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ARK: Survival Evolved Early Access Review

Jurassic ARK.

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GameSpot's early access reviews evaluate unfinished games that are nonetheless available for purchase by the public. While the games in question are not considered finished by their creators, you may still devote money, time, and bandwidth for the privilege of playing them before they are complete. The review below critiques a work in progress, and represents a snapshot of the game at the time of the review's publication.

Like DayZ and H1Z1, ARK: Survival Evolved is another Early-Access survival game that has received an explosive amount of attention. But does it provide something different enough to warrant all the publicity? In short, no. You can collect materials, craft items, and tame dinosaurs, but many of those features are not exclusive to ARK, nor are they any better here. Serious functionality problems and lag exist, sapping enjoyment and crippling immersion. Still, it’s not completely awful. Given the chance, you can have a lot of fun, even if there are not many fresh ideas at this stage of development. The game can be entertaining at times and frustrating on occasion, but the evolution of survival it is not--at least not yet.

Welcome to Jurassic Ark.
Welcome to Jurassic Ark.

When you first wake up on the mysterious island, the game’s primary drawback immediately becomes clear: performance. ARK has the trappings of many Early-Access games, but even with this caveat, it is incredibly sluggish and randomly glitchy. You may have to spend a lot of time in the graphics options menu clicking buttons and sliding bars until the frame rate becomes tolerable. Of course, this means you have to accept an uglier game to get better playability. This is what I had to do, so you’ll have to forgive some of my screenshots. I could only run the game in a blend of medium and low settings. On high settings, the game can actually be quite attractive, with lush, green jungles, roaring waterfalls, and stretching grasslands with flora swaying in the wind. It’s a shame to watch said flora blend into pixelated green blobs just a short distance away. Another major issue is server lag. Stuttering certainly occurs, but you have to enter a fight against a man or a beast to see it at its worst. In battles, players and creatures spring back and forth, to the point where any fight becomes a frustrating disarray of rubberbanding bodies.

Entering the game, you settle down on the island, which is populated by your fellow players, dinosaurs, and other extinct monsters. Creating your character is the first step, and ARK gives you a choice between a male and a female form, with many additional options -- and I mean a lot of options -- for shape and size. The results are interesting to say the least. In my travels, I met grotesque mutants with giant heads and stubby arms as well as many other variations. It is amusing to see what others have come up with, but be prepared to encounter some nasty looking folks. You awake with little more than your underwear and a map that slowly fills in as you explore. On your HUD you’ll find indicators monitoring stamina, food, and hydration levels. Weather, such as fog, will creep through the island, and rain will shower down, further stymieing the frame rate. Similar to DayZ, the game also introduces status effects. Extreme cold can damage health, while heat has a strong effect on your hydration levels. Sprinting through a steamy jungle will often leave you searching for sources of water or otherwise reaching for your waterskin.

Stay away from those horns!
Stay away from those horns!

Crafting is fairly rudimentary if you’re familiar with survival games. You punch trees to acquire chunks of wood and pieces of thatch, and you can gather rocks scattered on beaches or jungle floors. These materials can be combined to create a rock pick-axe that can shatter boulders so you can obtain more materials, such as flint and chunks of metal. A metal, diamond-shaped implant on your left arm displays your inventory and menus for leveling up crafting; the latter features recipes, include instructions for tools, weapons, and parts to create structures. You can carve raw steaks from dinosaurs and dodos that you kill, and you can pick berries from bushes. However, the type of berries that could be harvested seemed random. There are multiple types of plants, but I couldn’t figure out whether one bush or another was more likely to give certain berries.

Other than that oddity, as I began my journey into collecting various goods, everything appeared to be in order for a survival game -- save for one interesting surprise. As I was going about my business, I heard a gaseous rumble, and I was informed that I had defecated. I looked down and, sure enough, there it was. Huh, I thought, that is new. Naturally, the defecation has a purpose besides being instantly hilarious (I’ll grow up some day). You can use fecal matter that your character and animals expel as fertilizer to grow new plants for fiber and berries when you decide to create your own farm.

