Compare Jurassic World Evolution: Dinosaur Collection (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Frontier Developments. Published by Frontier Developments. Released on 11/16/2019. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Genres: Single Player, Bird View, Simulation.

Nine species, three packs, one bundle. Pure roster expansion for Jurassic World Evolution park builders who want more biodiversity without narrative strings attached.

The Dinosaur Collection bundles three previously separate species packs, the Cretaceous, Carnivore, and Herbivore releases, into a single purchase that drops nine new dinosaurs into your parks. There is no new campaign, no new islands, no story missions. This is a spreadsheet addition: more rows in your species database, more behavioral variables to manage, more enclosure math to solve. If that framing appeals to you, read on. The Cretaceous pack contributes the most roster contrast. The Carcharodontosaurus is a large carnivore with distinct predator behaviors that will immediately stress-test your fence ratings and security response times. Dreadnoughtus, described as one of the largest land animals on record, is the kind of titanosaur that inflates your land-use numbers fast and needs a genuinely large enclosure to stay comfortable. The Iguanodon rounds things out as a mixed-movement herbivore that can stand bipedally, giving it a slightly different comfort and terrain calculation compared to your standard quad herbivores. The Carnivore pack adds Acrocanthosaurus, Herrerasaurus, and the small but Tyrannosaurus-adjacent Proceratosaurus. The Herrerasaurus is particularly interesting from a park management angle because its Triassic origins make it one of the earliest species represented in the roster, and its narrow skull and jaw mechanics translate into lively feeding animations. Acrocanthosaurus runs large and aggressive, making cohabitation decisions more constrained. The Herbivore pack closes the deal with Dryosaurus, the forest-preferring sprinter; Homalocephale, the head-butting pachycephalosaur; and Nigersaurus, a compact sauropod that feeds close to the ground despite its long neck. Each of these three behaves differently enough to affect your habitat layout decisions in a real, not cosmetic, way. The honest caveat here is that none of these nine species rebalance the game or unlock new mechanics. You are paying purely for roster width. Players who have already hit the ceiling on base-game species variety will feel the impact most. If you are still working through the campaign or have not fully explored sandbox mode, the additional species may arrive before you have the enclosure infrastructure to use them meaningfully, which blunts the value somewhat. On Steam the Herbivore pack individually holds a 92% positive rating, suggesting the community receives these animal-only additions well, even without accompanying gameplay systems. For Xbox players specifically, this is the cleanest way to add significant dinosaur diversity in one shot. All nine species carry the same behavioral modeling fidelity as the base-game roster, each with individual comfort needs, terrain preferences, and social requirements. If you run a min-max operation and want to squeeze every appeal-per-hectare point out of your parks, some of these additions, particularly the Dreadnoughtus for sheer size appeal and the Carcharodontosaurus for carnivore variety, are meaningful upgrades to your options. Just go in knowing the bundle is an ingredient, not a recipe. Diego, Scout Team

Jurassic World Evolution: Dinosaur Collection (DLC)
Single PlayerBird ViewSimulation

Jurassic World Evolution: Dinosaur Collection (DLC)

Nov 16, 2019Frontier Developments
GamerScout Says

Nine species, three packs, one bundle. Pure roster expansion for Jurassic World Evolution park builders who want more biodiversity without narrative strings attached.

Xbox Series XXbox OneXbox
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About Jurassic World Evolution: Dinosaur Collection (DLC)

The Dinosaur Collection bundles three previously separate species packs, the Cretaceous, Carnivore, and Herbivore releases, into a single purchase that drops nine new dinosaurs into your parks. There is no new campaign, no new islands, no story missions. This is a spreadsheet addition: more rows in your species database, more behavioral variables to manage, more enclosure math to solve. If that framing appeals to you, read on. The Cretaceous pack contributes the most roster contrast. The Carcharodontosaurus is a large carnivore with distinct predator behaviors that will immediately stress-test your fence ratings and security response times. Dreadnoughtus, described as one of the largest land animals on record, is the kind of titanosaur that inflates your land-use numbers fast and needs a genuinely large enclosure to stay comfortable. The Iguanodon rounds things out as a mixed-movement herbivore that can stand bipedally, giving it a slightly different comfort and terrain calculation compared to your standard quad herbivores. The Carnivore pack adds Acrocanthosaurus, Herrerasaurus, and the small but Tyrannosaurus-adjacent Proceratosaurus. The Herrerasaurus is particularly interesting from a park management angle because its Triassic origins make it one of the earliest species represented in the roster, and its narrow skull and jaw mechanics translate into lively feeding animations. Acrocanthosaurus runs large and aggressive, making cohabitation decisions more constrained. The Herbivore pack closes the deal with Dryosaurus, the forest-preferring sprinter; Homalocephale, the head-butting pachycephalosaur; and Nigersaurus, a compact sauropod that feeds close to the ground despite its long neck. Each of these three behaves differently enough to affect your habitat layout decisions in a real, not cosmetic, way. The honest caveat here is that none of these nine species rebalance the game or unlock new mechanics. You are paying purely for roster width. Players who have already hit the ceiling on base-game species variety will feel the impact most. If you are still working through the campaign or have not fully explored sandbox mode, the additional species may arrive before you have the enclosure infrastructure to use them meaningfully, which blunts the value somewhat. On Steam the Herbivore pack individually holds a 92% positive rating, suggesting the community receives these animal-only additions well, even without accompanying gameplay systems. For Xbox players specifically, this is the cleanest way to add significant dinosaur diversity in one shot. All nine species carry the same behavioral modeling fidelity as the base-game roster, each with individual comfort needs, terrain preferences, and social requirements. If you run a min-max operation and want to squeeze every appeal-per-hectare point out of your parks, some of these additions, particularly the Dreadnoughtus for sheer size appeal and the Carcharodontosaurus for carnivore variety, are meaningful upgrades to your options. Just go in knowing the bundle is an ingredient, not a recipe. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

xboxRoster ExpansionPark ManagementSpecies VarietySandbox-FocusedBehavioral AINo CampaignEnclosure OptimizationDinosaur Collector

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Game Info

Developer
Frontier Developments
Publisher
Frontier Developments
Release Date
Nov 16, 2019

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