
Jurassic World Aftermath Collection Reviews
Check out Jurassic World Aftermath Collection Review Scores from trusted Critics below. With 6 reviews on CriticDB, Jurassic World Aftermath Collection has a score of:
Sneaking around when dinosaurs are on the prowl is exciting stuff so let's see how Jurassic World Aftermath Collection holds up.
Overall, Jurassic World Aftermath Collection is a decent VR game that offers a fun experience for fans of the franchise.
While younger folks might still get a kick from its occasional scares and familiar locations, Jurassic World Aftermath Collection is a desperately linear adventure that struggles to break free of its humble technical origins and fails to both do proper justice to the setting of its source material and the PSVR2 hardware itself.
We love the first Jurassic Park film, and the other five to varying degrees. Luckily for us, then, that despite its name, Jurassic World Aftermath generally takes after the original rather than any of the sequels, although the Switch version simply isn’t the best way to play it. If you have an Oculus headset, do yourself a favour and play the way it was meant to be – fully immersed in the soundscape of a ruined Jurassic World theme park while velociraptors stalk you. If you don’t have one, Aftermath on Switch certainly does enough for fans of the series to take a look, but the short experience grows a little too tedious by the time the credits roll without the immersion of VR to keep you on your toes.
You remember that one scene in the original Jurassic Park, where the two kids needed to hide from the velociraptors in the kitchen? The cat-and-mouse nature of
Though parts of this game are incredible, the Jurassic World Aftermath stealth mechanics aren't fully realized, leading to frustrating sequences. Despite this, the world-building narrative and impressive voice cast makes this a worthy addition for any Jurassic Park fan.