Surviving on the island rewards you with experience points and more crafting options. As you level up, you can boost one of many attributes, ranging from health to stamina. Leveling up also grants you a small handful of points to spend on engrams, which unlock even more recipes and item tiers. Thatch structures make way for buildings crafted from wood, and the slingshot makes way for the bow, which you can eventually trade in for greater firepower, such as pistols and automatic weaponry. But there is a steep time investment to consider. You have to reach level 15 just to unlock a bow and arrows, and it took me around 10 hours to reach that rank. The time requirements also tie into a major criticism I have with the structures. Walls made from thatch and wood can easily be destroyed by anyone with a hatchet and a few minutes of time. You can eventually upgrade to powerful metal walls and doors, but I was nowhere near that point. Every time I logged back in, I found my character dead, my base ruined, and all my materials and food pilfered. It’s almost enough to make you defecate in fury.

No Caption Provided
Unlock dinosaur dossiers to gain some history on the wildlife.
Unlock dinosaur dossiers to gain some history on the wildlife.

ARK’s primary draw is the dinosaurs, large and small, that populate the island. But don’t expect the shock and splendor of Jurassic Park with large, migrating herds of brontosaurs or clever raptors surreptitiously assassinating any lost traveller who wanders too deep into the jungle. Instead, animals tend to stay where they spawn, meandering about without much purpose or urgency. On occasion, a meat-eater will attack a herbivore, but a battle of titans it is not. Utahraptors swarm their prey, nipping and slashing for several minutes, sometimes longer. It’s not an exciting event to watch whatsoever. The two sides slowly hack or bite, usually without moving locations or moving just a tiny bit, until eventually one side emerges victorious. A larger-scale battle between, say, a tyrannosaurus and a stegosaurus, is impressive only because of its size, not because of its content.

Even facing most animals on your own is hardly risky. With many fights, if you can stay near the back end of a beast (or at least out of reach of its pointy bits), you can take it down with a steady stream of whacks using your stone hatchet. The exceptions here are the faster predators, but with the aforementioned lag issues, you can usually deal with them quickly by standing still and waiting until they bound into your vicinity. All this considered, we can conclude that at this stage, the most attractive aspect of the game (i.e., the creatures inhabiting the island) is also the most vapid--at least until you learn how to make some friends.

Why walk when you can ride a utahraptor?
Why walk when you can ride a utahraptor?

You can tame dinosaurs, which can be used as pack mules or sometimes as mounts. I found this to be my favorite activity in the game because it gave me a goal and provided a welcome challenge to overcome, which I wasn’t getting running around picking berries and crafting huts that kept getting raided. Taming a dinosaur is relatively simple. The process involves rendering it unconscious, either by punching it, pelting it with rocks, or using a tranquilizer arrow, then earning its trust by feeding it the correct food according to the creature’s correct diet--meat for the carnivores and berries for the herbivores. All the animals on the island have varying levels, and your tamed dinosaurs will level up, granting you the opportunity to increase their health and carrying capacity over time.

But, with a dinosaur at your side, wouldn’t it be better to ride it? The answer is yes, always yes. As you level up, you unlock saddles you can strap on to various dinosaurs, ranging from the slow-moving phioma to the speedier utahraptor and even the flying pteranodon. The raptor tears across the land, leaping far distances and using its talons to rip enemies to shreds. ARK’s world begins to open up once you start riding dinosaurs. Without having to rely on your slow legs, traveling far distances becomes possible, and the joy associated with exploration soars.

0008: Beams of light signify when a supply drop is about to touch down.
0008: Beams of light signify when a supply drop is about to touch down.

The more you pry open the world, the more activities and enigmas you discover. Hidden caves, both on the surface and below the water, are scattered across the area, guarded by ferocious creatures. You can also find hints of mystery on the island. Three enormous obelisks, colored red, blue, and green, float lazily in the sky. The odd, alien structures could have something to do with the device imbedded in your arm and/or the random supply drops that appear and slowly fall from the sky in a beam of colored light. All of this suggests that some semblance of a crazy science experiment or “Hunger Games” plot is lurking just below the surface. You can also track down bosses to battle, such as the broodmother, a giant arachnid queen.

In its current state, ARK: Survival Evolved doesn’t provide many surprises. It is unquestionably a survival game, complete with core gameplay and issues that have often defined its mates in the genre. But including the words “survival evolved” in its name makes you think it offers the next stage in what should be expected from the genre. ARK, however, doesn’t quite shake the foundations, notwithstanding the included thunder lizards. The developer promises more content, including procedurally generated environments, gas-powered vehicles, and a whole lot more. I want to remain optimistic because I did encounter moments of good fun in the game. The developer a year left until the game’s projected release, so if they can smooth out the rocky performance and add some fresh elements, ARK: Survival Evolved may eventually be something worth all the surrounding hype.

