In depth World of Darkness Review (Personal Takes):
WoD is a great modern rendition of what I remember the original being. The WCS once again delivers its usual standard for exhibit design, surpassing most of the AZA zoos out there. What I will highlight is this is in no way Congo, Madagascar, or JungleWorld. It is, by Bronx standards, middle of the road. In no way bad, just more similar in vibe to World of Reptiles, Mouse House or Aquatic Bird House. The collection is very solid, they've done an excellent job with signage and in no way does it "detract" from the zoo experience, only enhancing it.
The first thing I want to really highlight is the signage. If there's one stand out with WoD, it's the signage. As you enter the building there's about a half dozen giant walls with different custom artwork for the area of animals like Aye-aye, Naked Mole Rat, Sloth, etc. with cool photo ops. They've also brought back the OG World of Darkness entrance sign which is a nice touch. The building exterior is exactly as I remember. There is still a big empty pit in the middle of the building that seems prime for some form of an exhibit but at the moment, it's just a pit. The signs have this awesome (very WCS) effect where they're invisible in the darkness at first and as you approach there's a cool lighting effect where they become visible as you get right next to the exhibit. All the signage is beautifully hand done art (probably best I've seen the WCS do) for every animal. Each sign also has interactive elements like tracing lights and pressing buttons that illuminate education. It's really cool.
Now the downsides. The building is very lacking in theming. In fact, the theme almost looks to be "outdated building we shut down 15 years ago, but now its open again". Walls retain the original lighting shadow effects I remember as a kid (sort've similar to jungle world's cloud rat area but less intense). It's neat but otherwise it's very plain. Other than the exhibits the building is very empty and it makes the HVAC and building stuff really apparent. Imagine World of Birds or Congo's corridors but without the tree trunks, signage, etc. it's very weird. The other elephant in the room are the exhibits themselves. Are they bad? No not at all. But are they good...eh... None stand out as particularly WCS best work. The stand out 3 are the Aye-aye exhibit which is massive. Very cool floor to ceiling exhibit with vines and lots of climbing. The Caiman exhibit is very cool in theory. It's almost like a mix of the Nile crocodile exhibit and the world of reptiles croc exhibits but with lighting that makes it seem like it's an infinite swamp. Great when the lighting effect works...not great in other scenarios I'll discuss. Last is the sand cat exhibit which is like Prospect Park's exhibit but better. A lot more room, probably one of the best sand cat exhibits that exists. The rest of the exhibits though, while not bad. Just aren't WCS quality. They range from Franklin Park Zoo imitation bronx (snakes, bird house stuff, etc) to basically ZAA indoor quality. The South America mixed species for instance is the first exhibit and was frankly kind've jarring as an initial introduction to the house as it's certainly not the best foot forward the WCS has provided. It's serviceable but more in line with Mouse House quality. The house is also naturally dark, and while that's obvious, the flow is very weird because of it. You can miss exhibits or bump into others without rhyme or reason because there's no direction signs or anything. The layout of exhibits is a bit haphazard (at least at the beginning) where I can't help but think lighting or markers on the floor (almost like an airplane) or something might help with flow.
Exhibit backdrops are very plain and frankly easily noticeable. Blank black walls that lead to the indoor holdings are semi noticeable and are mainly due to the lighting. The lighting in the house is a double edged sword. For a nocturnal house, some of the best lighting I've ever seen. Super easy to see almost all animals. On the flip side, also makes it easy to see the lack of detail in the enclosures. Makes effects like in "infinite swamp" I mentioned earlier look more like a cool swamp for 2 feet then a cheap concrete water holding 10 feet back. I will reiterate, the house is not bad. It's still good. But good as an addition to Bronx, not attempting to be the next Madagascar! or Ocean Wonders: Sharks! It comes across more like value engineering in my eyes only because the exhibits do appear to just be the OG house with barely any updates besides signage. They look good, but like they were from 20 years ago, not created in 2025. It's of course still cool to see a nocturnal house open in the year 2025, but I do think this will be a huge marketing issue. It was semi popular opening day but not packed. Really tough sell to most families to go to the center of the zoo to go to the dark house full of bats, snakes, spiders, scorpions and rats. There's room for improvement as there are still some exhibit space if they'd like to expand. I like it, respect Jim for bringing it back, hopefully it will see the fruits of his 15 year of labor to do so. I think the house is a great addition for Bronx after 15+ years but I don't think this will win any awards.
7/10 Aye-ayes. It's pretty okay.