Jurassic World Evolution feature

Jurassic World Evolution – First in-game trailer surfaces

Frontier has showcased a new Jurassic World Evolution trailer at this year’s Frontier Expo. Contrary to the previous CGI trailer, this one features in-game visuals. In short, this will give you an idea at what Frontier is trying to achieve with this new Jurassic World game.

This Jurassic World Evolution trailer shows a number of dinosaurs, such as the T-Rex, Raptors and Triceratops. Unfortunately, though, the dinosaurs in Jurassic World Evolution do not appear to feature feathers. Kind of sad to be honest as according to the latest researches, pretty much all dinosaurs had feathers.

But anyway, in Jurassic World Evolution players will be able to build their own park. Players will bioengineer new dinosaur breeds, construct attractions, containment and research facilities.

Frontier claims that every choice will lead to a different path and spectacular challenges.

Jurassic World Evolution targets a 2018 release. But enough talk, enjoy the first in-game Jurassic World Evolution trailer below and stay tuned for more!

Jurassic World: Evolution - Trailer #2 - In-Game Footage!

18 thoughts on “Jurassic World Evolution – First in-game trailer surfaces”

  1. Models are nice, animation sucks, felt like 15 fps animation. Abrupt motion. The old movie vibe is not here, the jurassic world aka jurassic rangers is a shame for the series.

  2. What is this 2004? Where are my godamn PBR and SSR with FoV sliders…
    And no feathers is a big letdown they already invented TREXFX for exact same purpose.

    1. “Anything is possibru.”

      Has anyone really been far even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?

  3. I don’t mind featherless dinosaurs especially when it comes to the Jurassic Park movies. They may be scientifically inaccurate but they are thematically consistent and unique to the franchise.

    Real world science would be useless because they were never true dinosaurs since they were cloned creatures with surrogate DNA from modern animals. Heck, even the last movie mashed together several of the man-made creatures into one super predator while hinting the possibility of even crazier weaponized monstrosities in future movies.

    1. Who’s to say the dinos in the past weren’t cloned from surrogate dna either? We weren’t there to know how things came about.

      1. The franchise have flipped flop with details trying to appease real world scientific assumptions. They have scenes where paleontologists were killed off because the the on set science advisor disagreed with their opposing theories.

        I treat these movies as movies first, perhaps a super accurate documentary second. As story-telling media the movies should stay consistent with established elements it itself introduced. It’s weird to see a movie about genetic manipulation where they can make anything have to adhere to real world scientific tidbits.

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