
Jurassic Survival
Sitting at 30% positive on Steam with only ten reviews, this is early-access dinosaur survival at its most skeletal - grab it only if abandoned-project archaeology is your hobby.
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About Jurassic Survival
I went in hoping for a scrappy underdog of the survival genre - a rough-edged open-world game that punches above its budget with clever dinosaur interaction mechanics. What I found instead is a project that reads less like a released game and more like a proof-of-concept that someone accidentally shipped. Released in August 2016 and technically still labelled early access, Jurassic Survival drops you onto an open island populated by several dinosaur species and asks you to gather wood and stone, build a basic shelter, and not get eaten. That loop, familiar from a dozen better survival sandboxes, is present here in the most stripped-back form imaginable. The core resource loop covers the basics you would expect: collecting raw materials, cobbling together tools and rudimentary structures, hunting dinosaurs for food, and managing a simple inventory. Weather is listed as a feature, which tells you something about the feature density on offer. Crafting and building exist but are explicitly secondary mechanics - the Steam page itself says so - and the dinosaur AI does not appear to have evolved past roaming patrol routes. As a strategy-and-systems person I kept looking for resource chains, tech trees, or base-defence escalation. There is not much to find. The decision space in any given session is narrow enough that you can outline the whole thing in thirty seconds. The numbers tell a hard story. Ten Steam reviews at 30% positive is not just a small sample - it is a small sample that is mostly negative, which in the survival genre usually signals one of two problems: fundamental jank or abandonment. Here it looks like both. Saving was listed as unimplemented at launch, a fact the developer disclosed on the store page, which is either admirably honest or quietly damning depending on your tolerance for early-access risk. There is no evidence of a substantial post-launch content push, no active mod scene, and no community discussion worth pointing to. The multiplayer tag exists on the store page, but player counts have never been high enough to confirm whether those servers are even populated. Who is this actually for? Not survival veterans - ARK: Survival Evolved and its successors made this genre a high-bar competition years ago. Not casual players either, because the interface friction and missing save system are genuinely unfriendly to newcomers. The one plausible audience is someone who specifically wants the lightest possible dinosaur sandbox at the lowest possible price point and has already exhausted every other option in the genre. Even then, the unfinished state means you are betting on a developer who has not demonstrated consistent updates since the 2016 launch window. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows Vista, 7, 8 or 10
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 250 MB available space
- Graphics
- GTX 560 or higher
- Processor
- Intel Core 2 Duo @ 2 GHz or higher
Recommended
- OS
- Windows Vista, 7, 8 or 10
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 1 GB available space
- Graphics
- GTX 680 or higher
- Processor
- Intel Core i5 - 3570K @ 3.40GHz or higher
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Game Info
- Developer
- Technical Entertainment
- Publisher
- Technical Entertainment
- Release Date
- Aug 1, 2016