The Guardian (USA)

Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection review – a great way to relive a lost world of gaming

- Keith Stuart

For a period during the mid-1990s, it was ruled that no blockbuste­r movie was really complete until it had also been translated into a rock hard platformer or run-and-gun arcade adventure, seemingly designed to enrage and frustrate children everywhere. Disney’s wildly uncompromi­sing Aladdin and Lion King tie-ins were shining examples as were Probe Software’s challengin­g Robocop 3 and Alien 3 titles.

But veteran Manchester-based publisher Ocean was also a key purveyor. The company spent the 1980s churning out TV and movie games such as Miami Vice, Top Gun and Highlander, but its Jurassic Park titles were among its most ambitious creations and this new collection from cult retro label Limited Run Games brings its NES, SNES and Game Boy translatio­ns of the 1993 film together, while also including sequel Jurassic Park 2: The Chaos Continues and two Mega Drive tie-ins created by Bluesky Software: Jurassic Park and Jurassic Park: Rampage Edition. That’s seven chunks of nostalgic dino chaos.

Let’s be honest here: none of the games were considered amazing at the time. The original NES Jurassic Park is a top-down viewed shooter where you collect ID cards and eggs while blasting prehistori­c creatures and attempting to escape the island. There are some recognisab­le moments from the movie, but it’s basically a pretty version of the influentia­l 1985 arcade hit

Commando. Jurassic Park: The Chaos Continues is a decent run-and-gun platform shooter with some nice cinematic sequences, but it arrived at a time when seemingly every game was a run-and-gun platform shooter. Meanwhile, the Mega Drive titles were platformin­g adventures heavily influenced

by titles such as Flashback and Another World sporting similarly smooth character animation and filmic narrative style.

However, Limited Run has done an excellent job of curating and updating these digital fossils for modern players and fans of the movie franchise who missed out on them first time round. It includes the ability to save your position wherever you are in the games and also to rewind time, so that you don’t have to go right back to the beginning of every level over and over again due to one comically sadistic pixel-perfect jump challenge. There are also options to go full screen or stick with the original display ratio, and to add a platformsp­ecific filter – CRT scanlines for the console titles and a dot matrix style overlay for the Game Boy adaptation­s. Limited Run has even added new onscreen maps for spoilt millennial­s who don’t like getting lost in a vast dinosaur enclosure. My only major disappoint­ment is that there is no museum section providing informatio­n about the original games and perhaps images of the packaging, print adverts, etc. Limited

Run provided a booklet with the physical copies of the release but those have all sold out.

As someone who played most of these games first time round, reencounte­ring them now out of their contempora­ry context is a sweet nostalgic experience. The graphical flourishes of the Mega Drive era, including weird digitised recreation­s of the T rex, and the modest attempts to recreate images and moments from the films – the opening gates, the crashed jeeps, the computer interfaces, the spitting dilophosau­rus – speak a lot about how game designers had to really work to conjure the feel of TV and movie material. Weirdly, although I love the fact that the Mega Drive versions allow you to play as either Dr Grant or a velocirapt­or, it’s the Game Boy versions that prove most accessible and compelling now, with their simple controls and easily recognisab­le platformin­g convention­s. They could almost be modern indie titles.

The same old arguments apply to this release as to all retro compilatio­ns: you can find these games online then run them on an open source emulator for free, though you won’t get the modern save features. You could buy an original console and a copy of the games on eBay, but then that will work out much more expensive and unreliable. For Jurassic Park lovers and retro enthusiast­s, this is a really nice way to relive a lost world of gaming.

• Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection is available now on PC, PS4/5, Switch and Xbox, £25

 ?? ?? Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection Photograph: Limited Run Games
Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection Photograph: Limited Run Games
 ?? ?? Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection Photograph: Limited Run Games
Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection Photograph: Limited Run Games

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States