Life finds a way
August-December, Year ThreeBefore we begin on the penguins and opening the dinosaur chamber, I'd like to do some experiments on the dolphin show. I feel like there's quite a bit of money left there that we haven't tapped into yet. I started by drastically increasing the number of seats available.
While waiting for the show to end so I could adjust the ticket prices to the maximum of $12 and remove a couple weaker tricks that made the show a bit too long, I finally dismantled the jellyfish show. Sorry to their fans, but it finally had to go. If anyone wants a new marine animal, we've got an underworked marine specialist and a good spot for a tank.
During the next show, we finally won the Highest Customer Satisfaction award. This gave us a $25,000 prize, perfect for funding our new chamber.
The new grandstands didn't manage to sell out, but we more than doubled the profit from the show with the changes. I'll tweak it a bit more, but we're now making abut $1600 a show.
Before breaking ground on the dinosaur chamber, we built the penguin exhibit that CABL, King Zultan, and Duckman requested.
Since there were no specific dinosaur requests, I went with personal preference and chose an Allosaurus. I also went with cobblestone paths, a rainforest restaurant, a dinosaur gift shop, and a central large volcano. I can show you all that later, since we have to discuss something else at the moment.
Houston, we have a two-ton problem. Immediately upon hatching, our baby Allosaurus decided he didn't like his enclosure. What's worse, he also near-instantly discovered that the cage walls weren't actually strong enough to contain him. The Allosaurus broke free.
We had to move some plans around to afford it, but we immediately brought in a DRT chopper to contain the problem.
Thankfully, nobody was nearby at the time, the helicopter was close by, and the Allosaurus chose to break free on the side of the cage facing away from the expensive constructions. The breakout was handled with no serious property damage or injuries.
Once the dinosaur was safely tranquilized, his keeper loaded him into a crate to await the reconstruction of his pen.
We did take a serious financial hit from the incident, however. Donation income dropped for that month, we had to pay $2,000 for the helicopter, and we effectively had to build the exhibit twice. Our rating also plummeted for the moment, but we easily recovered without any ongoing crises. I sold all the rocks in our inner gaps where the AT-TE and AT-ST exhibits are eventually planned to go to compensate for the losses. We would have had to get rid of most of them eventually anyway when we move the walkers in.
With the money from the sold Moon rocks and the dolphin show, we rebuilt the fence with stronger electrified chain link. Iron bars would be stronger, but more expensive. We could upgrade later, but the Allosaurus is happy for now. The picket layer is there to protect tourists from touching the electric fence.
The Prehistoric Chamber, open for business.Zoo rating:91/95