10 chrome dinosaurs hidden across Spokane. Pick a starting location, look for the gold paw print, follow Goldey's trail. Find one, keep one. Just upload a pic so the rest of the pack knows.
Each drop has a starting spot. When you arrive, look for a gold paw print on the ground. That's Goldey's first track. Follow the paw prints from there. The trail leads to your Chromey.
On March 8, 2026, between 1 and 5 AM, someone walked into the Mead Works roundabout at N. Dupont and N. Mellon and stole Chromey. He was a chrome-finished, mylar-balloon-style T-Rex sculpture by New Zealand artist Gregor Kregar, placed by Greenstone Corp as part of the Fossil Park development.
Sheriff's office estimated his replacement value at $70,000. The neighborhood had already adopted him. Dressed him in a Santa suit at Christmas. Green cap on St. Patrick's Day. Within months he was theirs. Then he was gone.
At ENJOY3D we build with what we have. A printer farm. A finishing setup. A stubborn belief that small acts matter. So we made more Chromeys. Smaller. 3D-printed. Hand-finished in chrome. Hidden across Spokane.
Every Chromey out there is hand-finished in our shop. Find one, keep one, or hide it somewhere new for someone else to find. The hunt grows when the pack grows.
Most of these drops are at skateparks. That's not random. Spokane's skate community taught me a lot of what I know about community itself. The long-game: build an indoor skatepark and event center in North Spokane.
The original 3ft Chromey toured Spokane before he was stolen. These are some of the stops. Photos from @chromey_t_rex.
20 cloned Chromeys hidden across Spokane so far. Past drops + current. Find your way back through the journey.
New drops, reveals, hunter wins, and the slow climb toward the indoor park. Both handles are @chromey_t_rex.