JWE3 Species and Ideas wishlist

@Detective_D1no I would like to see the spines sticking out in Acrocanthosaurus and the head has to be more carcharodontosaurid than tyrannosaur.



Plateosaurus is a must-not-miss species.

Besides the Becklespinax, there is no telling what other species will be included in a Chaos Theory DLC.

Of the aviary species, I prefer Rhamphorhynchus to be added.

Even if Archaeopteryx and Microraptor are to be added, which category would those two be in. Aviary or a viewing gallery attraction like the Compy?
i forgot to add Rhamphorynchus, Megalania and Tanystropheus. I would put Archaeo and Micro in small aviaries to be able to see them easier. Let's be honest in a normal aviary with Pteranodon and Quetz, would you notice these small animals?
 
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MORE IDEAS:
STAFF ONLY PATHS: maybe like this, there's already a mod in JWE2.
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BINOCULAR VIEW:
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MORE PATHS:
BIGGER AVIARIES: the JWE1 one was perfect.
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HOLOGRAM STATUES: https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&url...d=0CBQQjRxqGAoTCNDdvK2e64sDFQAAAAAdAAAAABCaAQ
MORE FEEDERS: pig, deer, cow, fruits and maybe land fish feeder, this one for semi-aquatic species. (herbivore feeders would be a great comeback but i don't see a logic in these coming back. (useful utilities mod by Kaiodenic)
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CUSTOMIZABLE SIGNS: (like in prehistoric kingdom) (reminder: i don't want jwe3 to have modular building, only for custom signs.)
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LAGOON UPGRADES: more decorations, maybe the Tylosaurus skin from JPTG, lagoon fencing, being able to change the color of the water, underwater tunnel tour, underwater foliage(bioluminescent corals?), terrain tool for lagoons and interactions between at least flying species.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&url...ved=0CBQQjRxqFwoTCLC2292i64sDFQAAAAAdAAAAABBI
ANIMATIONS: swimming animations for (maybe) all species and walking animations for flying species.
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MORE SKIN PATTERNS: (also preview of the skin in the hatchery)
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SAUROPODS and HADROSAURS FIGHTING BACK: also better fights animations.
VEHICLE DECORATIONS: maybe more cars we see in the movies for example the mobile lab from JP2
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SUBMARINE TOUR:
 

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@Detective_D1no I would like to see the spines sticking out in Acrocanthosaurus and the head has to be more carcharodontosaurid than tyrannosaur.



Plateosaurus is a must-not-miss species.

Besides the Becklespinax, there is no telling what other species will be included in a Chaos Theory DLC.

Of the aviary species, I prefer Rhamphorhynchus to be added.

