Deinonychosaurian
theropods, especially members of the family
Dromaeosauridae, are known for their recurved, sickle-shaped claw on the second toe being held off the ground, and thus not preserved in the trackway. This causes their footprints to preserve only two of their toes, making the deinonychosaurian tracks functionally didactyl (two-toed). The similarly sized, small theropod ichnotaxon
Minisauripus, also known from the same formation and other East Asian deposits, is distinguished from
Dromaeosauriformipes with all of the three toes preserved in the trackway, making the tracks assigned to
Minisauripus functionally tridactyl (three-toed). Footprints of both the holotype and paratype trackway of
Dromaeosauriformipes are similar in size, roughly long and wide in average. The average step length between each of the seven consecutive tracks of the holotype is , while the two long steps of the paratype are measured up to long respectively. With the comparative dataset of 17 microraptorine specimens, Dececchi et al. (2024) estimated the hip height of the paratype trackmaker up to tall. The diminutive size of the didactyl tracks is consistent with that of small dromaeosaurids, so the trackmaker of
Dromaeosauriformipes is likely to be either a small
microraptorine or a juvenile of a larger dromaeosaurid like the trackmaker of
Dromaeosauripus. However, the proximal portion of the second digit is not preserved in any tracks assigned to
Dromaeosauriformipes, which distinguishes this ichnotaxon from other dromaeosaurid ichnogenera. Additionally, the size and degree of elongation shown in the footprints of
Dromaeosauriformipes are different from those of
Dromaeosauripus. ==Classification==