 |
"The Survivors"
Jurassic Park: The Game (Telltale Games)
Video game
November 2011 |
Our heroes come to the end game.
Notes from the Jurassic
Park chronology
This story takes place on Isla Nublar
shortly after the events
of the first
Jurassic Park film.
Didja Know?
Jurassic Park: The Game was published by Telltale Games
in November 2011. The game is broken up into four distinct
episodes (each composed of multiple chapters) that make up a
larger story and serves as a kind of sequel to the original
Jurassic Park film. I have
chosen to write a separate study for each of the four episodes.
This is the study of the concluding episode, Episode 4, of
Jurassic Park: The Game.
Didja Notice?
Trust Issues
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
Nima says, "Huele a excremento." This is Spanish for "Smells
like poop."
Nima describes the Troodon eyes as "like ojos de lobo."
"Ojos de lobo" is Spanish for "wolf's
eyes."
Home Invasion
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
The Final Intersection
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
This chapter reveals there is a desalination plant on Isla
Nublar. Presumably this is to process sea water into potable
drinking water, though you'd think there were already freshwater
springs that could be tapped.
Dr. Sorkin spots a breakout box on the tunnel ceiling that helps
her find the direction the group needs to go to get to the
marine facility. A breakout box is an electrical device which
separates electrical power flow towards individual devices or
destinations.
When the group finds the blueprints of the JP tunnel system on a
drafting board, notice there is a cardboard JP coffee cup
holding down a corner of one of the blueprints and another cup
is sitting on its side, with coffee spilled onto the drafting
table.
Several of the electrical banks in the room in which the group
finds themselves are labeled HVAC. This is an abbreviation of
Heating, Ventilation, Air Conditioning.
Separated!
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
Bygones
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
Nima says, "Por el amor de Dios!" This is Spanish for "For the
love of God!"
Nima reveals to Gerry that it has been nearly 12 years since she
was last on the island. She lived in a fishing village there as a
girl.
Nima tells Harding that when she was growing up on the island
she used to love the ocean and loved to swim in it, which is why
her father called her Nima. She also says
that her father was an awa, who sang for Sibo, who created the
Earth. I have not been able to translate the terms "nima"
and "Sibo" from
Spanish; most likely they are meant to represent words from her
island tribe's own language, not Spanish. She mentions that Sibo
is one of the mountains on the island and later seems to
indicate that "nima" means "little fish".
Harding remarks that Jess loves to climb on things, "She can't
not climb." This may be a nod to Ian Malcolm's remark about
Harding's older daughter, Sarah, in
The Lost World: "She can't
not touch."
Nima reveals that InGen moved the native human inhabitants off
Isla Nublar when they bought the island from Costa Rica.
Nima reveals that she has a daughter named Atlanta, whom she
calls "my Mariquita." "Mariquita" is Spanish for "ladybug".
Nima says "como se dice". This is Spanish for "how do you say".
The Marine Facility
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
Yoder reveals that InGen plans to send a wing of B-52s to
essentially napalm the island, killing all the dinosaurs on it.
The B-52 Stratofortress is a U.S. Air
Force bomber that has been in active use since 1955 and still
going strong...in fact plans are to keep it in service until
2040 if not beyond!
Hearing about the B-52s, Nima says, "Dios mio!" This is Spanish
for "My god!"
A diagram of what appears to be a few ichthyosaur types is
hanging on the wall of the marine facility.

An exhibit in the marine facility states the Paleozoic Era took
place from 542 to 251 million years ago. This is correct.
Dr. Harding explains that the marine facility actually houses
modern day marine creatures that are considered "living fossils"
because they've evolved very little since dinosaur times. He
remarks that InGen couldn't expect to find insects that had
bitten and drank the blood of marine creatures hundreds of
meters under the sea. (However, it soon is revealed that InGen
does somehow have a cloned mosasaur, an apex predator of the sea
during the
Cretaceous Period).
"Living
fossil" is an actual term used to describe modern day species
that are essentially unchanged from fossils and which have no
other living relatives.