Even if Archaeopteryx and Microraptor are to be added, which category would those two be in. Aviary or a viewing gallery attraction like the Compy?
Becklespinax is known from limited remains, specifically three posterior dorsal vertebrae and possibly a single tooth.(Source:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altispinax#History) I share @DragonNTiger concern about it possibly looking too similar to Concavenator. The only other species that could be used in that pack would be the sabretooth cat, but I have mixed feelings on that as the only species we have that comes from the time after the dinosaurs is Megalodon, which I don't know if it will be in the next game. Personally, I would prefer to see Moschorhinus or Inostrancevia added instead, as they tend to hunt in a manner that is similar to how big cats hunt.
I'm going to list my top ten species that I hope get added to the Jurassic World Evolution 3; as I have already made a list that shows many of the species I'm hoping get added to Jurassic World Evolution 3 in another thread, which post the link for here: https://forums.frontier.co.uk/threa...ations-for-jurassic-world-evolution-3.627289/.
1: Austroraptor, A genus of dromaeosaurid theropod dinosaur that lived during the Campanian and Maastrichtian ages of the Late Cretaceous period in what is now Argentina. Austroraptor was a large, moderately-built, ground-dwelling, bipedal carnivore, estimated at 5–6 m (16–20 ft) long. It is the largest dromaeosaur to be discovered in the Southern Hemisphere. They are believed to have been piscivores. The genus name Austroraptor means "Southern Thief," and is derived from the Latin word auster meaning "the south wind" and the Latin word raptor meaning "thief." The specific name cabazai was chosen in honor of Héctor "Tito" Cabaza, who founded the Museo Municipal de Lamarque where the specimen was partially studied. It was featured in Prehistoric Planet.
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2: 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, comparable in size to modern elephants. It was also one of the last dicynodonts, living shortly before their extinction at the end of the Triassic period. Lisowicia is unique amongst dicynodonts for its erect posture, with all four limbs held upright directly under its body. This is similar to the limbs of living mammals and dinosaurs, but unlike the sprawling and semi-erect postures typical of all other dicynodonts (and indeed all other non-mammalian synapsids), and shares many independently evolved features of its limbs with large mammals.
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3: Cymbospondylus, A basal early ichthyosaur that lived between the early and middle Triassic period. It could grow between 4 and 17 meters (13-56 feet) long. Cymbospondylus is one of the largest animals known from that time. It appeared in Sea Monsters: A Walking with Dinosaurs Trilogy. Its teeth structure suggest that fed on fish, cephalopods, and possibly other marine reptiles for larger species. If gets added I would recommend the developers have it require fish feeder in its enclosure, but also give the ability to use the shark feeder as well.
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4: Plateosaurus, A genus of plateosaurid dinosaur that lived during the Late Triassic period, around 214 to 204 million years ago, in what is now Central and Northern Europe. Adults of this species grew between 4.8 to 10 meters (16 to 33 feet) in length, and ranged in mass from 600 to 4,000 kilograms (1,300 to 8,800 lb.). These animals are believed to have lived for at least 12 to 20 years, but the maximum life span is not known. The oldest individual found was around 27 years of age and was still growing. The meaning of its name is not clearly understood. In 1846, a geologist speculated that "(πλᾰτῠ́ς, breit)" [English: broad] was the origin of the name, German paleontologist believed its name was derived from the stem of πλᾰτέος (plateos), the genitive case of the masculine adjective platys in Ancient Greek. In the same year, another researcher proposed that the name derives from the Ancient Greek πλατη (platê – "paddle", "rudder"; the researcher translates this as Latin pala = "spade") and σαυρος (sauros – "lizard").
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5: Inostrancevia, An extinct genus of large carnivorous therapsids who lived during the Late Permian in what is now European Russia and South Africa. The first known fossils of this gorgonopsian were discovered in the Northern Dvina, where two almost complete skeletons were exhumed. Inostrancevia is the biggest known gorgonopsian, the largest fossil specimens indicating an estimated size between 3 and 3.5 meters (9.8-11 feet) long.
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6: Rhoetosaurus, A genus of sauropod dinosaur from the late Jurassic Walloon Coal Measures of what is now eastern Australia. Rhoetosaurus is estimated to have been about 15 meters (49 ft) long and weighed about 9 tons (8.9 long tons; 9.9 short tons). Rhoetosaurus is among the best-known sauropods thus far discovered in Australia, as well as for the Jurassic of Gondwana. It is named after Rhoetus, a titan in Greek mythology mentioned by Ovid in Book V of his mock-epic Metamorphoses. Researchers suspect it may be a relative of Shunosaurus; and may have also possessed a tail club.
or
Shunosaurus, a genus of sauropod dinosaur from Late Jurassic (Oxfordian) beds in Sichuan Province in China, from 161 to 157 million years ago. It grew between 9.5 and 11 meters (31-36 feet) and weighed around 3 metric tons (3.3 short tons). In 1989, researchers discovered that the tail ended in a club, equipped on its top with two successive spikes formed by cone-shaped osteoderms with a length of 5 centimeters (2.0 inches), which it was believed to be used to fend off predators. The generic name derives from "Shu", an ancient name for Sichuan. The specific name honors hydrologist Li Bing, the governor of Sichuan in the third century BC.
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7: Scutosaurus, An extinct genus of pareiasaur parareptiles. Its genus name refers to large plates of armor scattered across its body. It was a large anapsid reptile that, unlike most reptiles, held its legs underneath its body to support its great weight. Fossils have been found in the Sokolki Assemblage Zone of the Malokinelskaya Formation in European Russia, close to the Ural Mountains, dating to the late Permian period. Its name means shield lizard.
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8: Yangchuanosaurus, An genus of metriacanthosaurid theropod dinosaur that lived in China from the Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous periods. Yangchuanosaurus hails from the Upper Shaximiao Formation and Suining Formation and was the largest predator in the area during that time. It is believed to have grown between 26 and 36 feet long and weighed around 3 tons. This theropod was named after the area in which was discovered, Yongchuan, in China.
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9: Mirarce, A genus of enantornithe bird from the Late Cretaceous of Utah. It was similar in size to modern turkeys. It is the most complete enantiornithine found in North America. The generic name is made up of the Latin mirus; beautiful, "for an impressive level of preservation and morphological details," with the addition of the name of Arke ( Ἄρκη \ Arkē ), the winged messenger of the Titans of Greek mythology - "for evidence pointing to an improved vehicle of this kind." The species name eatoni given in honor of Jeffrey Eaton in recognition of the decades of scientific work done on the Kaiparowits formation and the study of its fossil specimens.
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10: Excalibosaurus, A genus of ichthyosaur that lived during the Early Jurassic period in what is now England. It is characterized by the extreme elongation of the rostrum, with the lower jaw about three-fourths of the length of the upper jaw, giving the animal a swordfish-like look. The holotype specimen has a skull length of 78.5 cm (2 ft 6.9 in), while the largest specimen has a skull length of 1.54 m (5 ft 1 in). The larger specimen has a total length of 6.528 meters (21.42 feet). Its name means Excalibur's lizard.
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I would put Archaeo and Micro in small aviaries to be able to see them easier. Let's be honest in a normal aviary with Pteranodon and Quetz, would you notice these small animals?

