Dinosaurs and VR were made for each other. Standing next to a full-scale T. rex hits different when it’s towering over you instead of sitting behind glass on a movie screen. The Meta Quest library has quietly built up a solid roster of dinosaur games, from stealth horror to habitat sims to the trading craze currently eating up every schoolyard conversation.
Here are seven that earn their spot on your headset, whether you own a Quest 2, Quest 3, or 3S.
1. UG
If you’ve heard kids arguing about dino values lately, this is why. UG launched in late 2025 and became one of the fastest-growing games on the Quest platform, crossing 1.2 million players and averaging over 100,000 daily users within six months, according to developer Continuum in an interview with Road to VR.
The pitch is simple: hatch dinosaurs from eggs, raise them, ride them, and trade them with other players. Movement uses the arm-based locomotion popularized by Gorilla Tag, so getting around feels physical and fast. Lead designer Michael Murdock has cited Pokémon and Roblox’s Adopt Me as direct influences, and it shows — the trading economy is the real endgame here.
That economy is also where new players get burned. Rare dinos like Krono carry wildly different values than commons, and lopsided trades happen constantly. Before accepting anything, it’s worth running the offer through a UG Calculator to see whether you’re gaining or losing value. Thirty seconds of checking beats losing a dino you spent weeks raising.
UG is free-to-play on the Meta Horizon Store with optional in-game purchases.
2. Jurassic World Aftermath Collection
The best pure survival-horror dinosaur experience on Quest. Set two years after the fall of Jurassic World, Aftermath strands you in an abandoned research facility where Velociraptors hunt you room by room. There’s no fighting back — you hide under desks, throw cans to create distractions, and pray the clicking claws move past your locker.
The cel-shaded art style keeps performance smooth on standalone hardware while somehow making the raptors scarier, not less. Jeff Goldblum lends his voice to the story, which is exactly the bonus it sounds like. If you loved the tension of Alien: Isolation, this is your game.
3. Dino Hab
The calm one on this list. Dino Hab, built for Quest 3, casts you as a member of the Paleoguard — a time-traveling conservation outfit keeping prehistoric ecosystems in balance. Guided by an AI companion named Puck, you place plants and fungi, earn Dino Points by keeping creatures happy, and raise dinosaurs from hatchlings, starting with a newborn Triceratops.
It’s part habitat sim, part digital pet, and a genuinely relaxing alternative when you don’t feel like being chased or scammed in a trade lobby.
4. Jurassic Zoo: Dinosaur Hunting
A survival shooter set in a dinosaur park gone wrong. Enclosures have failed, raptors roam the grounds, and your job is to hunt threats and rescue survivors — with a T. rex encounter waiting for anyone who gets cocky.
The developer has patched controls and graphics steadily since launch, and the teleport movement option makes it one of the more comfortable action picks for players prone to motion sickness. It won’t win awards for subtlety, but it delivers exactly what the title promises.
5. Dinosaur
An educational experience rather than a game, and one of the best uses of a Quest headset for younger dino fans. Dinosaur presents 14 species as animated 3D models at true-to-scale sizes ranging from 1 to 20 meters. You walk around each one, hear its calls, and learn through text and audio descriptions.
For $2.99, it’s the cheapest way to make a kid (or, honestly, an adult) gasp at how big a sauropod actually was.
6. Dino Runners
A movement game where you are the dinosaur. You pump your arms to run, swing, and dash through themed environments — the same physicality that makes Gorilla Tag such a workout, applied to racing. It’s still in active development, so expect the content map to keep growing.
Simple concept, sweaty execution. Good pick for younger players and anyone who wants cardio disguised as a dino game.
7. Jurassic Dinosaur Hunting: Fight Dinos
Where Jurassic Zoo hands you guns, this one hands you a hammer. It’s melee combat against prehistoric predators — your strength and dexterity against teeth, claws, and tails. Rated Teen for violence, it’s the pick for players who want their dinosaur encounters up close and personal rather than at rifle range.
Which One Should You Download First?
Depends on what you’re after:
- Social and trading: UG, no contest — it’s free, and it’s where the Quest community actually is right now
- Scares: Jurassic World Aftermath Collection
- Chill building: Dino Hab
- Action: Jurassic Zoo or Fight Dinos
- Learning with kids: Dinosaur
One practical tip if UG becomes your main game: values shift fast whenever Continuum adds or removes dinos — the Mammothor removal alone flipped the market overnight. Checking a regularly updated UG value list before big trades keeps you on the right side of those swings.
The Quest’s dinosaur library has range now. Whether you want to run from a raptor, raise one, or trade one for profit, there’s a headset-shaped hole in the Mesozoic with your name on it.






