time had passed again. Sobek couldn't even figure out how much time had actually passed now. One year? Two? Maybe three? He didn't know.After his retirement, Sobek had gone deep into the forest of Maakanar. It was hard for him to move his huge body through the trees and very often ended up destroying them: his passage was evident as a trail of uprooted trunks was always behind him. He had moved permanently to the lake where he had met Buck and where he had established his first army. And he hadn't gone there alone.Carnopo and Buck had joined him just a month after his departure. They, too, had decided they'd had enough and abandoned their roles entirely. After all, in the new world there was no longer a need for either an army commander or one of the shock legion. Now there was peace, and the old war veterans had no reason to try to find their place in their world. So they had decided to do what they had always done: follow their pack leader.The trio spent th
Another year had passed. In Sobek's eyes, time seemed to have begun to flow more rapidly. The months and weeks all passed almost the same and in a flash the morning turned into evening.Humanity had continued its advance. By now, Aphrodites had been fully colonized. Whole cities had sprung up on it and millions of settlers had begun to live there. Davis had now reached more than a billion inhabitants and Hermes now owned thousands of mining establishments.Thanks to teleportation technology it was so advanced that traveling between planets was even easier than going from one city to another. Since energy and material consumption were now no longer a concern thanks to solar panels on Hermes and mining plants on asteroids, everyone had a portable teleportation device. By now, being hired to work a mine on an asteroid was no different than being hired to work at the local convenience store.Colonies on the moons of Leviathan and Behemoth had multiplied, providing e
More time, more changes. In just one year, many things had changed.Nefertiti had assumed control of the entire astrophysics division of the dinosaur pack, effectively acting as acting pack leader for them. After the first shared mission, she had begun to promote more policies of integration and union between humans and animals. She had facilitated interspecies interspace operations, sending animals and humans to work together in the new worlds to be colonized. Furthermore, there was still much to colonize, as human attention was slowly shifting beyond the outer Solar System to the dwarf planets and comets of the Oort Cloud.The work was not cheap and with it the possibilities of working together. With the Dyson Sphere nearing completion, energy was no longer an issue. After determining which moons to colonize, the Eden Union had begun an intensive mining program in the asteroids of the main belt in order to be able to build huge lenses to capture the sunlight and also
One more year, more innovations. The more time passed, the more progress seemed to accelerate. It was like a speeding train that multiplied its speed every second: first slow, then faster and faster, until it turned into a giant projectile.Sobek knew that progress was bound to accelerate more and more, after all it was his nature. For each new discovery, countless doors open. And every door leads to other doors. This was the nature of progress. It was no coincidence that it took humanity less than two hundred years to go from horses to aircraft capable of leaving the orbit of their home planet.He recalled that on Earth, where he came from, progress had become so fast in the 21st century that it was enough to be born even a generation later or further back to find oneself in a completely different world. While in 1990 the main communication system was the satellite phone, in 2020 people used social networks for the most disparate things. While in 1990 movies were watc
More time had passed. This time it was a year… or maybe a year and a half? I don't know. Not that it mattered much, actually.The world's attention to the inner solar system was gradually waning. Now that three planets had been terraformed, even if one of them still wasn't enough, and Hermes had become a stable colony that was continuously producing large panels of glass that joined in the orbit of the Sun to form the Dyson Sphere, the humanity was beginning to anticipate new challenges. From the inner solar system it was time to move to the outer solar system.Although some colony outposts were already present on some moons of Behemoth, they could not be defined as true colonies. However, now that energy consumption was no longer a problem thanks to the Dyson Sphere, which although not completed already released enormous amounts of energy, the Eden Union decided to start an exploration program of the entire outer solar system, or at least of the space between B
Two more years had passed. The advance of humanity towards the stars continued inexorably.The hypotheses of the scientists had proved to be correct: using a combination of gravity control technology and energy obtained from the Dyson sphere, although still incomplete, they had managed to accelerate the rotation of Aphrodites. The planet was slowly accelerating, though not too fast. There was generally talk of an hour each week. At this speed there was no risk of destroying the infrastructure already present on the planet. Yes two years, the rotation period had gone from 2082 hours to 1978 hours. Continuing at this rate, it was expected to reach 24 hours in 'just' another 38 years.Once this process was completed, the huge orbiting mirrors could finally be taken off. The day/night cycle would no longer be artificially determined and there would no longer be the risk that something would go wrong due to the impact of a micrometeorite. In addition, the accelerated rotati