It’s written by a third party—neither Kirk, Dylan, nor Regina. It’s from "The Committee," a shadow organization watching from outside the timeline. The final line reads: "Subject Dylan has succeeded. The timeline has fractured. Two realities now exist simultaneously: one where he dies in the past, one where he returns. The anomaly designated 'Regina' has been flagged for deletion."
This file reframes the entire game. Dylan isn't just a soldier trying to get home. He’s a father who realizes that the time jumps have caused him to lose ten years of his daughter's life. The dinosaurs are just the backdrop to a man trying to prevent a paradox that would erase his child from existence. If you beat the game without collecting everything, you get the standard ending: Dylan stays in the past to raise a baby dinosaur (weird, right?). dino crisis 2 all files
Dr. Kirk’s masterpiece. It’s pure theoretical physics, but buried in the jargon is a horrific plan: "If we send a mass of organic material (e.g., 100 tons of dinosaur biomass) through the fold, the energy return is 4,000%. We do not need to contain the dinosaurs. We need to farm them." Suddenly, the game's "Extinction Points" (killing dinosaurs for currency) aren't just a gameplay mechanic. They are the canonical plot . You, the hero, are literally fueling a doomsday device with dinosaur corpses. The Tragic Connection: Dylan’s Daughter The most heartbreaking file in the game is File No. 44: "A Father’s Regret." You find it in a ruined nursery inside a military base—a room that has no business existing in the prehistoric era. Dylan writes: "Paula asked me why the sky was green today. I told her it was the Northern Lights. It wasn't. It was the Third Energy wave collapsing. I lied to my four-year-old daughter because the truth—that reality was unraveling—is too scary for a child." It’s written by a third party—neither Kirk, Dylan,