That is (almost) certainly not going to happen.Please never do a dumb DLC based on a kids show in the first place.That abominable Scorpius or whatever it's called and the worst crap of it all, bioluminescent Paras, just don't belong into this game and would totally ruin the immersion and atmosphere of this game.
Like I said in my earlier post, Camp Cretaceous is too successful and too popular to ignore, what with it receiving critical acclaim from critics and fans of the franchise and reaching within the Netflix's top 10 or even top 5 of the week in multiple countries. The show stays up in the top 10 and top 5 for rather a long time, more than a month, so it’s not simply a flash in the pan.
The recent news as well, that Camp Cretaceous will tie into Jurassic World: Dominion further underlines just important the show is to the franchise. With all that taken into account, the notion of adding a Camp Cretaceous DLC seems to be less of a matter if it will be added to the game and more of a matter of when it will be added to the game.
And pray tell, how exactly would Scorpius rex and bioluminescent Parasaurolophus ruin the immersion and atmosphere of JWE2?
The Scorpius rex would be no more out of place than the other 5 hybrids which are returning for the sequel and the bioluminescent Parasaurolophus would be no more out of place than enormous, hype-intelligent Velociraptors and the itsy bitsy, teenie weenie, frill splaying, venom spraying Dilophosaurus. They’re both excellent examples and different approaches to “using genetic modification to up the wow factor”.
You might want to carefully read my post again, I used the Sinoceratops as an example of the large volume and variety of skins that can be found on the herbivores in the show’s background.Bioluminescent Paras/any hadrosaur, is actually the only thing I liked in that list of Gondrasia, Scorpius Rex is the worst thing, and he posted Sinoceratops, which is already in the game, like Ouranosaurus should to.
Monolophosaurus is meh to me.
Bumpy and all those childish named dinosaurs are a nightmare.
That was the point, in-universe it was the first attempt at creating a hybrid dinosaur and like all first attempts, it doesn’t go well. In reality, it was intentionally designed to be like a failed medical experiment, it was meant to be horrible and ugly. Entertainment Weekly has a great interview where Scott Kreamer and Colin Trevorrow talk about Season 3, this what they say about the Scorpius rex:Yeah - I have to agree the Scorpius rex is just horrible and ugly - it kind of reminds me very bad failed attempt to make an Indoraptor. By comparison the Indoraptor is a much better hybrid, as it is at least scarier and cooler at the same time.
"We wanted it to feel like a failed medical experiment," Kreamer explains. "Our design team just put a lot of time into figuring out what features should be exaggerated. We definitely wanted it to feel as the same phylum as the Indominus and the Indoraptor."
Trevorrow initially thought the Scorpius Rex design was "the ugliest thing ever," so much so that he "was a little against [the concept] at first."
"[The producers] rightly explained, 'Well, that's sort of the point, man.' It's the idea that we are messing with nature to the point that we have things that are genetic malfunctions," he says. "It's some dark stuff."