
Dino Zoo Transport Simulator
Hauling angry T-Rexes across offroad death tracks is a funnier premise than it has any right to be, but manage expectations hard before clicking purchase.
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About Dino Zoo Transport Simulator
I sat down expecting to ironically snicker at this for ten minutes and ended up grinding through all three modes just to see what breaks next. Dino Zoo Transport Simulator is a low-budget offroad trucking game where you pilot a trailer rig across hilly, obstacle-strewn tracks while tyrannosaurus and stegosaurus specimens try to ruin your day. That pitch alone carries it further than its production values deserve. The structure is simple. Fifteen levels spread across three modes, Practice, Time Trial, and Survival, give you a clear progression loop that a casual player can work through without a manual. Practice mode is genuinely useful for getting a feel for the physics, which are bouncy and loose in a way that feels more carnival ride than simulation. Two camera options let you switch between third-person and a closer view, though neither will make you feel like you are in a serious trucking sim. That is fine, because this was never trying to be Euro Truck Simulator. Controller support is listed and it works, which matters more than usual here since keyboard input makes the already floaty steering feel even sloppier. A basic gamepad smooths things out to a point where the chaos reads as fun rather than frustrating. Do not expect force feedback support or wheel compatibility. This is a gamepad-or-keyboard-only experience, and the physics engine has no interest in rewarding precise hardware. The honest problems are real. The visuals are dated even by indie budget standards, the dino attack animations are rudimentary, and the track variety across 15 levels thins out quickly. There is no multiplayer of any kind, no local co-op, no shared-screen mode. If you were hoping to rope friends in for a laugh session, you are watching rather than playing together. Community reaction on Steam has hovered around mostly positive, which is probably the right calibration. Players who go in with zero expectations come out mildly charmed; anyone expecting a competent simulation comes out confused. Who actually gets value here. Genuinely young kids who like dinosaurs and trucks will probably have a fine time. Parents looking for something age-appropriate, low-stakes, and controller-friendly have seen far worse. For everyone else, it is curiosity content, the kind of game you run for 45 minutes on a slow afternoon and feel no guilt closing. The Survival mode adds a small layer of pressure that keeps the experience from going fully flat, and that is more than some games at this tier manage. Riley, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 x64
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Storage
- 250 MB available space
- Graphics
- GT 210
- Processor
- Intel Dual Core
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10 x64
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 250 MB available space
- Graphics
- GT 730
- Processor
- Intel i5
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- A Nostru
- Publisher
- My Way Games
- Release Date
- Sep 23, 2019