The six periods shown as part of the Paleozoic Era in the marine
facility exhibit are accurate in order and time.
In the marine facility, Harding and Jess look at the silhouette
image of what he guesses is a mosasaur.
Ethics, Part 1
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
Jess' description of nitrogen narcosis is more-or-less accurate.
On her phone call, Dr. Sorkin first asks to speak to Mr. Maguire
before changing her mind and asking for Peter Ludlow. "Maguire"
may be a reference to one of the InGen board members in the
script of
The Lost World (he is
referred to as Mr. Nicolas in the actual film). Peter Ludlow is
the nephew of John Hammond and becomes the CEO of InGen after
Hammond's retirement and is seen in that position in
The Lost World.
Stepping in while Dr. Sorkin is making her secret phone call to
InGen, Harding says, "Oh, I have a bad feeling about this." This
may be a reference to the Star Wars franchise, in which
many characters have been known to say, "I have a bad feeling
about this."
The console at which Harding speaks to Sorkin through the
intercom has a label reading "mosasaur", giving us a clue
as to what is coming, i.e., Sorkin soon releases a living
mosasaur into the lagoon. (Although it's never officially
identified, the marine reptile that menaces the nuclear plant in
"Redemption"
Part 5 may also be a mosasaur.)
Ethics, Part 2
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
After Yoder betrays the rest, Nima refers to him as "desgraciado".
This is Spanish for "disgrace".
As Harding looks at the scuba tanks on the shelf, the green and
yellow diamonds printed on them are symbols indicating
compressed gas and oxidizing agent, respectively.
As the group prepares to don scuba suits, Jess remarks that
"neoprene makes everyone look good." Neoprene is a synthetic
rubber that is used in the making of wetsuits.
The feeding chart in the marine facility shows dates of
6/11-6/14, with 6/12 circled, presumably representing "today".
The
Jurassic Park film was released on
6/11/1993. And in the timeline of the video game story, it would
now be the next day, 6/12/1993.
Dr. Harding indicates that his older daughter Sarah got away
from him and he doesn't want the same thing to happen between
him and Jess.
The Swim
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
Fight to the Death
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
This chapter reveals there is a lighthouse on the island. From
the design, it is likely it was built by InGen as they were
building the park.
Old Friends
Read the summary or view the walkthrough of this chapter at Park
Pedia
Dr. Harding runs away from the T. rex along the length
of the dock and just manages to jump aboard the fleeing vessel
before the carnivore can grab him up in its jaws. But shouldn't
he have dived off the edge of the dock into the water before
then? It seems unlikely the rex would have jumped in after him,
and he could have swum out to the boat.
Notice that we never get an explanation of how InGen was able to
obtain mosasaur DNA.
The storyline of the game suggests that Isla Nublar was
firebombed shortly after the ending of this story, to eliminate
all life on the island. Since we never see it happen, it might
be argued that the U.S. military intervened and prevented it in
order to set up an experimental base there as seen in the
ongoing storyline of the Topps JP comic books which take place
shortly after
Jurassic Park.
If the game player chooses to have Nima go after the Barbasol
can instead of helping Jess in this chapter, an alternate ending
is created in which Nima is eaten by the
T. rex. In this ending, Dr. Harding mentions to
Jess that he may try to get his old job back at the
Dallas Zoo.
In both the
Jurassic Park and
The Lost World novels, and
in "The Intruder", he is
said to have previously worked at the
San Diego
Zoo, so he must have been employed at the Dallas Zoo before
that. And, since it's implied that Jess lives in Dallas with her
mother, it's probable he would like to work there again to bring him closer to his
daughter, though the Dallas Zoo
has only been open since 1988, so that doesn't give him much
time to have bounced from the Dallas Zoo to the San Diego Zoo to
Jurassic Park in just five years! (In the "happy ending"
version, Harding suggests to Nima that she and her daughter
should come back to Dallas with them.)
Memorable Dialog
she
can't not climb.wav
next stop.wav
Uncle
Wallace.wav
swim
casual.wav
Back to Episode Studies