So, hype train for the video?
Actually, this video is rubbish. It\s just some pre/rendered video looped and tagged as game-engine, without any way of telling it really is.
Just the typical PR smoke and mirrors. I'm not impressed.
I would be very surprised if there wasn't a REQUIREMENT in the licensing to keep the dinos looking the same as the movies.
I am hoping for a bit more....jump in that Chopper/jeep and go explore FPV styleFirst thing which came in to my mind about the video was, that theres possibly a free roam camera which you can use to go and see what the dinos are doing in the park.
I could spend hours in my park with a feature like that.. [yesnod]
To me this was like having christmas early. Kept throwing my wallet at my laptop screen. Summer of 2018 can't come soon enough. Side note I thought it was funny seeing that trike run from them raptors when awhile back(when i still owned a pc copy of jpog) they'd be trampling them like it was nothing on one of my site b plays.
I still would like the dinosaurs to be represented a little bit more "modern". I've stated this in the "whish-list-thread" as well.
What do I mean here?
Look at the Triceratops, for example.
The neck shield is covered by greyish scales, indistinguishable from the other skin parts.
Paleontologic examinasions however have found that the shield was pevaded with blood vessels, very much like the beaks of birds where the horn is oftentimes brightly colored. Present-day reptiles also show bright colors in order to attract females, especially when in the mating season. Modern BBC productions featuring the latest discoveries show dinosaures therefore way more colorful; the "bland" look seems somehow dated.
Also the Raptors.
As far as I know, the current idea is that many Theropoda had feather-like skin features - to keep them warm (dinosaures were warm blooded) and probably also to help them maneuver while hunting. This is, how birds later developed their flying feathers.
By analysing the forms of fossilised pigment cells (which are typically shaped according to the color they show), we even know about the feathers colors and their distribution: brown, black and white. (Not the ones of Raptors, though.)
I would love to see this represented in a modern dinosaur game as well.
All this stands back behind gameplay, of course and I do not deny that the animals look superbly modeled and textured.
Just unnecessarily a bit uni-colored. For the look of a game, more colorful creatures would be a good thing to have (nicer to look at) - and here, modern science even indicates it to be the case!
Why stick to an out-dated state of knowledge?