User blog comment:Red243/Tyrannosaurus Rex vs Spinosaurus/@comment-5078776-20140604181818

'CFP31577'S EDGES OF MASSIVE DESTRUCTION: "It's a bleeding boneyard!" ' Despite the T-Rex's largely over-the-top representation of being a hunter in films, we have evidence to support that it was more likely a scavenger because of the way it was built. It's weak arms, slow speeds, highly attentive sense of smell, and a weak sight support the fact that it hunted carcasses, rather than prey. The Spinosaurus, while not exactly the ideal predator either, at least actively hunted fish and other sea-fairing beasts in North America. The T-Rex manages to snag an edge here. While it's gigantic head may seem to slow it down, the sheer size of the Spinosaurus' head makes it slow in a flat-out sprint. The T-Rex's smaller size make it capable of at least keeping up with the Spinosaurus, possibly going faster because of it's stronger legs. The jaws are something we need to consider on these animals, and it's frankly even. The T-Rex's gigantic mouth holds a bunch of strong, bone-crushing teeth that will inflict massive damage to the Spinosaurus if it gets it down. Meanwhile, however, the Spinosaurus' slender mouth makes it act like scissors in a way; If you get caught in between something's gonna snap when it bites you. Plus, the mouth is lined with several small teeth that even the most slippery of prey couldn't escape. But jaws function differently, and both can do a helluva lot of damage. Ultimately, despite the T-Rex's massive head and teeth, the Spinosaurus' larger size and hands make grappling and pinning the T-Rex significantly easier. Plus, the jaw the Spinosaurus has ain't too weak either, so it can compete jaw-for-jaw against the T-Rex.
 * Experience: Spinosaurus 
 * Speed: T-Rex 
 * Jaw Use: Even 
 * Strength: Spinosaurus 
 * Senses: TBA
 * Intelligence: TBA
 * WINNER: TBA