New Ideas for Future DLCs about When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth.

A. For Attractions.
1. River Ride: Through and around an enclosure. Could work like the Tour/Jeep/Gyrosphere Ride. (Maybe add one more skin like the Bone Shaker Coaster JPTG. Just as a alternative skin for the Park Tour.)
Select what kind of River Ride from different eras.
"We have the Jungle River Ride where the boats follow tracks underwater"
John Arnold. In JP Novel.
Jungle River Raft JP Novel/Motor Boat JPIII/Kayak JW/Coaster Ride for Biosyn like the River Adventure Ride in JP Theme Parks.
2. Air Ride: Aviary Lodge Ride JP Novel/Balloon Tour JPOG/Hang Gliding JWCC.
3. Lagoon Attractions: Submarine Ride (like the tour ride)/Lagoon Sub Dome (placed on the water floor)/Lagoon Sub Tower (in the lagoon higher than the Dome between water surface and lagoon water bed).
4. TreeTop Lodge.
B. Feeding Animations.
1. More Dinosaurs eating out of the insect feeder. Compys/Dimorphodon/Ornithomimus etc.
2. Dead Fish Basket Feeder for Lagoon Plesiosaur Dinosaurs (like the meat feeder we have for carnivores)
3. More Variety of Live Meat Feeders like Egg Feeder, Mouse Feeder, Frog Feeder, Pig Feeder, Cow Feeder, Deer Feeder and each Carnivorous Dinosaur would prefer something different, just like we have Variety in plant's for our Veggiesaurs depending on the species others like the same others don't.
C. Decorations and Buildings.
1. More variety of Different Paths (wood/rocky/sandy) and colouring the paths.
Individual Staff Jeeps/Vehicles (in both conditions Parked-Destroyed), Jurassic Park/World Gates, Bin's, Benches and Vending Machines.
2. Bridges/Tunnels.
3. Waterfalls/Lagoon Decorating/Tall Long Rectangle Rocks for Aviaries(flying reptiles to land on Like we saw in JP3) and for Lagoons.
Decorations for the eternal Lagoon wall's like seaweed/rocks.
4. More Skeleton statues of Dinosaurs With and Without Banners.
T-rex with banner (When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth) ( Welcome To Jurassic Park) (Dino DNA) (Spare No Expense) (Danger) (More Teeth) (Warring It Bites) (Veggiesaurs) (Hungry) etc. Apatosaurus, Triceratops, Stegosaurus, Gallimimus, Dracorex, Pteranodon, Kronosaurus etc. (Not for every Dino but at least some variety of Different species.)
5. Abandon Facility Buildings like Amenities Security/Staff/Control Centers Viewing Galleries etc. Like in TLWJP.
6. Fake Dinosaur Nest's.With and Without Eggs.
D. Mechanics and Animations
1. Connect secondary entrance/exit to the Viewing Dome and Log Gallery from the other side of the enclosure.
2. Pterosaurs walking on the ground even for a little. Especially the Quetzalcoatlus.
3. More Aquatic Animations for our Lagoon Dinosaurs. (Splashing there tail on the water surface, Jumping on the surface of the water especially for the Ichthyosaurs like dolphins, Plesiosauroidea Reptiles standing still on the surface of the water with there neck and head standing tall.)
E. New Dinosaurs
1. A couple of small Aquatic Dinosaurs.
2. Dimetrodon family spices like.
Shringasaurus, Nothosaurus, Tanystropheus, Edaphosaurus, Siamosaurus.
Just a little more variety to are list of four legged crawling carnivore's.

Great work Team Frontier. Dinosaurs have never been so alive.
Thank you for everything.
 
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Well one more small Spinosaurian looking, like a small fin croc walking on all four i think is ok.
Nah bro that Siamosaurus is trash. It's absolutely disgusting. You couldn't think of something like Irritator or Ichthyovenator?
1684694057864.png
 
I think the developers should consider adding more species from the Triassic period. So far, we have Lystrosaurus, Coelophysis, and Herrerasaurus, but we have no herbivorous dinosaurs from this period and, in general not many animals from this period. I do agree that it would be nice to have more species from the Permian Period. Some species from the Triassic period I would recommend include:
Plateosaurus
1684879599627.png

Lisowicia, An extinct genus of giant dicynodont synapsid that lived in what is now Poland during the Late Triassic Period. Lisowicia is the largest known dicynodont, as well as the largest non-mammalian synapsid, and is estimated to have weighed between 5–6 tons. It was also one of the last dicynodonts, living shortly before their extinction at the end of the Triassic period.
1684884576427.png

Tawa, A genus of basal theropod dinosaurs from the Late Triassic period. The fossil remains of Tawa hallae were found in the Hayden Quarry of Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, US.

