Does a creature with a long tail and/or neck count its entire silhouette for the purposes of determining how many hexes it occupies, or just the 'footprint' of its body?
I looked at how Lands Out of Time handled sauropods and can't make sense of it.
Brontosaurus: 75' long (55% tail, 25% neck, 20% body), 8' wide, 10 hexes. Seems to be body only (3 hexes wide, 4 long).
Diplodocus: 90' long (roughly same proportions), 7' wide, 30 hexes. Seems to be body (3 hexes wide, 6 long = 16 total), plus neck (7 hexes long), plus another 7 for tail (which is actually more like 16 yards long, but maybe the thin tip doesn't count).
Brachiosaurus: 'nearly as long as diplodocus' (actually more like 70% the length, shorter than brontosaurus), 30 hexes.
Actual dimensions, 70' L 10' W, maybe 50% neck, 25% body, 25% tail. 16 hexes body, 6 tail, 8 neck (possibly reduced from by being held upright rather than horizontal).
The 10-hex triceratops also seems dubious; see image.