User blog comment:Adsper/All Possible Mobs/@comment-2001:5B0:45C4:75D0:0:FF:FEBF:47C0-20180619180137/@comment-2001:5B0:45C6:8C60:0:FF:FEBF:47C0-20180624165239

Guys, hold on. Don't get into a Giga vs. T. rex argument. Very few fossils of Giganotosaurus have been found as compared to the number of T. rex fossils that have been found, so we still don't know how big Giganotosaurus could get, and a lot of this 'evidence' that you guys have brought up is mostly conjuecture and speculation based on the fossils that we have now. It is safe to say that the largest T. rex couln't have grown bigger than 40 feet, and the average T. rex was 37 feet. We know this for sure because there have been many, many specimens of T. rex found, showing these size ranges. In contrast, for Giganotosaurus, there have been only 3 specimens found, and most of them incomplete or fragmentary. So, until we find more Giganotosaurus specimens, we have no idea how big it was. Some Giganotosaurus could have been the same size as the largest T. rex. Some Giganotosaurus could have been a bit bigger than the largest T. rex. Some Giganotosaurus could have been way bigger than the largest T. rex. We just don't know yet.