| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| This bird-like dinosaur's name inaccurately means "egg thief." | oviraptor | 94%
|
| This small dromaeosaurid from Cretaceous Mongolia was actually the size of a goose, and not like the movie monsters it is made out it be in Jurassic Park. | velociraptor | 89%
|
| This dThis ceratopsian discovered in the Gobi Desert was the first to prove dinosaurs laid eggs. | protoceratops | 87%
|
| This was Asia's T-Rex. | tarbosaurus | 85%
|
| This is the largest oviraptorid discovered. It measured 8 meters (26 feet) from nose to tail. | gigantoraptor | 79%
|
| This Japanese dinosaur's name means "Fukui lizard." | Fukuisaurus | 76%
|
| This is the dinosaur that was only known from a gigantic set of mysterious forelimbs with massive claws until a full skeleton was unearthed in 2014. | deinocheirus | 66%
|
| This saurapod had an unusually long neck, and was once considered the longest dinosaur that ever lived. | mamenchisaurus | 65%
|
| This was one of the earliest ceratopsians. It lived in many parts of Asia, and it had quill-like feathers like a mane on its tail. | psittacosaurus | 61%
|
| This cute little feathered dinosaur was found curled up in a sleeping position with its head tucked under its "wing." Its name is Chinese for "sleeping soundly." | mei | 53%
|
| This hadrosaurid from the late Cretaceous was named for the Shandong Peninsula in China, where it was discovered. | shantungosaurus | 53%
|
| This tiny feathered dinosaur from China had both feathers and dragon-like pterosaur wings. | yi qi | 52%
|
| This feathered oviraptorid from Cretaceous Mongolia was found brooding on a nest of fossilized eggs. | Citipati | 45%
|
| This was the first non-avian dinosaur fossil to definitively show feathers. | sinosauropteryx | 44%
|
| This upper Jurassic dinosaur from inner Mongolia was the first dinosaur to show ornimental tail feathers. | epidexipteryx | 24%
|