From T-Rex to Titanosaurs: Hyper-Realistic AI Jurassic Park Created with Google Veo 3 Stuns the Internet
A hyper-realistic AI-generated Jurassic Park video made using Google Veo 3 goes viral, featuring dinosaurs like T-Rex and Velociraptors in a simulated zoo experience.
From T-Rex to Titanosaurs: Hyper-Realistic AI Jurassic Park Created with Google Veo 3 Stuns the Internet

A jaw-dropping AI-generated video featuring a lifelike Jurassic Park experience has taken the internet by storm. Created using Google Veo 3, the video showcases an immersive digital world filled with dinosaurs—from towering Titanosaurs to ferocious T-Rexes—leaving viewers awestruck.
The viral video, shared on X (formerly Twitter), shows a content creator donning a Jurassic Park-style hat strolling through a simulated dinosaur zoo. From visitors snapping selfies with Velociraptors to zookeepers calmly tending to massive prehistoric beasts, the scene feels straight out of a National Geographic documentary—except it’s completely artificial.
The realism of the AI production has sparked widespread reactions online. While some users applauded the technological leap, others admitted to being fooled by the video’s lifelike quality. "My 12-year-old thought it was real," one user commented. Another added, "These dinosaurs look more alive than some CGI from Hollywood—yet it’s obvious they’re fake. It’s uncanny."
The creator behind the video revealed that most of the visual prompts used included "no subtitles, wide-angle cell phone video of…" to simulate a casual, real-world aesthetic. They also mentioned switching briefly to Google Veo 2 for certain shots to maintain character continuity.
Since its debut at Google I/O 2025, Veo 3 has demonstrated unprecedented capabilities in AI video generation, pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in digital storytelling. The Jurassic Park video is just one example of how the tool can blend realism with fantasy, blurring the line between authentic and synthetic media.
While some critics labeled the trend as “AI slop for National Geographic consumers,” others see it as a glimpse into the future of content creation—where anyone can produce studio-level footage with a few prompts.