Jurassic World The Game is a decade old and reviews are dominated by crashes mid-battle, broken rewarded ads, and a collection grind that increasingly favors paying players. These dinosaur and creature-collection alternatives offer better stability, more generous progression, and in some cases the same Jurassic IP done better.
Each app below addresses a specific gap in Jurassic World The Game's offering. We picked them based on real user review patterns and feature differentiation.
Jurassic World Alive (also from Ludia) is the augmented-reality companion to The Game and is widely considered the more actively updated of the two. You collect dinosaurs by walking around your neighborhood, then battle them in PvP arenas. More frequent events, more collection variety, and the AR layer adds a reason to leave the house.
Explore Jurassic World Alive data →Dragon City has been one of the most popular creature-collection mobile games for over a decade — over 1,000 dragons to collect, breed, and battle. Significantly more frequent events than Jurassic World The Game and a more generous early-game progression. From Social Point.
Explore Dragon City data →Monster Legends shares the Social Point pedigree with Dragon City but focuses more heavily on PvP team-building and competitive arenas. The collection includes over 700 monsters and the meta is regularly refreshed via new events. A strong fit if you came to Jurassic World The Game for the team-building strategy.
Explore Monster Legends data →ARK: Survival Evolved Mobile takes the dinosaur fantasy in a completely different direction — full survival sandbox where you tame dinosaurs, build bases, and explore a hostile prehistoric world. Vastly more depth than Jurassic World The Game's tap-to-collect format if you actually want a dinosaur game.
Explore ARK: Survival Evolved Mobile data →Pixel Petz is a pixel-art creature collection game where you design your own creatures rather than just collecting them. The community-driven trading and creation system makes it dramatically more social than Jurassic World The Game, and there's no $499 IAP ladder to navigate.
Explore Pixel Petz data →Pokémon GO is the obvious king of creature collection on mobile — the largest active player base, the most-developed AR experience, and the deepest meta-game. If you came to Jurassic World The Game for the collect-and-battle loop, Pokémon GO does that one job dramatically better at much lower cost.
Explore Pokémon GO data →We found these alternatives by analyzing review patterns across simulation and collection games. The most common reasons Jurassic World The Game players churn are crashes, broken ad rewards, and aggressive monetization at the high end of the collection meta-game. Each alternative below addresses at least one of those concerns.
The game was built in 2015 and has accumulated years of patches, dinosaurs, and ad SDKs without a major engine refresh. Reviews consistently flag stability issues during battles, which is the worst possible time for them. Jurassic World Alive (from the same studio) is built on a more modern engine and is significantly more stable.
Both are made by Ludia. Jurassic World The Game (2015) is a base-builder where you breed and battle dinosaurs in your park. Jurassic World Alive (2018) is an AR game where you collect dinosaurs by walking around the real world, then battle them. Alive is more actively updated and more popular among long-time fans of the franchise.
Jurassic World Alive is the most polished dinosaur-specific option. ARK: Survival Evolved Mobile is the deepest if you want a survival sandbox. For pure creature collection, Pokémon GO and Dragon City both have larger active communities than Jurassic World The Game and friendlier free progression.
App Vulture uses AI-powered review intelligence to analyze what real users say about apps — their pain points, feature requests, and reasons for switching. We identified these alternatives by analyzing review patterns across simulation and creature-collection games and validated each candidate against the source app's most common churn reasons.
Communication alternatives.
Design & Creative alternatives.
Food & Drink alternatives.
Sports alternatives.