If there’s one thing unusual in you neighbourhood, who you gonna name? The native information, perhaps you will get on the telly. An invisible man sleeping in your mattress? There’s a singular function positive to attract consideration once you Airbnb your flat! If you’ve had a dose of a freaky ghost child? That can bootstrap a brand new profession as an influencer. So if ghosts are haunting your theme park, hell, promote it as a function. Planet Coaster at this time launched its Ghostbusters enlargement, including a brand new story marketing campaign with ghosts to bust, spooky new rides, and even Dan Akroyd reprising the function of Ray Stantz.
Frontier Developments say the story marketing campaign relies on the 1984 film, by which I believe they imply ghosts escape as a result of some authorities swimsuit (performed once more by William Atherton) pulls the plug. So off you go, recruiting busters to whack ghosts round your park to cease them from messing with rides and haunting bins. Also you massively capitalise on the confirmed existence of an afterlife by promoting ghost merch, adorning your park with new ghostbits, and constructing points of interest like a Slimer coaster and an Ecto-1 capturing experience whizzing friends by scenes from the movie. And sure, it has that music.
While a few of Planet Coaster’s DLC based mostly on motion pictures and TV and issues have been pretty slight, this one appears (and sounds!) fairly neat.
Planet Coaster’s Ghostbusters enlargement is out there now from Steam and Frontier’s store for £13/€15/$15.
Today’s launch is accompanied by a free replace including a brand new metropolis biome, playable capturing gallery rides, and extra. See the update notes for extra on the enlargement and the patch.
After the light animal imprisonment of Jurassic Park Evolution, Frontier are additionally now engaged on a extra technical Planet Coaster-y animal jail, Planet Zoo. Edwin Evans-Thirlwell had a go of a preview version just lately, calling it “a promising zoo game and an exhilarating philosophical nightmare.” Sounds real looking to me.