Operation Chicken Box
Get a 5 Star rating...with only Struthiomimus.
Get a 5 Star rating...with only Struthiomimus.
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Let's have a round of applause for Steggs!
Let's have a round of applause for Steggs!
Hi!
Recently watched the stream recording (couldn't see it live) and was very happy to see you choose one of my suggestions.
It is possible, but it took me +300 Struthis and I "cheated" (unlimited money, power, feeders and dinosaur lifespans, no disease, failed incubations nor social/population requirements and difficulty set on easy...I believe that's not "cheating" because it's sandbox). I guess you could have done it with less animals, using those DLC genes...but it's still definitely not a 30 minutes project.
I'll try to be more sensible with my next suggestions
Not really a challenge challenge but how about a paleo study. Eg. a prey predator relationship or species/subspecies families or in geographic area of dig sites. Could start off with the species details the game gives you, look up other online resources (or background resources used to make the game) and/or make guesses on how many struthis a T-rex would need to eat per week to stay alive, how much vegetation the struthis would consume, why struthis might live in groups or why natural selection caused dinosaurs to grow big. You might not be 'right' all the time in your guesses but what if you were a paleontologist using JWE dinos for study.
Your theory on raptors is good and all, but isn't all this conjecture kind of moot? I mean, once the U.N. and Costa Rica and everyone decides how to handle that second island, scientists will just go in and look for themselves.
A game for two players
- Player A closes his/her eyes.
- Player B starts incubating a dinosaur in a Hammond Creation Lab.
- Player B starts drawing said dinosaur with path, fence and terrain tools.
- After Player B has started, Player A opens his/her eyes and tries to guess which dinosaur is incubating based on Player B's drawing before incubation finish.
- Alternate who's drawing and who's guessing
A hint: larger dinosaurs take longer to incubate