
The weapons that you’ll be using will also sound particularly nice, whether you’re firing away with a shotgun or trying to capture those swooping flying dinosaurs with the net gun. SOUND: The sound is one of the most important aspects of Primal Carnage, just like that scene in Jurassic Park where the water starts moving with the vibrations of the oncoming T-Rex, the sound in the game will tell you just how far away those pesky dinosaurs are away from you when you’re playing as the vulnerable humans. Primal Carnage is an indie game at heart though, so hopefully you’re not expecting too much from the visual department anyway. So, while the visuals aren’t particularly special, they do their job in the sense that they make you tense while you’re playing the game as a human, not taking away from the player’s enjoyment and ability to play the game for however long they decide to do so.

You’ll learn to be scared when you see the silhouette of a massive Tyrannosaurus Rex off in the distance, being lit from the back through some of the densest fog you’ve ever seen. Despite the environments and the humans looking not particularly inspired, the dinosaurs that you’ll be playing as and against are all modelled to a high level of detail. The visuals, or lack of anything decent to look at, doesn’t take away from this in the slightest. The entire game feels like it’s built from the ground up to serve a single purpose, to let humans shoot and kill dinosaurs or vice-versa, and in that sense, the game is an accomplishment. GRAPHICS: Primal Carnage isn’t the best looking multiplayer FPS in the world, but neither does it need to be. A game which asks you to choose a side from either humans or dinosaurs and take down the opposition in any way you can. Whichever way you see the narrative, your fantasies can finally become somewhat of a reality thanks to Lukewarm Media and their multiplayer First Person Shooter, Primal Carnage. Perhaps you’ve always fantasised about being one of those dinosaurs, chasing down the humans for coming into your territory and making out as if you’re the bad guys all of a sudden.

If you’re anything like me, then every time you watch Jurassic Park you think to yourself that it would be cool if someone designed a multiplayer game around a group of survivors attempting to turn the tables on the vicious reptiles, taking up arms and taking the battle to them instead of running away all the time.
