Jurassic Park Interactive 3DO Review

Jurassic Park 3DO

Introduction

“Jurassic Park Interactive” for the 3DO was a massive, missed opportunity. This could have been a visually stunning immersive tie-in game experience with FMV sequences lifted from the original film. However, instead, we got a mishmash of various game genres mixed with an embarrassing set of 1979-era arcade games such as Asteroids, Space Invaders, and Breakout.

 Release and Expectations

This 3DO game was published in a very nice-looking long box format by Universal Interactive Studios in 1994 to tie in with the hugely popular Steven Spielberg film from 1993, which was, in turn, adapted from Michael Crichton’s famous 1990 book.

This was Universal Interactive’s first game for the 3DO and one they had originally hoped to be the included launch game. They needed to produce something that would bolster the ailing 3DO platform, which was seriously lacking good games, and they needed to secure their investment in 3DO and prove the system’s worth.

The game cost about $1-2 million dollars and had a programming team of around ten developers, headed by Greg Gorsiski. With all the clout of Universal/MCA and the power of the 3DO, this should have been so much better.

Opening FMV

The intro FMV movie explains that you must save various people scattered all over the island and get them back to safety for extraction from the helipad on the island. While helping them escape, you must drive through the jungle chased by a T. Rex, shoot Spitters, and outrun a Velociraptor in the hallways of one of the outbuildings.

Once people are saved, you must unlock Dennis Nedry’s computer virus, get Jurassic Park back online, and open the comms to the mainland to get everyone to safety. You need to do this within 24 hours, or else the cargo ship with stowaway breeding raptors will not return, and the fate of the world will be altered forever.

All sounds very dramatic, but the game doesn’t cash in on this buildup. The premise is promising, but the actual execution is a disappointment.

Spitter gameplay
Spitter gameplay

 Visuals and Casting Issues

The intro FMV initially looks great and was taken from the original film with the original music included, but you soon realize that any imagery of the actual cast members has been carefully edited out. It turns out that the cast did not sign agreements for their likenesses to be used – or maybe were not offered enough compensation.

Had they been used, then the authenticity of the game might have been improved. Instead, we get stand-in unknown actors playing all the well-known parts, which instantly reduced the immersion factor. These actors appear in small newly shot cut scenes not taken from the movie that look feeble and cringeworthy and are supposed to set up the various ‘save the guests’ game sections.

 Saving Guests: Splitter Jungle Section

This saving guest’s section initially looks like it has potential. The 3D Splitter section looks great with a detailed jungle backdrop. But the aiming of the taser gun becomes clumsy and awkward, and it’s not initially obvious (well, not to me) you can scroll the whole scene left and right. Also, once shot, the Spitters spin off stage left in the most ridiculous fashion.

 T. Rex Chase Sequence: Driving the Ford Explorer

The chase sequence involving a first-person drive to safety in a Ford Explorer also initially looks good, and you can see the T. Rex in the car mirror getting closer which adds some tension. However you soon realize the Ford does not handle like a proper car and requires unrealistic extreme movements to dodge the never-ending recycled 2 or 3 obstacles.

Why didn’t they make a few different tracks here and improve the handling? Why do you hear a hillbilly yelling “YEEHAW” when you finish the level?

Escaping the Velociraptor

The last section is an escape from Jurassic Park building hallways by finding keys and trapping the Velociraptor behind gates. This again looks promising and shows off the 3DO’s ability to render Wolfenstein 3D-like corridors – but the corridor designs are lazy and all start to look identical, leading you to get confused as to where you are, and the slowness of turning corners starts to drive you bonkers.

All the while, a Velociraptor is chasing you, and this sluggish turning just adds to the frustration as you try to escape.

Velociraptor tunnel gameplay
Velociraptor tunnel gameplay

 The Terrible Mini-Games

The mixture of all the different play mechanic styles makes this feel like a cobbled-together set of demos, and this damages the player’s ability to get used to a certain playing style and get properly committed to the game.

The save the guests stages were at least trying to use some of the 3DO’s 32-bit gaming capabilities; however, the Dennis Nedry Engineering Systems code-breaking section really scrapes the barrel in the originality stakes. You have various long-winded Space Invaders, Breakout, Galaga, and Asteroid clones with overly simplistic and childish dinosaur visual embellishments.

These five weak mini games are just fillers and a waste of time. They drag on too long and really add to the overall disjointed gaming styles on offer. Also, they don’t even make use of the full screen and appear in tiny little sections to the left of the screen.

Conclusion

Despite the criticisms, I don’t totally hate this game, but I bemoan the fact that this should have been a top-tier 3DO game from a studio with bags of resources and a rich film license to work with. I still occasionally play the main part of the game as I’m a huge fan of the film and the 3DO, but the exciting-looking marketing was deceptive, as the real game was unfortunately a letdown.

Jurassic Park Manual

Jurassic Park 3DO Manual
Rating
2.5/5

Intro video and gameplay

Screenshots

Game CD box

Jurassic Park logo
Jurassic Park stone logo

Key points

  • First release from newly formed Universal Interactive Studios in 1994.
  • Premise: rescuing island guests and combating dinosaur threats, unlocking engineering systems by beating 5 mini-games to call back the cargo ship.
  • Suffers from poor execution: disjointed gameplay, clunky mechanics, unconvincing stand-in actors.
  • Includes outdated 1980’s arcade-style mini-games.
  • Big marketing push to position it as a top-tier title but ultimately a disappointment for Jurassic park and 3DO fans.
  • Overall design and gameplay styles are lackluster and fragmented.
"It's the hardest thing I've ever had to do. How do you rewrite a linear story for a non-linear environment and make it better?...
Greg Gorsiski
Designer
Jurassic Park driving gameplay
Jurassic Park driving(?) gameplay
Jurassic Park game intro screen
Jurassic Park game intro screen
Denis Nedry's terrible mini games - space invaders

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