Film & TV Entertainment

Next ‘Jurassic Park’ Installment Will Be Part-Sequel, Part-Prequel

When it comes to “Jurassic Park: Survival”, it’s becoming increasingly clear that Saber Interactive isn’t just making another Jurassic game—they’re rebuilding Isla Nublar piece by piece, as if the island has been unearthed from 1993 and rebuilt for longtime fans.

“Jurassic Park: Survival” is shaping up to be a lot more than a survival adventure; it’s a meticulous reconstruction of one of cinema’s most iconic locations.

A new behind-the-scenes featurette gives a rare glimpse at the process. Developers highlight their approach to re-creating the Visitor Center, jungle pathways, InGen facilities, and other landmarks down to the finest detail.

Brachiosaurs in "Jurassic Park: Survival"
Credit: Universal City Studios LLC and Amblin Entertainment / Saber Interactive

One sequence shows the T-Rex skeleton in the atrium, towering and intact, even though the film ended with Rexy smashing it to pieces during the climactic fight.

That detail isn’t an oversight—it’s evidence that the studio is starting from the very beginning of the island’s story and reshaping it for the player’s journey.

By designing Isla Nublar in this way, the team ensures players don’t simply inherit a movie set—they inhabit a living world where history is still unfolding. It also raises intriguing questions about how the game’s story connects to the film itself.

Will the player witness key sequences from the 1993 film play out in real time, or are flashbacks used to bridge gaps? Either way, beginning with a pristine island before the wreckage sets in allows Saber Interactive to control when and how chaos strikes.

Gallimimus stampeding over a jungle explorer in the 'Jurassic Park: Survival' game trailer
Credit: Universal City Studios LLC and Amblin Entertainment / Saber Interactive

Related: Jurassic Park’s Rumored GB Experience Will Mirror the 1993 Film’s T-Rex Breakout | Disney Dining

For a franchise that has often relied on spectacle, this kind of careful world-building is a statement. It means the game isn’t just adapting moments from Steven Spielberg’s film—it’s engineering an environment where those moments, and new ones, can coexist.

The attention to detail signals a project aiming to honor the past while letting fans finally explore Isla Nublar on their own terms. If every fossil, fern, and footprint is being placed by hand, “Jurassic Park: Survival” might just become the definitive way to experience the island that started it all.

There’s no release date for the game yet.

Are you excited about “Jurassic Park: Survival”? Let us know what you think about the new video in the comments down below!

Daniel Roberts

Dan is a huge fan of Star Wars, Disney, Jurassic Park, Ghostbusters and Harry Potter, and has written for numerous entertainment websites.

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