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Lego pirates of the caribbean reviews
Lego pirates of the caribbean reviews







lego pirates of the caribbean reviews

#Lego pirates of the caribbean reviews series#

It’s a by-the-numbers entry in the series that doesn’t bother to attempt the type of meaningful additions seen in LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars. If this was a cheaper Jack Sparrow simulator, it would be 10/10, as a £40 videogame, sadly it's a 6/10Īnd that’s really the one of the key words here, “solid”. Still, as with the rest of the game, the story and the attention to detail remain solid. As you’d expect there aren’t as many beloved and iconic moments to draw from so there’s isn’t as much of a pay off this time around.

lego pirates of the caribbean reviews

That said, these aspects are a little diminished in LEGO Pirates since the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise is rightfully not as a revered or nostalgic as past LEGO subject matter like Star Wars and Indiana Jones. Of course, you can’t discount the appeal and the charm of both the LEGO brand and Traveller’s Tales’ humorous reinterpretations of the source material. It’s this fiendish mastery of the carrot on a stick formula that continues to be the reason why I both love and hate the series. You always seem to be close to affording the next cool unlockable too, promoting that “just one more level” syndrome in us. There are so many things to collect ranging from new characters, buildable ships, cheat codes and new areas. Not only are they simple, dumb fun but they’re also easy to play with video games novices like children or a significant other.Ĭonversely, they successfully tap into the completionist tendencies of gamers. So, with a catalogue of minor problems and a complete lack of innovation why do I not hate LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean? Furthermore why do we, as consumers of video games, insist on returning to this uninspired series again and again? For one thing, they’re straightforward and don’t require much mental investment or skill. LEGO Orlando Bloom is somehow more emmotive than the real Orlando Bloom. Sloppy auto targeting, frequent glitches and bugs, relentless randomly generating enemies in places… I could go on but this article is in serious danger of becoming a bullet point list. The game, obviously aimed at children and families, is also still crying out for some sort of hint system when the puzzles and objectives take a turn for the confusing. The inconsistent camera often makes platforming tough and is disorientating during split-screen co-op. Playing the game alone quickly becomes dull and doubles the amount of time it takes to complete the multistage puzzles. With the same old formula comes the same old problems. It positively abuses this function on stages that feature Jack too asking you to go through the process up to eight times per level. The actual searching process consists of moving Jack ploddingly between waypoints a particularly irritating task across the larger areas of the game. While such an ability sounds interesting in theory and very appropriate given the source material the novelty soon wears off. The only significant new game play mechanic is Captain Jack Sparrow’s compass ability which allows him to hunt for buried treasure. It may even be a step back for series given the additions of space combat and real-time strategy elements in the last outing, LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars. Though I skipped out on the last couple of Traveller’s Tales’ LEGO games playing LEGO Pirates for the first time was like nothing had changed besides a fresh coat of paint. Of course, this time around the game is based on Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean series, spanning all four films including new entry On Stranger Tides. The game successfully captures Jack Sparrow's mannerisms.Īs such, LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean is exactly what you’d expect, providing basic combat and platforming with a heavy emphasis on smashing and building things made from LEGO bricks.

lego pirates of the caribbean reviews

Outside of Tecmo Koei’s Dynasty Warriors franchise I can’t think of any other series that has stuck so closely to a single formula since initially gaining popularity. Reviewing a Traveller’s Tales’ LEGO game is almost redundant at this point.









Lego pirates of the caribbean reviews