As you research your animals you’ll understand their needs better, and be able to put up more useful signage for your guests. You’ll also need to educate your guests, and there’s a whole research element Frontier touched on but didn’t really show off during the demo. Pretty damn small, in comparison to the giraffes we saw. The smallest animal revealed so far is the Brazilian Wandering Spider, which has a leg-span of six inches. Small-scale exhibits are in the game, and while you won’t construct every piece of them (like you do with larger enclosures) you can still customize their look with different ornaments-logs, rocks, and lamps, in the case of the iguana we saw. There are a few other tidbits I’d love to cover, as I had a lot of very specific questions for Frontier. Place a tree too close to the edge of the chimpanzee pen, and your guests may have a zoo trip they never forget. But there’s a lot more substance to the management side as well, especially as you add more exhibits, more animals, and try to keep your park staff from breaking the fourth wall.Īnd if you just want to set lions loose upon your unsuspecting guests? Frontier hinted you can do that too-by accident even, because enclosures are hand-built.
#Planet zoo mobile mods
If you want to focus on creating a beautiful zoo for guests to experience, there are plenty of built-in tools to facilitate that-not to mention whatever mods end up on the Steam Workshop. With Planet Zoo, I feel like Frontier (maybe) got the balance right. Jurassic World Evolution skewed too far in the other direction in my opinion, heavy on management but very restrictive when it came to player creativity. Planet Coaster is primarily a game about theme park construction, light on the management aspect. It’s a mix of Frontier’s best ideas, really. Staff paths return from Frontier’s more fantastical Jurassic World Evolution, allowing you to maintain the zoo-as-theme-park illusion. There are some simple monorail-style rides you can put in for the braver guests. Want a bunch of logs for your chimpanzees to play on? You place those one at a time, and the animals will actually climb on them-a feature Frontier says took a year to get right. Want a pond for the animals to drink from? Or a sand pit? You build it, and each animal will prefer different terrain in their pens. While I could sit and watch Planet Zoo’s clockwork exhibits play out all day, there’s a lot going on behind the scenes-most of which we have to take on faith for now, as it’s more big-picture than this demo. It makes for a hell of a first impression though, and was certainly enough to sustain a 20-minute demo on its own.įrontier brought more than shader tricks, though. In my experience visual prowess always wears off sooner or later, the eye growing accustomed to this new baseline. I don’t know how long that feeling will last. “Very cat-like,” as Frontier’s Liesa Bauwens said. And the cheetahs? They lounged in the sun, refusing to do anything interesting. A few experimented with the “enrichment items” scattered around their enclosures, stripping meat off a hook or rubbing against a pole. Most of our demo-which is recreated by Frontier in the video above-was spent up close and at ground level, eye-to-eye with the animals as they went about their days. It makes for a builder you want to sit and watch, as much as play.