There are few pop culture names as enduring as Jurassic Park. Since Michael Crichton’s 1990 novel and Steven Spielberg’s 1993 film, the franchise has evolved with blockbuster sequels, animated television shows, games, merchandise, theme park attractions, and more.
But even with all that content, fans are now finding creative ways to fill gaps in the story and explore parts of the Jurassic timeline the studio has never touched.

Unofficial Jurassic Park Content
Enter the world of unofficial Jurassic content, where YouTube creators and independent developers are keeping the spirit of Isla Nublar alive on their own terms — and sometimes in ways the official canon never would.
One such fan creation gaining attention is The Muldoon Logs, a YouTube series by creator Ali Awada. Presented as analog horror-style found footage, the series follows game warden Robert Muldoon, played in the 1993 film by Bob Peck, as he patrols the park and investigates mysterious raptor behavior. It leans into tension and atmosphere rather than spectacle, giving viewers a slow-burn, immersive look at life behind the scenes of the original park that recent studio films haven’t delivered. Watch one of the latest videos from Awada below:
Non-Canon Jurassic Content Is Growing Fast
Another intriguing piece of fan work comes from Krenautican, a developer who originally built a massive Jurassic Park game dubbed Jurassic Park: Operations. After a cease-and-desist from Universal, that project was reborn as Cretaceous Kingdom, retaining much of the original scope while distancing itself from official branding.
Krenautican has also released a short animated sequence called “The Shed Incident,” (among many others) which depicts the grisly off-screen fate of engineer Ray Arnold (Samuel L. Jackson’s character) in chilling detail — something the original film left to our imaginations. Watch it below:
Related: ‘Jurassic Park’ Films Unlikely to Return to Theaters, New Report Suggests
The creativity doesn’t stop there. The InGen 2D YouTube channel has carved out its own niche with animated shorts that reinterpret scenes from Crichton’s novel, including tense encounters like the iconic Tyrannosaurus Rex attack re-created in animation.
These bite-sized pieces bring the book’s darker beats to life in ways official animated shows haven’t touched, offering fans new, compact thrills outside the mainstream canon.
Whether it’s found-footage horror, reimagined death scenes, or novel-inspired animation, these unofficial avenues show just how deep and creative Jurassic Park fandom has become.
Have you checked out any unofficial Jurassic Park content? Let us know in the comments below!