What's There?A survival game with dinosaurs to tame, buildings and items to craft, and a load of performance issues that hamper the fun.
What's to Come?More of everything, including weapons, animals, bosses, and biomes. The developer also promises better performance, and that the “game will sparkle like a shiny diamond before it is considered ready for Full Release.”
What Does it Cost?$24.89, available via Steam.
When Will it be Finished?Projected release date is June 2016.
What's the Verdict?ARK: Survival Evolved is less of a step toward evolved survival as much as it is a shuffle. Still, there is entertainment to be found here, so long as you’re willing to invest the time and weather the performance issues and server lag.

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MetalFerret

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Great game!!! That is if you enjoy spending hours and hours working on something just to have it taken away, "fixed", nerfed, destroyed, broken, etc. First, it was the griefers, then it was the cross server jumping, then it was people abusing glitches, and finally - the decision to make all flyers absolutely useless.

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NemaLive

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I heard its coming to xbox one early access as well...anyone hear anything about this?

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beardie87

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It's an early access game, it's going to have optimization issues. It also doesn't help when you're running a rig that would obviously have issues with games that aren't quite ready for budget builds. Try the game with something better than the gtx970 you're sporting and maybe a bit more ram and revisit this.

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DJBarzTO

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Ok so I've put about 15 hours of gameplay into Ark now and I can provide the following insights.

1. This game is pretty bad if you don't have friends to play with. Without friends survival is harder, you have to unlock engrams that aren't quite as "fun" and the whole game just progresses slower. With a team of 2-3 (or more) people you can share resources, concentrate on different crafting skills and help eachother out. This makes the game wayyy more exciting. It's not necessarily bad in single player but it's certainly more of a grind.

2. Skip PVP, PVP is cool when you can defend yourself but with the current lag issues PVP just isn't worth it PVE is where it's at (also the people on PVE servers are generally less ass-hatt-y).

3. The world is great, it's lush, there's interesting wildlife (with more being added). My only real complain with the world is the seeming randomness of resource drops.

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ljhsquall

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I agree with many others that this is the one of the best, if not the best Early Access game I have ever played. There is plenty of fun already, and the achievements is great. Can be a little quirky at times with some bugs and issue, but it is still a great game in the end.

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ck1112

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Edited By ck1112

My 10 year old son is looking to download this. I understand that this is an early access so it is not rated. He does not play games such as Grand Theft Auto, Halo or Assassins Creed. I'm searching for honest feedback as to whether or not this game age appropriate for a 10 year old in your opinion? Thank you in advance.

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DJBarzTO

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@ck1112: It's pretty tame. Bit of blood from the dinosaurs, the violence is nothing crazy (stab with spear, shoot with gun). That being said there's certain parts of the game that might be a challenge simply because the game requires you to have a decent knowledge of how the world works. For example, you are hot, you should cool down by going in the water etc. But if he's smart he'd probably be able to handle it. Rating wise I'd say it's probably a Teen?

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Tarteholic

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This is the most fun, least buggy early access /Alpha game I have played. It's fun, immersive, and the quality is bar none.

The game is amazing.

I'm not sure why this gamespot review says, "Serious functionality problems and lag exist, sapping enjoyment and crippling immersion."

Really? I have played with dozens of friends and family members, as well as people I've met in the game and watched Twitch streamers play it. None of us have experienced "serious functionality problems and lag," and all of us are enjoying the game and so immersed that we're taking days off work and calling in sick or requesting PTO to play it.

The developers at Studio Wildcard communicate with the players every day on the Steam ARK discussion forums, updating us about new content patches, improvements to performance, and providing guides, tips, and tricks for optimizing game performance and playing the game in general.

I honestly do not think the writer of this article played ARK, having compared it to H1Z1 and DayZ and saying it doesn't warrant all the publicity it's getting. YES IT DOES! It is hands down the best early access game ever to be released, and the numbers on Steam sales, steamcharts, and the Twitch streamers all prove that.

You dont like ARK? Reinstall and launch it, try it out, and think again ;)

I bet you'll write a new article. Maybe you were just grumpy or woke up on the wrong side of the bed or have a beef with the developer to write this review.