Eoraptor, A basal sauropodomorph that lived during the Late Triassic in Western Gondwana, in the region that is now northwestern Argentina. It was one of the earliest-known dinosaurs and one of the earliest members of the sauropod family. It is believed to have been omnivorous.
1684880051318.png

Buriolestes, A early sauropodomorph dinosaurs that lived during the Late Triassic found in the Santa Maria Formation of the Paraná Basin in southern Brazil. The shape of teeth lead scientists to believe it was carnivorous.
1684880301515.png

Pisanosaurus, An extinct genus of early dinosauriform from the Late Triassic of Argentina. It is being debated whether it was a ornithischian or silesaurid.
1684977457760.png

Thrinaxodon, An extinct genus of cynodonts, including the species T. liorhinus which lived in what are now South Africa and Antarctica during the Early Triassic. Thrinaxodon lived just after the Permian–Triassic mass extinction event, its survival during the extinction may have been due to its burrowing habits. It is prevalent in the fossil record in part because it was one of the few carnivores of its time, and was of a larger size than similar cynodont carnivores.

Cynognathus, An extinct genus of large-bodied cynodontian therapsids that lived in the Middle Triassic. Cynognathus was a 1.2-metre (3 ft. 11 in) long predator closely related to mammals and had a southern hemispheric distribution. Fossils have so far been recovered from South Africa, Argentina, Antarctica, and Namibia.
1684887431626.png

Cymbospondylus
1684881790450.png

Helveticosaurus, an extinct genus of diapsid marine reptile known from the Middle Triassic of southern Switzerland. It is believed to have been carnivorous.

Placodus, A genus of heavily armored marine reptiles belonging to the order Placodontia, which swam in the shallow seas of the middle Triassic period. Fossils of Placodus have been found in Central Europe (Germany, France, Poland) and China. They had a durophagous diet of shellfish.
1684882045898.png

Grippia,
Utatsusaurus
1684884852037.png

Augustasaurus,
Bobosaurus,
Yunguisaurus,
Pistosaurus
1684961001607.png
 
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I think the developers should consider adding more species from the Triassic period. So far, we have Lystrosaurus, Coelophysis, and Herrerasaurus, but we have no herbivorous dinosaurs from this period and, in general not many animals from this period. I do agree that it would be nice to have more species from the Permian Period. Some species from the Triassic period I would recommend include:
Plateosaurus
View attachment 356640
Lisowicia, An extinct genus of giant dicynodont synapsid that lived in what is now Poland during the Late Triassic Period. Lisowicia is the largest known dicynodont, as well as the largest non-mammalian synapsid, and is estimated to have weighed between 5–6 tons. It was also one of the last dicynodonts, living shortly before their extinction at the end of the Triassic period.
View attachment 356653
Tawa, A genus of basal theropod dinosaurs from the Late Triassic period. The fossil remains of Tawa hallae were found in the Hayden Quarry of Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, US.

Eoraptor, A basal sauropodomorph that lived during the Late Triassic in Western Gondwana, in the region that is now northwestern Argentina. It was one of the earliest-known dinosaurs and one of the earliest members of the sauropod family. It is believed to have been omnivorous.
View attachment 356641
Buriolestes, A early sauropodomorph dinosaurs that lived during the Late Triassic found in the Santa Maria Formation of the Paraná Basin in southern Brazil. The shape of teeth lead scientists to believe it was carnivorous.
View attachment 356642
Pisanosaurus, An extinct genus of early dinosauriform from the Late Triassic of Argentina. It is being debated whether it was a ornithischian or silesaurid.
View attachment 356644
Thrinaxodon, An extinct genus of cynodonts, including the species T. liorhinus which lived in what are now South Africa and Antarctica during the Early Triassic. Thrinaxodon lived just after the Permian–Triassic mass extinction event, its survival during the extinction may have been due to its burrowing habits. It is prevalent in the fossil record in part because it was one of the few carnivores of its time, and was of a larger size than similar cynodont carnivores.

