LEGO Worlds does an interesting job in standing out from the competition. It has had years to develop its own brand of digital block building, and for the most part it succeeds. Although its controls are a little fiddly, its freedom to build and explore are amazingly detailed.
Lego Worlds is a welcome departure for everyone's favourite brick-based series of adventures. Although it can use some fine-tuning, what's here will provide fans hours of imagination-fueled fun.
Like Minecraft but Lego, one of the best games to come to PS4. Could use more characters. Day two free DLC was added, hopefully the first of many DLC packs introduced.
Basically I nutted really hard while playing this game. I enjoyed playing with Angel boiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
LEGO Worlds is a technical accomplishment, containing thousands of bricks and items that allow players to build whatever comes to their mind. There are a few odd decisions and the gameplay will appeal more to a specific demographic, but Traveller's Tales' latest will surely prove a joy for most creative types.
Lego Worlds has a lot of potential and the fun of building wherever you want with Lego bricks on its virtual universe, but on the other hand it feels half-baked with random and tedious activities, a problematic camera and some technical issues. The worst part of the game is that you need to repeat the same elements again and again in order to begin to really create your own world.
This should have been a dream come true, but an annoying camera and the fact that it takes a really long time before you can start building your own worlds keep LEGO Worlds from reaching the lofty heights it aims for. Shame.
LEGO Worlds is a disappointing and frustrating mess. The idea of an open-world Minecraft-like title is brilliant, and maybe with a few patches and improvements it might live up to that promise. But right now? LEGO Worlds feels like it was rushed to consoles and performs at an unacceptable level. Kids might enjoy it in short bursts, but I’d recommend waiting to see if improvements are implemented in the coming months. Until then, go buy some real LEGO bricks instead.
O jogo é muito divertido particularmente o modo sandbox, ele é cheio de coisa pra fazer cheio de personagem da franquia lego, o multiplayer também é muito bom
Comparing Lego Worlds to Minecraft, the Lego game lets you build with the same level of detail as the Lego toys and interact with the world using many more objects such as vehicles, a zoo's worth of animals, dozens of characters, insane weapons, and a few environmental objects. Unlike Minecraft, Lego Worlds is limited to two players only and the game isn't so much about survival as it is about exploration. Oh, one more thing, Lego Worlds doesn't have a "creator" mode and you have to collect all of the bricks you need to build your dream playset, though thankfully you only need to collect those bricks once.
The game starts with what I consider an 8-10 hour tutorial that gets you ready to to build creatively. As you run around worlds doing little fetch quest for Lego mini-figures, you collect gold bricks, lego items, and lego sets. You can also scan item, vehicles, and mini-figures to rebuild them whenever you like. Larger sets like castles have to be collected by finding the set in the game world or by copying a pre-existing set built in the game world. The trouble, however, is that all of the tools you need are slowly unlocked as the game progresses, and the ultimate tool, the ability to make a custom Lego world, requires an exhaustive effort to collect 100 gold bricks. While I was on task collecting bricks, my kids enjoy exploring the world and at their leisurely rate, they won't collect 100 bricks for months. The gameplay is as shallow as shallow can be, and the same criticisms of Minecraft apply here. Maybe it's an age thing, because my kids could care less. I really don't mind the lack of compelling gameplay, as my goal is to build insane Lego sets.
The tools that you do unlock are powerful. You can reshape the world by raising or lowering terrain, removing or adding blocks, copying and pasting large chunks of the world, placing individual blocks, dropping down pre-made sets, or adding or removing blocks by shooting them with special guns. It is amazing. There are vehicles that help too, such as a digger for making tunnels and a steamroller that lays down a road underneath it. If you want to make a secret base, race course, flying city, or whatever, go ahead. And unlike Minecraft it, you aren't limited to 3 foot thick walls so let your inner builder free.
Performance wise, this game plays like a beta. The game was in beta on PC for years before it came to console, and I hope work is on-going. The game includes a respawn feature for minor glitches like getting stuck. Frame rates can often chug to the single digits and load ins can sometimes be so slow that fast vehicles like airplanes become useless. My son decided to walk everywhere because it seemed faster. Some quests seem glitchy as quest givers never seem to appear. Yet the premise of the game is solidly presented, and changes you make to the highly detailed world persist if you let them.
Something to keep in mind here is the price: $30. Not only is that competitive with Minecraft, its what the game is really worth. There is no thrilling campaign or cut-scenes. There is little of the trademark Lego humor. The stakes are low, with failure always an option. But for less than the cost of medium sized Lego set, you can build just about anything. It's a must buy for building aficionados.
Is a game tha needs more content, the beginning is good, the mechanic is not objective and a little slow, the graphics is ok, the experience is not satisfactory, the game needs more, is a lot of quests but little content, it dont give satisfaction when you complete the quest, on the trailers it look like a real good game but when you spent 3 or 4 ours playing you already is thinking in play other thing
SummaryIn a galaxy of procedural worlds made entirely from LEGO bricks, will you... EXPLORE environments filled with adventure, then alter them? DISCOVER secrets and treasures, then play with them? CREATE your own models, then make a world your own? In LEGO® Worlds, it’s up to you.