Planet Coaster 2: Thrill-Seekers Ride Pack (DLC)
Add-on / DLC for Planet Coaster 2 — view full gameCompare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Planet Coaster 2: Thrill-Seekers Ride Pack (DLC)
My first instinct when booting Planet Coaster 2 was to open a spreadsheet and start mapping out ride placement, staffing ratios, and power grid routing. The good news: that instinct is genuinely rewarded here more than it was in the first game. The new Utilities system means rides and water attractions now need to be hooked up to generators, distributors, water pumps, and filters before they run, and an overarching Research tree lets you accumulate points across every park you build rather than grinding unlocks from scratch each time. These are real systemic additions, not cosmetic ones. The bad news, which I will get to, is that the management layer still falls well short of what the genre's harder-edged titles demand. The headline addition is waterpark construction, and it earns its place as more than a glorified expansion pack. Pools, lazy rivers, flumes, wave machines, and water slides all come with their own operational wrinkles: changing rooms, lifeguards, dedicated plumbing infrastructure. Designing a freeform pool using the flexible toolset, watching animated guests bomb off diving boards and tread water, feels distinct from the clockwork loop of coaster throughput management. The coaster editor itself remains impressively deep, letting you hand-sculpt track geometry, adjust individual piece angles, and paste custom scenery directly onto ride cars. The new free-form pathing system, with shape stamps and freehand tools, is a genuine quality-of-life upgrade that makes plaza design far less frustrating than before. Where Planet Coaster 2 stumbles is in the management layer's lack of teeth. Financial pressure rarely escalates into a genuine crisis: too many breakdowns means hire more mechanics, too much litter means more janitors, and the money curve trends upward almost by default once your ride count is healthy. Hardened sim players expecting the tension of a Tropico budget spiral or a Two Point Campus disaster spiral will find the stakes oddly low. The UI also attracts repeated criticism from reviewers and the community alike: it was clearly designed with controller navigation in mind, which creates friction for mouse-and-keyboard players on PC. The Career mode's narrative framing, centering on a fictional ancient coaster-building civilization, aims for charm but lands closer to forgettable. For newcomers, this is actually an easier entry point than you might expect. Career mode introduces mechanics at a measured pace through voiced tutorials, Sandbox mode can disable the Utilities simulation entirely if you just want to build without infrastructure overhead, and the Frontier Workshop gives immediate access to thousands of community-created blueprints so you are never staring at a blank lot with no idea where to start. Returning players from the original will find the creative ceiling noticeably higher: the scenery scaling tool, revised pathing, customizable restaurant interiors, and the waterpark layer all add genuine build variety. The content gaps that caused some community friction at launch, particularly around missing feature parity with the first game, have been partly addressed through post-launch updates. Bottom line for the strategy-and-sim crowd: Planet Coaster 2 is the best park builder available right now, but it is primarily a creation-first, management-second experience. The Metacritic score of 76 and a split user reception reflect a real tension between its exceptional toolset and its relatively shallow operational challenge. If you want to spend 150 hours sculpting an immaculate themed environment with a working waterpark, this is your game. If you want your park to actually threaten to bankrupt you, you may finish Career mode wishing Frontier had pushed the economic systems harder. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10 64bit (22H2)
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 25 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 (6GB VRAM) / AMD Radeon RX 5600XT (6GB VRAM) / Intel Arc A750 (8GB VRAM)
- Processor
- Intel i5-6600K / AMD Ryzen 5 2600
- Additional Notes
- SSD Recommended
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10,11 64bit
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 25 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 Super (8GB VRAM) / AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT (12GB VRAM) / Intel Arc A770 (16GB VRAM)
- Processor
- Intel i7-10700K / AMD Ryzen 7 5800
- Additional Notes
- SSD Required
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Planet Coaster 2: Thrill-Seekers Ride Pack (DLC).
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Frontier Developments
- Publisher
- Frontier Developments
- Release Date
- Nov 6, 2024