Cynognathus, An extinct genus of large-bodied cynodontian therapsids that lived in the Middle Triassic. Cynognathus was a 1.2-metre (3 ft. 11 in) long predator closely related to mammals and had a southern hemispheric distribution. Fossils have so far been recovered from South Africa, Argentina, Antarctica, and Namibia.
View attachment 356659
Cymbospondylus
View attachment 356646
Helveticosaurus, an extinct genus of diapsid marine reptile known from the Middle Triassic of southern Switzerland. It is believed to have been carnivorous.

Placodus, A genus of heavily armored marine reptiles belonging to the order Placodontia, which swam in the shallow seas of the middle Triassic period. Fossils of Placodus have been found in Central Europe (Germany, France, Poland) and China. They had a durophagous diet of shellfish.
View attachment 356647
Grippia,
Utatsusaurus
View attachment 356655
Augustasaurus,
Bobosaurus,
Yunguisaurus,
Pistosaurus
View attachment 356652
You put a picture of Ubirajara for the Pisanosaurus, also recent studies have put the silesaurs as basal ornithischians, technically Pisanosaurus is both an ornithischian and a silesaur.
 
I think the developers should consider adding more species from the Triassic period. So far, we have Lystrosaurus, Coelophysis, and Herrerasaurus, but we have no herbivorous dinosaurs from this period and, in general not many animals from this period. I do agree that it would be nice to have more species from the Permian Period. Some species from the Triassic period I would recommend include:
Plateosaurus
View attachment 356640
Lisowicia, An extinct genus of giant dicynodont synapsid that lived in what is now Poland during the Late Triassic Period. Lisowicia is the largest known dicynodont, as well as the largest non-mammalian synapsid, and is estimated to have weighed between 5–6 tons. It was also one of the last dicynodonts, living shortly before their extinction at the end of the Triassic period.
View attachment 356653
Tawa, A genus of basal theropod dinosaurs from the Late Triassic period. The fossil remains of Tawa hallae were found in the Hayden Quarry of Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, US.

Eoraptor, A basal sauropodomorph that lived during the Late Triassic in Western Gondwana, in the region that is now northwestern Argentina. It was one of the earliest-known dinosaurs and one of the earliest members of the sauropod family. It is believed to have been omnivorous.
View attachment 356641
Buriolestes, A early sauropodomorph dinosaurs that lived during the Late Triassic found in the Santa Maria Formation of the Paraná Basin in southern Brazil. The shape of teeth lead scientists to believe it was carnivorous.
View attachment 356642
Pisanosaurus, An extinct genus of early dinosauriform from the Late Triassic of Argentina. It is being debated whether it was a ornithischian or silesaurid.
View attachment 356644
Thrinaxodon, An extinct genus of cynodonts, including the species T. liorhinus which lived in what are now South Africa and Antarctica during the Early Triassic. Thrinaxodon lived just after the Permian–Triassic mass extinction event, its survival during the extinction may have been due to its burrowing habits. It is prevalent in the fossil record in part because it was one of the few carnivores of its time, and was of a larger size than similar cynodont carnivores.

Cynognathus, An extinct genus of large-bodied cynodontian therapsids that lived in the Middle Triassic. Cynognathus was a 1.2-metre (3 ft. 11 in) long predator closely related to mammals and had a southern hemispheric distribution. Fossils have so far been recovered from South Africa, Argentina, Antarctica, and Namibia.
View attachment 356659
Cymbospondylus
View attachment 356646
Helveticosaurus, an extinct genus of diapsid marine reptile known from the Middle Triassic of southern Switzerland. It is believed to have been carnivorous.

Placodus, A genus of heavily armored marine reptiles belonging to the order Placodontia, which swam in the shallow seas of the middle Triassic period. Fossils of Placodus have been found in Central Europe (Germany, France, Poland) and China. They had a durophagous diet of shellfish.
View attachment 356647
Grippia,
Utatsusaurus
View attachment 356655
Augustasaurus,
Bobosaurus,
Yunguisaurus,
Pistosaurus
View attachment 356652
What about Riojasaurus?
 
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