Compare ARK: Survival Evolved Bionic Stegosaurus Skin (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Wild Card. Published by Wild Card. Released on 10/27/2017. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Genres: Action, Single Player, Multiplayer, Third Person, First Person, Virtual Reality, Massive Multiplayer, Indie, MMO, FPS / TPS, Adventure, RPG.

A purely cosmetic skin that reskins your tamed Stegosaurus into a cybernetic, metal-plated beast. No new mechanics, no stat changes - just chrome dino vanity for committed ARK players.

Let's be honest about what this is. The Bionic Stegosaurus Skin is a single cosmetic DLC for ARK: Survival Evolved, released alongside a small wave of similar bionic creature skins at launch. It replaces the standard visual of your tamed Stegosaurus with a cybernetic, mechanical redesign - think prehistoric plate armor swapped out for something that looks like it rolled off a sci-fi assembly line. It adds zero gameplay mechanics, zero new abilities, and changes nothing about how your Stego performs in combat, taming, or resource gathering. As an RPG specialist, I will admit that I usually care about whether a purchase changes how a game plays or how a story unfolds. This one does neither. It sits squarely in the vanity category, which is fine - ARK's creature-taming loop has genuine depth, and there is something to be said for wanting your mount to look distinct when you are riding into a server full of other survivors. The bionic aesthetic is genuinely striking: exposed mechanical joints, a plated chassis that reads as alien-industrial, and a visual language that stands apart from the base creature roster. If you spend serious hours in ARK and your Stegosaurus is a recurring companion in your survival runs, the skin does make that companion feel more personal. The catch is that this is a one-and-done purchase with a very narrow use case. It works exclusively with the Stegosaurus. It requires the base game. It has no narrative context, no unlock conditions that feel earned, and no connection to ARK's mysterious lore about the simulation, the obelisks, or the overarching mystery of why humans keep waking up on these islands. For a game that actually has interesting world-building buried under its survival systems, a cosmetic skin feels like the least interesting place to spend money. Studio Wildcard released several of these bionic skins as individual purchases simultaneously - Raptor, Parasaur, Trike, and others - so if the aesthetic appeals to you, there is a whole set to consider rather than buying just one in isolation. Bottom line: if your Stegosaurus is your ride-or-die mount and you want it to look like it was built in a factory rather than hatched from an egg, this delivers exactly that. If you are on the fence about whether ARK's cosmetic layer adds meaningful value to your sessions, it probably does not change your calculus much either way. Monika, Scout Team

ARK: Survival Evolved Bionic Stegosaurus Skin (DLC)
ActionSingle PlayerMultiplayerThird PersonFirst PersonVirtual RealityMassive MultiplayerIndieMMOFPS / TPSAdventureRPG

ARK: Survival Evolved Bionic Stegosaurus Skin (DLC)

Oct 27, 2017Wild Card
GamerScout Says

A purely cosmetic skin that reskins your tamed Stegosaurus into a cybernetic, metal-plated beast. No new mechanics, no stat changes - just chrome dino vanity for committed ARK players.

Xbox Series XXbox OneXbox
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About ARK: Survival Evolved Bionic Stegosaurus Skin (DLC)

Let's be honest about what this is. The Bionic Stegosaurus Skin is a single cosmetic DLC for ARK: Survival Evolved, released alongside a small wave of similar bionic creature skins at launch. It replaces the standard visual of your tamed Stegosaurus with a cybernetic, mechanical redesign - think prehistoric plate armor swapped out for something that looks like it rolled off a sci-fi assembly line. It adds zero gameplay mechanics, zero new abilities, and changes nothing about how your Stego performs in combat, taming, or resource gathering. As an RPG specialist, I will admit that I usually care about whether a purchase changes how a game plays or how a story unfolds. This one does neither. It sits squarely in the vanity category, which is fine - ARK's creature-taming loop has genuine depth, and there is something to be said for wanting your mount to look distinct when you are riding into a server full of other survivors. The bionic aesthetic is genuinely striking: exposed mechanical joints, a plated chassis that reads as alien-industrial, and a visual language that stands apart from the base creature roster. If you spend serious hours in ARK and your Stegosaurus is a recurring companion in your survival runs, the skin does make that companion feel more personal. The catch is that this is a one-and-done purchase with a very narrow use case. It works exclusively with the Stegosaurus. It requires the base game. It has no narrative context, no unlock conditions that feel earned, and no connection to ARK's mysterious lore about the simulation, the obelisks, or the overarching mystery of why humans keep waking up on these islands. For a game that actually has interesting world-building buried under its survival systems, a cosmetic skin feels like the least interesting place to spend money. Studio Wildcard released several of these bionic skins as individual purchases simultaneously - Raptor, Parasaur, Trike, and others - so if the aesthetic appeals to you, there is a whole set to consider rather than buying just one in isolation. Bottom line: if your Stegosaurus is your ride-or-die mount and you want it to look like it was built in a factory rather than hatched from an egg, this delivers exactly that. If you are on the fence about whether ARK's cosmetic layer adds meaningful value to your sessions, it probably does not change your calculus much either way. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

xboxCosmetic DLCCreature SkinVanity ItemTaming-AdjacentSingle Creature

System Requirements

Minimum

64bit support
Yes
System requirements
Windows 10

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Game Info

Developer
Wild Card
Publisher
Wild Card
Release Date
Oct 27, 2017

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