I'm talking in terms of making them for the game.
I only ask because with the recent announcement of the Australia Pack, I'm surprised we're only getting a single exhibit animal from a country that has so many famous reptile and invertebrate species. I have to assume exhibit animals are at their core easier to make than habitat animals, since they only have to slot in to a single prefabricated habitat and be animated based on a set number of positions within the habitat which are cycled through randomly. On top of that, it's a matter of adding values for their ideal temperature/humidity range.
I don't think the pack is undervalued. This isn't a nonsense rant about getting "ripped off". I'm more genuinely curious about this subject.
I know a lot of folks here aren't especially enamoured by exhibit animals, but for me they're very important to building a realistic zoo, so I want as many as I can get. My hope is that we might see more exhibit animals added in their own DLC somewhere down the line, with options covering every region in the game (maybe three from each continent - South America, North America, Africa, Asia, and Australia). I'd happily pay the same price we're currently paying for it, or even a little more, even if it didn't come with content aside from the animals themselves.
The choice of the eastern blue-tongued skink surprised me. Like many, I have one as a pet. I would agree that they are a good ambassador species from Australia, but there are several others I think are better; the frill-necked lizard and thorny devil are obvious, as is the social huntsman, but there are others, too; the goliath stick insect, the golden bellfrog, the Lord Howe Island giant stick insect, the whistling tree frog, the taipan, or even the shingleback lizard if you wanted to go down the skink route so badly. I'm of course also forgetting the bearded dragon and the water dragon.
This might have also been a good opportunity to do something completely different - a freshwater turtle. The Australian painted turtle, or more famously the eastern long-necked turtle, would have been amazing. Of course this would require making a new exhibit environment which is mostly water, but even so.
I only ask because with the recent announcement of the Australia Pack, I'm surprised we're only getting a single exhibit animal from a country that has so many famous reptile and invertebrate species. I have to assume exhibit animals are at their core easier to make than habitat animals, since they only have to slot in to a single prefabricated habitat and be animated based on a set number of positions within the habitat which are cycled through randomly. On top of that, it's a matter of adding values for their ideal temperature/humidity range.
I don't think the pack is undervalued. This isn't a nonsense rant about getting "ripped off". I'm more genuinely curious about this subject.
I know a lot of folks here aren't especially enamoured by exhibit animals, but for me they're very important to building a realistic zoo, so I want as many as I can get. My hope is that we might see more exhibit animals added in their own DLC somewhere down the line, with options covering every region in the game (maybe three from each continent - South America, North America, Africa, Asia, and Australia). I'd happily pay the same price we're currently paying for it, or even a little more, even if it didn't come with content aside from the animals themselves.
The choice of the eastern blue-tongued skink surprised me. Like many, I have one as a pet. I would agree that they are a good ambassador species from Australia, but there are several others I think are better; the frill-necked lizard and thorny devil are obvious, as is the social huntsman, but there are others, too; the goliath stick insect, the golden bellfrog, the Lord Howe Island giant stick insect, the whistling tree frog, the taipan, or even the shingleback lizard if you wanted to go down the skink route so badly. I'm of course also forgetting the bearded dragon and the water dragon.
This might have also been a good opportunity to do something completely different - a freshwater turtle. The Australian painted turtle, or more famously the eastern long-necked turtle, would have been amazing. Of course this would require making a new exhibit environment which is mostly water, but even so.