About a week and a half prior to this review, the Jurassic Pro appeared on select Walmart shelves in Texas. Thanks to a friend down there, I was able to get one in the mail. Now, after lots of time testing (both on a workbench and on a playing field), I’ll gladly add to the hype. The Jurassic Pro isn’t the pro blaster we expected, but it’s definitely the pro blaster we needed,
License to be Different
The blaster is modeled after a tranquilizer gun in the movie universe, though it features a much brighter color scheme (for obvious reasons). It also takes fun liberties, such as using translucent orange plastic on the stock and putting a mosquito inside to evoke the “bug in amber” of the original movie. The paint on the sides, with the movie logo, is super detailed. I’m not sure what process is used for doing this, but it makes it look less like it’s painted and more like an integral part of the plastic. It’s really good, and it contributes to making the blaster feel like far more than a cash-in.
Fully assembled, the stock sits at a nice length for a 5’10” adult like me. The handle, while featuring some angular molding, is unexpectedly comfortable to grip and use. The force needed for priming is in line with other pro blasters. There is a bit of wobble where the stock attaches, but nothing severe (and certainly not blaster-breaking). In any case, that joint can certainly handle the spring the blaster comes with.
Performance
Speaking of aim, hitting targets with the Jurassic Pro is a breeze. Even when I downgraded the blaster with a different spring to fire under 130fps, darts generally went where I wanted them to go.
Speaking of firing under 130fps…here’s some extended footage using the blaster in a ~45-minute mission of Humans v Zombies. Talk about sniping targets!
Internals
The Jurassic Pro has the setup you’d expect, with a two-part breech allowing the use of both half and full-length darts. It is different, however, in one aspect: the plunger tube has a large oval cross-section!
The catch mechanism sits on the back of the yellow plunger tube cap. That cap is clipped onto the tube on both sides, and it is HARD to remove without stressing the plastic. Eventually, if you open it up too many times, those tabs break. Given the support the plunger tube has within the blaster, however, that may not be a big deal.
What is a big deal is the spring size. I measured 24.5mm OD, 20.5mm ID, and 102mm length (the spring is compressed a bit inside the plunger tube). It’s hard finding springs that will fit, due to the existing spring rests and space behind the plunger head. I’m still testing, though!
Final Thoughts
The Jurassic Pro came out of nowhere, and I’ve basically fallen in love with it. Doing a movie blaster lets Dart Zone expand their pro blaster options even more, and gives enough justification to throw a fun bolt-action mechanism into the mix. The rate of fire will never be stellar, but everything else about the blaster certainly is. I look forward to when these blasters finally appear on Walmart shelves nationwide – $65 is a great price for a pro blaster with an official license, especially one that’s made this well.