Chaos Theory mode has you progress through a new set of campaign missions, where each one is like a what-if scenario of the parks in the movie franchise. I also like how the game has three other modes on top of the campaign, which are all playable from the get-go. There’s a lot of complex systems at play here, and, for the most part, it all works well enough to keep you hooked for hours on end. For example, some guests want to see dangerous dinos while others want to take in the beauty of nature. Your guests also have different needs that you’ll have to satisfy if you want them to make return visits. And you essentially do this by having a good variety of dinosaurs in your park, all of which should be safely enclosed and visible for viewing. You ideally want your guests to go home happy…and alive. Because at the end of the day, you’re still managing a park. Not to mention, dissatisfied dinos can destroy their enclosures, run free around your park, and eat guests – just like in the movies – which is never good for your park’s reputation. They’re territorial and they don’t all get along, so this is something you have to plan for as you progress – unless, of course, you just want to see them fight. The game features over 75 different dino species and each one has its own set of distinct traits and behavioral patterns. You additionally have to consider what other dinos they’re sharing that enclosure with. You’ll have to make sure they’re comfortable in their enclosure, filling it with enough food, water, and rocks for their needs. Taking care of these fearsome reptiles is a pretty involved process, I must say, but it’s incredibly fun. I missed out on the first game, so I like that this mode kind of brought me up to speed on what I needed to know about starting my own park. It’s a great setup for the fairly short and uneventful campaign, which mostly boils down to interconnected tutorial missions that give you a good grasp of the basics. Set between the events of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom and the upcoming Jurassic World: Dominion, dinos are set loose across the United States and humanity has to wrangle them back into their cages. And that’s not lost in Jurassic World Evolution 2, a management simulator that has you building your own park of prehistoric attractions. But this is largely why we love the Jurassic Park movies in the first place – dinosaurs are wonders to behold. Who doesn’t love dinosaurs? Sure, they’re big and scary and can probably eat us whole if they walked the earth today. The game is also available now on PlayStation and Xbox. Jurassic World Evolution 2 was reviewed on PC, with a publisher-provided code.
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