The first thing I noticed was that he was covered in bloody scratches, which would soon be treated, but the second thing is how lifelike the dinosaur looked. Wanting to see how the allosaurus was doing, I zoomed in closely to get a better look at him. It's then time to look for the other escaped dinosaur, which means leaving the centre and tracking it in the wild. There are two Carnotaurus wandering around the main area so I quickly build a fenced enclosure and add a control centre, operational response facility, and power generators-it's basic but will do for now.
In the first chapter of the campaign a poacher ring has recently been broken up, and I need to locate the dangerous dinosaurs that are now in the wild and build a facility nearby to contain and treat them.
Sure, king penguins and meerkats are cute, but prehistoric reptiles from another age have a special place in my heart. After a two-hour preview, it's interesting to see what changes Frontier has made to its dinosaur-centric management sim, especially considering the success of the studio's other creature theme park sim, Planet Zoo. Even though they've only just escaped, Jurassic World Evolution 2 wants you to put the dinos back in their habitats and, keeping in line with the first game, tasks you with building a sprawling dinosaur wildlife park.