I would not recommend putting the Archaeopteryx and Microraptor in a normal aviary with the Pteranodon and Quetzalcoatlus. As long as those two gliders can be viewed from the viewing gallery, that is what matters. Will those two need forest cover in their territory?

MORE FEEDERS: pig, deer, cow, fruits and maybe land fish feeder, this one for semi-aquatic species. (herbivore feeders would be a great comeback but i don't see a logic in these coming back. (useful utilities mod by Kaiodenic)
fish.png
utilities.jpg

We have seen the following species hunt beef cattle in Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis:

  • Dilophosaurus
  • Velociraptor
  • Ceratosaurus
  • Albertosaurus
  • Allosaurus
  • Acrocanthosaurus
  • Carcharodontosaurus
  • Spinosaurus
  • Tyrannosaurus Rex

Not recommended to small carnivores (especially Velociraptor), I would like to see beef cattle being dispensed from the live prey feeder to feed medium-sized carnivores (such as Metriacanthosaurus, Majungasaurus, Yutyrannus, and Qianzhousaurus) and large carnivores (except T-Rex).

Instead of herbivore feeders, I rather see fixes in the cohabitation system:

  • Ornithomimids, hadrosaurs, pachycephalosaurs, and ceratopsids can mutually cohabit
  • If stegosaurs dislike Microceratus, the relationship between stegosaurs and pachycephalosaurs should also be dislike.
  • Huayangosaurus and Chungkingosaurus can mutually cohabit
  • Homalocephale, Gallimimus, and Deinocheirus are friendly with one another
  • Torosaurus and Triceratops can mutually cohabit
  • Camarasaurus, Diplodocus, Barosaurus (if added), Apatosaurus, and Brachiosaurus can mutually cohabit

Dislike relationships based on paleobotany are DISGUSTINGLY APPALLING.
 
Has anyone suggested minimum population customization yet? If not, I'm suggesting it here:

This feature would allow us to customize the minimum population for any species, so they don't get lonely nor get stressed from it, so we won't have to worry about having to add multiple members per species (for example, Dryosaurus, Camptosaurus (if added), hadrosaurs, ornithomimids, sauropods, etc).

This could go well with cohabitation customization (I personally want JWE1 herbivore feeders as well, but that's besides the point), which would allow us to customize the cohabitation for any species, so we could get them to like or dislike a certain species or category of animals (for example, I want all "natural" herbivores (and Gigantoraptor, Deinocheirus, scavengers, and herbivore hybrids) to like each other and have all large carnivores dislike each other). That way, we could have a safari park with many herbivores not fighting each other to death constantly, and instead peacefully coexisting like living animals in safari parks (like San Diego Zoo Safari Park).
 
I would not recommend putting the Archaeopteryx and Microraptor in a normal aviary with the Pteranodon and Quetzalcoatlus. As long as those two gliders can be viewed from the viewing gallery, that is what matters. Will those two need forest cover in their territory?
If they're gliders instead of fliers? Lots of it... after all, how else are they gonna get high enough off the ground to glide?

Frankly, I don't like all this talk of dumbing down the animals to fit them into some exhibit box... all animals should function normally. Is is dumb to put a single Compsognathus in a pen fit for a T-Rex? ...yes... but it shouldn't be the developers or the game that decides where we put what or whether or not things make perfect sense, it should be us the players... ... ...I mean, outside of super obvious things like putting a T-Rex in a pen fit for a single Compsognathus...
 
