Games

'Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection' Delisted Soon: Here's How to Buy It Cheap Now

There's no turning back if it goes extinct soon.

The "Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection" is officially next in line for removal. If you're a fan of the franchise, you'd better test your luck next month.

Limited Run Games has confirmed that the retro compilation will be delisted from all major platforms on March 31, 2026, giving players a shrinking window to secure a copy before it disappears.

Delisting Set for All Major Platforms

ComicBook spotted through the game's Steam listing that the collection will be pulled from PC, Nintendo Switch, PS4, PS5, and Xbox Series X|S. While the removal is still weeks away, Limited Run Games says it is providing advance notice to remain transparent with fans.

More importantly, anyone who purchases the game digitally before the deadline will retain access and can continue downloading it even after it's removed from storefronts. However, once March 31 arrives, new purchases will no longer be possible.

"Jurassic Park Classic Games Collection" used to be a good game to play on Switch, but it struggled to perform better by the time Switch 2 arrived.

PlayStation Users Get a Major Price Drop

The standard price for the collection is $29.99 on Switch, PC, and Xbox. PlayStation players, however, currently have a significant advantage. The PS4 and PS5 versions are discounted to $5.99 until February 25 at 11:59 PM PT.

There are a few caveats:

  • The discount is exclusive to PlayStation Plus subscribers.
  • The PS4 and PS5 versions are sold separately, meaning players must purchase each version individually if they want both.

Meanwhile, physical editions have already been discontinued. Some retailers still carry limited stock, though often at higher prices than the discounted digital version.

What's Inside the Collection?

Released in November 2023, the bundle includes seven classic "Jurassic Park" titles from 1993 to 1995, spanning multiple retro platforms:

  • "Jurassic Park" (NES, SNES, Game Boy, Sega Genesis)
  • "Jurassic Park Part 2"
  • "Jurassic Park: Rampage Edition"

The collection enhances these titles with modern conveniences such as save states, rewind functionality, in-game maps, screen filters, and a built-in music player.

While critical reception was mixed at launch, nostalgia and the impending delisting could drive renewed interest. Licensed games often become harder to access once removed, making this a potentially rare digital package for retro collectors.

For fans who want to secure a piece of Jurassic gaming history, the clock is ticking. Once the collection leaves storefronts, it may not return.

Originally published on Player One

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