Chris Buffa (Modojo): Most video games based on Jurassic Park involve blasting dinosaurs or eating people, so it's good to see the management sim Jurassic Park Builder stomp its way to iPhone and iPad. The app immediately brings to mind Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis from 2003, where the goal is to build a five-star theme park filled with prehistoric attractions. One of the biggest differences, however, is Builder's freemium model that forces users to either wait hours and days to make progress without spending a dime, or speed evolution along by opening their wallets. Regardless of which path they choose, life, uh, finds a way.
This weekend, Invisible Gamer's Austin played a plethora of Jurassic Park games and gives you a quick tour around each game in a theme-park inspired format.
Jurassic Park Builder Guide Cheats - Strategy Tips for Android iPhone Game
The most important action in the game is to collect coins so you can keep developing your park. Dinosaurs and buildings generate coins over time.
IGN - I never felt like I was missing anything, and I still don't. And I think, perhaps a bit snootily, that that's because there's a divide – a kind of perceptual chasm – between what people think they remember Jurassic Park being about, and what it was, you know, actually about. And I also think that this is the reason that every Jurassic Park game I've ever played has been a disaster.
IDK, I thought the SNES was pretty decent, the FPS sections were nicely done if a little primitive (considering the hardware). There was a cool glitch in it (collecting the dinosaur eggs gave you extra lives - just move away slightly from the egg until it's on the edge of screen.. BAM, it reappears - collect the eggs until you have 99 lives) Just a damn shame you couldn't save your game, with breaks it took me about 8hrs to finish it. Ending was crap though.
Jurassic park 2 on snes and Operation genesis would like to have a word with you