![]() ![]() You’ll quickly discover you’re not alone on these worlds, as there will be many enemies, from your typical pirate skeletons to zombies and anything in between. Within my first couple hours playing I discovered a world that was half pirate and half swamp, the ensuing battles between enemy NPC skeletons and zombies is some truly entertaining stuff. On top of all that you may even find a world that has a mixed theme. Did I mention these worlds all have themes? There are pirate worlds, swamp worlds, and even completely underwater worlds for the player to discover. The aspect of travelling to new large worlds is the key to this game, to discover and customize every world as you see fit. The game has no linear story line, but offers the player the ability to create their own stories. These worlds range from small islands to large expanding landscapes, complete with life above and below ground. The sheer number of worlds to discover and explore is almost endless. The simplest explanation? You’re an intergalactic astronaut that simply wants to explore the stars. The game lacks a story, in favor of a more free open world experience unlike any other Lego game before it. I have yet to acquire the vast amount of golden bricks needed to create my own world from scratch but I have made some major changes to an already built world, to be nothing but a large lava landscape with some surrounding desert which is then in turn surrounded by water, with vast amounts of pirates and sharks filling the sea, ready to attack at the first thing that moves. The tools can be found in your UI wheel, that can be brought up by holding the Y button, allowing you to select whichever tool you may need. All of these tools are an essential part of the game and without them you can’t have any hope of exploring and customizing the worlds to your liking. The last of these tools is the Copy Tool, and you guessed it, it copies any object in the world allowing duplicates to be placed in the world, great for creating towns and cities without having to build every structure individually. After this is the Paint Tool, it in fact does just that, allowing the player to paint any object or the entire world any color they choose, by simply selecting the grid size and spraying the item you want to paint. Next is the Landscape Tool, giving the player the ability to raise or lower landscapes, even enabling the player to change the size of the grid to which they want to excavate. Second, is the Build Tool, which allows just building structures, piece by piece. The first is the Discovery tool, which allows scanning of almost any plant, creature, or object to be permanently stored so that you can later put it into any other world. To be successful you’ll need the necessary tools, all of which are provided during the tutorial. Platform: platform reviewed – Xbox One, MonsterVine was supplied a copy for review purposes. You’re friends and family can even join you in classic couch co-op split screen or over Xbox Live.ĭeveloper: Traveller’s Tales, TT Games Publishing With its short tutorial spanning across 3 worlds to teach you the basics, I’d say it gets right to the point and then lets you be on your way to have some fun. While the two may share some common features, Lego Worlds is in a completely different world, no pun intended. Lego Worlds isn’t the Minecraft clone, I thought it would be, it’s much better in my personal opinion.
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