Originally released as two separate parts in 2020 and 2021, the brings the entire survival-stealth horror experience into one cohesive digital package. But does the Switch handle the tension of a Velociraptor sniffing your locker? And is the NSP (digital download) version worth the storage space?
If you’ve ever watched Jurassic Park and thought, “I wouldn’t run. I’d just hide very, very quietly,” then Universal and Coatsink’s Jurassic World Aftermath Collection is your ultimate stress test.
The download is stable, the performance is solid, and the complete experience is finally in one package. Just make sure your SD card is fast and your firmware is up to date. Jurassic World Aftermath Collection Switch NSP ...
Play in handheld mode with the volume up and the lights off. The gyro aiming for distractions is surprisingly precise. Is the Collection Worth Your Time (and Storage)? Price: $24.99 / €24.99 (Complete Collection) Compared to buying separately: Saves about $10.
You play as Sam, a salvage technician hired to retrieve sensitive data from a ruined research facility. Naturally, the dinosaurs have other plans. The result is a claustrophobic, low-poly but atmospheric journey where you cannot fight back. Your only tools: distraction items, a motion tracker, and the art of holding your breath. Originally released as two separate parts in 2020
The absence of combat means every encounter is a puzzle. You will memorize raptor footstep patterns. You will accidentally bump a chair and freeze. The sound design is top-tier: the echo of a distant roar through ventilation shafts is haunting.
Let’s break it down. Contrary to the action-packed Jurassic World Evolution simulators, Aftermath is a first-person, stealth-based horror game set in the wreckage of Isla Nublar—shortly after the events of Jurassic World (2015). If you’ve ever watched Jurassic Park and thought,
However, the cracks show in the final act. By hour six, you’ve learned to cheese the AI. The cell-shaded raptors lose their intimidation factor once you realize they can’t open doors you’ve shut behind you. Also, the lack of a run button (you can only jog) feels restrictive, not realistic.
Published by: The Mesozoic Gamer Platform: Nintendo Switch (Reviewed as Digital NSP / eShop Download)
You will die. A lot. But every time you slip past that final raptor and hear the escape helicopter’s rotors, you’ll feel like Alan Grant himself. Have you survived Isla Nublar on Switch? Sound off in the comments—what’s your most embarrassing death?