Planet Zoo: Asia Animal Pack (DLC)
Seven new Asian species, 100+ themed scenery pieces, and a South Korea campaign scenario expand Planet Zoo's roster for dedicated zoo builders.
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About Planet Zoo: Asia Animal Pack (DLC)
Planet Zoo's DLC model is well-established at this point: Frontier drops a themed animal pack, you get a handful of new species, a pile of scenery assets, and usually a campaign scenario to justify the purchase beyond pure cosmetics. The Asia Animal Pack follows that formula with seven animals sourced from across the continent, over 100 scenery pieces drawing on Asian architectural and natural aesthetics, and a new campaign scenario built around helping a character named Dominic Myers reconstruct a zoo in South Korea. If you have played any prior Planet Zoo DLC, you know exactly what shape this comes in. From a pure zoo-building strategy angle, new animals matter more than the scenery count. Each species brings its own habitat requirements, social dynamics, enrichment needs, and exhibit footprint, which feeds directly into how you allocate staff coverage, climate control budgets, and visitor path flow. Seven animals is a solid batch. The question for any returning player is whether the specific species fit gaps in your existing roster or whether they overlap with animals you already have well-represented. The South Korea campaign scenario is the more structured entry point: it gives you a defined goal state, a narrative wrapper, and constraints that force you to think about build order rather than just sandbox sprawl. For newcomers considering whether to start here, the honest answer is that this DLC has no standalone value. You need the base game, and the base game already has a steep learning curve around terrain sculpting, guest happiness systems, and keeper routing. That said, the campaign scenario format in packs like this one is genuinely one of the better onboarding tools Planet Zoo has produced over its DLC lifespan. A goal-directed scenario with a pre-built park skeleton to work from is less overwhelming than a blank sandbox, and the South Korea setting gives the scenery pack an immediate practical use rather than leaving you staring at 100 pieces wondering where to start. The Steam Workshop integration is the long-term value multiplier here. Planet Zoo's modding community routinely produces exhibit blueprints, habitat designs, and scenery arrangements built specifically around each new DLC's assets within days of release. If you are the type of player who treats the base game as a platform and the DLC as content fuel, the workshop turns a seven-animal pack into a much larger sandbox through community blueprints. That ecosystem is one of the strongest arguments for staying invested in this game's DLC cycle. The weaknesses of this format are the same as always. AI management in Planet Zoo is largely passive once your park is running, so the strategic depth here is in construction and layout planning rather than in dynamic crisis response. The campaign scenario will not last long for experienced players. And if you are already sitting on a dozen prior DLC packs, the Asia Animal Pack is incremental rather than transformative. It does what it says, cleanly and competently, without reinventing what Planet Zoo is. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Frontier Developments
- Publisher
- Frontier Developments
- Release Date
- Jun 25, 2025