In 2056, a breakthrough in genetic reconstitution allowed a research institute in a small South American country to recreate once extinct lifeforms from preserved genetic material. In hopes of attracting new benefactors through name recognition, the institute rebranded itself as DinoGenics IOM.
A...
In 2056, a breakthrough in genetic reconstitution allowed a research institute in a small South American country to recreate once extinct lifeforms from preserved genetic material. In hopes of attracting new benefactors through name recognition, the institute rebranded itself as DinoGenics IOM.
A new venue for greed was born as industry leaders from around the world flocked to the nation in hopes of building the first successful dinosaur park. Spurred on by the sudden influx of wealthy investors, the once impoverished nation seemed to change overnight. New infrastructure projects and vacation homes quickly filled the landscape.
Unfortunately, the early days of the DinoGenics collaboration proved unfruitful. Tourists did not want true to life dinosaurs; they wanted the great beasts and monsters that had wowed cinemas and popular culture for generations. With the promise of ever increasing revenue, DinoGenics gave into demands and engineered the dinosaurs the world wanted.