BE prepared for a rip roaring adventure as the nightmare of the Hollywood blockbuster Jurassic Park gets reborn into the gaming world.

BE prepared for a rip roaring adventure as the nightmare of the Hollywood blockbuster Jurassic Park gets reborn into the gaming world.
Out November 15 Jurassic Park: The Game will get fans of Jurassic Park to experience what really happened to the Barbasol can of stolen dinosaur embryos lost during the first film. Developed through a publishing agreement with Universal Partnerships & Licensing, Telltale's new game based on Jurassic Park will shed light on this mystery and much more.
An episodic adventure in five parts, the game is set during the events of the first film. The story unfolds through a film-inspired cinematic adventure crafted to stir mystery and tension while building to exciting climactic peaks.
The game storyline picks up on the stormy night as Jurassic Park began to fall apart – when Dennis Nedry stole a Barbasol can full of invaluable dinosaur embryos. He died trying to deliver it. He never knew it contained a tracking device. That same night, a desperate smuggler infiltrates Isla Nublar, hunting the canister and its precious cargo. She collides – literally – with park staff trying to evacuate. They are trapped together as the park collapses, left behind with the newly-freed dinosaurs. When InGen launches a perilous rescue operation, mercenaries, saboteurs, and survivors are thrown together in the struggle to escape the island. They confront T. Rex, Velociraptors and other dinosaurs in spectacular showdowns. As human agendas clash, secrets of the park are exposed, and a new threat emerges: an eerie, nocturnal predator stalking the group, hunting them relentlessly across the island.
Comments...
No Comments Posted yet
Do you have comments on this?
India monsoon floods leave 138 dead
The Kedarnath temple is submerged in mud and slush. Officials just hope that it does not collapse

West Indies star could soon strut his stuff on TV show
Is Gayle set to storm India's dance floors?

Music producer Sawhney talks world tours and London duet
Nitin chat helps Joss to be a rolling stone
US lawmakers, businesses demand Indian trade reforms
Some US lawmakers have suggested removing India from the US Generalized System of Preferences program to express US concern