MORE IDEAS (PART 2):
BETTER OPTIMIZATION
BIGGER MAPS (i hope we'll have full island maps with coasts and ferry landing, or mountains)

MORE TREES/FLOWERS/FOLIAGE: especially flowers to make our enclosures more colorful, also all terrain paint for every map, and maybe fallen leaves as a terrain paint would be very cool to see.
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willow.jpg
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MAP CUSTOMIZATION: something like JPOG.
BEEF CATTLE: imagine having a paddock, like the indominus rex one, to feed the indominus we could have something similar to the movie. If we ever get paddocks, i think that beef cattle as a feeder would be awesome.
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NON-DINOSAURS SPECIES: JWE is based on the franchise so i don't mind if we won't get accurate dinos or cenozoic species, for that there's prehistoric kingdom. But it's not the first time we get non-dinosaur species for example: Dimetrodon, Nothosaurus, Lystrosaurus, Herrerasaurus, ecc... So in jwe3 we could have maybe with the addition of semi-aquatic species more non-dinosaur species. I already made a list with MY (personal) list of species that i would like to see in jwe3 but here's some species i forgot to add:
-LISOWICIA
-EDAPHOSAURUS
-MEGALANIA
-SCUTOSAURUS
-POSTOSUCHUS
-KAPROSUCHUS
FERRIS WHEEL ATTRACTION: other than dinosaurs, a park needs fun.
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PATHS AND LOGS: i already gave this idea in the latest post, but i found this image that shows maybe how Frontier could make it.
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Also for small aviaries i don't mean tiny boxes, but i mean something like this (but a little bit bigger):
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MORE BUILDINGS: many more new buildings like a SPA or an information kiosk
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If there was therinzino DNA in it, it wouldn’t be just the claws that are changed (just how genetics work)
All things considered...
  • How little each animal seems to have contributed to the Indominus.
  • How all of this is based on what science says is literally impossible
  • How crazy and weird and nonsensical the writing and plot has always been... since the first movie...
I don't think the writers really care about how things work...
 
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All things considered...
  • How little each animal seems to have contributed to the Indominus.
  • How all of this is based on what science says is literally impossible
  • How crazy and weird and nonsensical the writing and plot has always been... since the first movie...
I don't think the writers really care about how things work...
Of the species listed to create the Indominus, it would be nice to add Rugops to the game.
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Frankly, I don't like all this talk of dumbing down the animals to fit them into some exhibit box... all animals should function normally. Is is dumb to put a single Compsognathus in a pen fit for a T-Rex? ...yes... but it shouldn't be the developers or the game that decides where we put what or whether or not things make perfect sense, it should be us the players... ... ...I mean, outside of super obvious things like putting a T-Rex in a pen fit for a single Compsognathus...

Even if the Tarbosaurus, T-Rex, Spinosaurus, and Giganotosaurus like scavengers; it is best not to put the scavengers with these territorial large carnivores. Scavengers panic when a large carnivore is within their vicinity. Therefore, scavengers have to be kept separate from large carnivores. Besides not meeting their needs, another source of stress come from panic when fleeing from larger predators. Other than the "prey dinosaurs", it is best that the four territorial large carnivores have no like relationship as they would rather have their territory for themselves and not sharing the territory with other species especially scavengers.
 
Even if the Tarbosaurus, T-Rex, Spinosaurus, and Giganotosaurus like scavengers; it is best not to put the scavengers with these territorial large carnivores. Scavengers panic when a large carnivore is within their vicinity. Therefore, scavengers have to be kept separate from large carnivores. Besides not meeting their needs, another source of stress come from panic when fleeing from larger predators. Other than the "prey dinosaurs", it is best that the four territorial large carnivores have no like relationship as they would rather have their territory for themselves and not sharing the territory with other species especially scavengers.
All the more reason for smaller pens. It feels really weird building a big exhibit for something that can be very hard to see.
 
All the more reason for smaller pens. It feels really weird building a big exhibit for something that can be very hard to see.

Large enclosures are needed to house larger dinosaurs and large variety of dinosaur species, way to view them vary. Instead of viewing gallery, large enclosures are to be viewed from the viewing platform.

Safari zones can be made for herbivores, it is recommended to view the hateful Therizinosaurus from the gyrosphere. There have been gossip about river-ride-type attraction, I think this type of attraction can do for the herbivore safari.

The viewing platforms and the remote viewing galleries are for large carnivores.
 
Large enclosures are needed to house larger dinosaurs and large variety of dinosaur species, way to view them vary. Instead of viewing gallery, large enclosures are to be viewed from the viewing platform.

Safari zones can be made for herbivores, it is recommended to view the hateful Therizinosaurus from the gyrosphere. There have been gossip about river-ride-type attraction, I think this type of attraction can do for the herbivore safari.

The viewing platforms and the remote viewing galleries are for large carnivores.
I meant it feel weird building all that just for something that would be to small for most guests to see, like Compys.
 
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