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theATMUZ

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@tarteholic A year later and we still have the issues he mentioned. Granted I am playing on PS4, but the lag and every thing still exists. I completely agree with how he says the dino fights are nothing exciting. They literally sit in the same spot just biting.. Even riding one and killing things seems just bland. The dino's movements are so basic it feels like I am pushing around a hot wheels car. I love the game and still awaiting early access to finish, but if these things stay the same it's just bad for everyone.

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Mycareer

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"You punch trees to acquire chunks of wood"

Well ok, I'm sold.

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theATMUZ

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@mycareer Punch the tree to get the wood, you get the wood to build a cabin! But how do you tame a horse?:

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Caldrin

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Not really been able to put this down since release..

Its early access so yes its buggy and yes there are performance issues, the performance issues can mostly be solved by using the -SM4 at the loss of some nice lighting effects and a few other things.Saying that I dont run that command myself as I can get a pretty stable 30-40 fps with my setup running everything on high.

my specs.

i7 2700k @4.5 ghz
16GB RamGeforce 970
Windows 7x64

Game and OS on a SSD,

Game is a lot of fun when you get into and clan fight can be good as well.. devs seem to be very active in the community and they also push patches out pretty fast.

if you like survival games and if you like test early access games then this is well worth picking up.. if you dont like testing early access and cant put up with bugs in games then stay away until its finished... but i say this for all early access games.

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KusanX

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This early access stuff is becoming so frustrating...how many early access games are there with the "survival" theme on Steam now? I count at least 10. Why should I pay for an unfinished game which may not even be finished like, ever? I've had enough with AAA developers releasing bugged/glitched games for free beta testing so they release a patch some weeks after launch, now smaller developers want people to pay for completely unfinished (sometimes not even playable) games? What is this?

Gaming industry these days. *sigh*

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BigCheese727

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The trailer for this game had me so excited, I really hope the full release has these issues taken care of.

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Fanible

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@bigcheese727: The development for this has been phenomenal. The trailer had me skeptical, but it has been exactly what I've been playing. Easily the best survival game hands down, which is saying a lot considering it still has so much more content and polish ahead of it before final release.

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Caldrin

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@bigcheese727 well they have a year of development and considering how fast they are getting patches out pretty sure it will be ok hehe :)

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tommynj

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You try to survive while dinosaurs try to eat you ? It sounds fun but when I watch streams on Twitch and Youtube it looks very stupid. I'm really not sure what to think about this game.

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bluebird08

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Reviewing early access game is seriously stupid.

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UberMcLovin

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Edited By UberMcLovin

@bluebird08: mmm infact a good idea as long its not the final review.... devs can then adress the cons so there wont be any cons in the finished product:) its a winwin for all:) often a review when game is done is of little help as its to late to fix problems sometimes because final score is then given, many bad reviews and customers falling away - which may not come back..... its like baking a cake that taste poo,, better get someone to check it out in time, so changes can be made, before selling it to the public:)

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Alurit

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@bluebird08: well it's not a full review and the devs charging money so it's not a bad thing to inform customers whether or not an early access game is worth a shot

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deactivated-64efdf49333c4

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Don't ever grow up, Cameron. The most successful and healthy people I know are equally immature.

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SphinxDemon

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Edited By SphinxDemon

I personally hate early access and especially survival games but I grew up with the first Jurassic Park.. so I tried this out and I could not put it down for the life of me

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Kerry12424

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Only reason I bought it over other (early access) survival games: I have yet to encounter pesky hackers.

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dcno07

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I like dinosaurs.

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Andyf1ghter

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Like DayZ and H1Z1? Rust would have been a better comparison.

I think Ark is a lot of fun. They have made a lot of improvements in terms of optimisation since day one (when I found it unplayable).

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ZophieWinters

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Edited By ZophieWinters

@Andyf1ghter: Agree completely, it's RUST with dinosaurs and more. And yeah the constant updates from the devs are awesome, performance has improved tremendously since early access launch.

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snake8877

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@zophiewinters: i love survivla games , so witch one shuld i get , this or rust ?

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ZophieWinters

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@snake8877: Might depend on your tastes regarding the setting and early access. RUST has been out for a while and pretty solid as is, and the setting is generally a bit more "realistic". ARK takes that to the next level by adding dinosaurs and monsters and potentially a lot more features, but you have to deal with early access bugs and optimization issues (for now). Personally I loved RUST but ARK has completely stolen my attention with everything it has to offer, so I would recommend ARK if you don't mind Early Access (it also helps if you have a higher end PC)

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