![]() I spent an obscene amount of time playing the first game back when it was released in 2018, and again last year when it came to the Nintendo Switch. Jurassic World Evolution 2 expands on the foundation established by the first game by adding new dinos and scenarios from the two Jurassic World films, helping to further open this in-game world up and let players play God. I’m not letting this oversight affect my score for the game, but it certainly is a missed opportunity to make the overall experience that much more immersive. With all the pop-ins from movie characters telling me what to do and warning me when things go wrong, it seems like a missed opportunity to not have those calls come in through my controller - like a real-life walkie-talkie. I spent my time playing the PlayStation 5 version, and I was slightly disappointed that Frontier did not incorporate the DualSense controller’s speaker into the game in any way. Jurassic World Evolution 2 is available on PlayStation 4 and 5, Xbox One, Series X and S, as well as on PC. I found a lot of fun in Sandbox and it really shouldn’t be overlooked in the grand scheme of things, as it has so much to offer park-building-game fans. Without the pressure of the other modes, Sandbox is a relaxing Sim City-like experience that allows you to be as creative as you want. Wu, or John Hammond telling you what to do and how to do it. The entire game is wide open for you to create a park as you see fit, curating the dinosaur attractions you want, without Claire, Ian Malcolm, Dr. Sandbox is, well, just what it sounds like. The bonus here is that by completing challenges, you unlock new options and dinos for use in the other game modes These scenarios come with a variety of difficulty levels and make for a pulse-pounding park building experience - in smaller, bite-sized nuggets. Challenge mode tasks players with handling specific scenarios with particular restrictions in play, like an in-game clock or a limited budget. ![]() Jurassic World Evolution 2 is rounded out by two additional modes: Challenge and Sandbox. It’s less about creating and managing the chaos that you inevitably create, and more reactively making lemonade out of 65 million-year-old lemons by managing the situations you come into. Following the events of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, the dinosaurs are off the islands and out in the real world, and you’re tasked with finding them and building parks around them. ![]() Jurassic World Evolution 2 takes a different approach. It followed the films from which it is based and put the control entirely in your hands. The first game was a park simulator that incorporated the study and creation of dinosaurs to build attractions for guests to spend their hard-earned money to come to see. Jurassic World Evolution was one of my favorite games when it launched, and now, three years later, Jurassic World Evolution 2 is here to create more dino-chaos for you to manage and overcome, or stumble and let your guests become dinner. It was a stellar park simulation game that used assets from the Jurassic Park/World films to add scenarios and, of course, dinosaurs to up the ante, and create a sense of both wonder and chaos of trying to build and manage an amusement park. In the summer of 2018, Universal Games and Frontier Developments dropped arguably the best movie tie-in game ever made with Jurassic World Evolution.
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