User:MosuFan2005/Sandbox/1

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Piranhadon trademark icon
Piranhadon
Piranhadon swimming
Alternate names None
Species Fish
Height ?? (males)
?? (females)
Length Up to 70 feet (females)
Around 20 feet (males)
Weight Around 14 tons (females)
Around 2 tons (males)
Forms None
Controlled by None
Relations Other Piranhadons
Allies None
Enemies Humans, Small animals
Created by Unknown
Played by CGI
First appearance King Kong (2005)
Latest appearance King Kong (2005)
Design(s) None
Roar(s)
TBA

Piranhadon is a fictional species of carnivorous fishes that appears in the extended version of the 2005 film, King Kong.

History

A Piranhadon swims towards one of the rafts, it attacked it and broke it, so the people from it fell in the water. The Piranhadon ate one crew member while he was trying to escape. The Piranhadon saw Jack Driscoll in the water, it swims towards him, opens its jaws as it is prepared to eat him, but then its mouth got stuck between 2 trees. Jack Driscoll got his chance to escape. The Piranhadon then ate another crew member. Carl Denham and other people on the raft grabbed their guns and started shooting in the water as they saw the Piranhadon swimming towards them. The Piranhadon flipped the second raft, and the people from it fell in the water. The crew went to the closest land they could find. A crew member was going to the land, but the Piranhadon ate him, too.

Abilities

An ambush predator, Piranhadon tends to lie in wait near the river banks, using its sensitive barbels to detect the approach of potential prey, as its eyes are poor and can only see differences between light and dark. A surge of its enormous body, and it will lunge out of the water, taking its prey in its jaws, either killing it with a massive bite or dragging it down below the surface to drown. Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

References

This is a list of references for MosuFan2005/Sandbox/1. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]