![]() ![]() ![]() The latter aren’t quite as evil as you’d expect thankfully. Close quarter saber combat isn’t particularly fluid, but the speed and flow of the film fights are well conveyed via standard attacks and occasional QTE prompts. This being the Skywalker Saga, lightsaber battles are very much at the forefront throughout each episode, beginning with Luke vs Vader during the classic trilogy, generally Obi-Wan vs all comers in the prequels, culminating with Rey fighting Kylo Ren over and again in the final three. Though others are multipart and go on for a while with switching from one pair of players to another being possible. Some levels can feel a bit terse and over very quickly at times, just as they’re hitting their stride. It’s not quite as groanworthy as in the cinema, but not far off. You do get the daft space horses on the hull of a Star Destroyer set piece though. So it’s a mixed bag in terms of what’s included. Though pivotal scenes like the climax of The Last Jedi on the salt flats are barely shown. Floaty Space Leia is thankfully relegated to an intermediate cutscene. Though given the way the last two films panned out, this probably isn’t a wholly terrible idea. We can’t help but feel the game should’ve perhaps been focussed more on those entries rather than the prior seven films, so perhaps this is more of a greatest hits album with the final quarter being new material. Given the last Lego Star Wars only covered the seventh film, this is the first outing for the final two films of the saga, being released in 20 respectively. Many will have been included in the prior games, but it feels like the last two films aren’t really given a fair crack of the whip in some respects. ![]() It’s an understandable design choice, but inevitably means that scenes worthy of game treatment fall by the wayside. For the most part they’ve done a good job in fleshing out each set of levels with expansive hub worlds. Each of the films is represented across five distinct levels, the challenge for developer Traveller’s Tales being which set-pieces they choose to include. So it’s understandable that here we are eighteen months later finally at release.Īs the title The Skywalker Saga might suggest, this covers all nine films, barring the spinoff Solo & Rogue One one-offs. The original release date for this was pencilled in as October 2020, until you know, 2020 lurched into existence. If it feels a bit late compared to the last film having been released, you’d be right in thinking it’d been a while. Lego Star Wars II was an Xbox 360 launch title and along with Complete Saga and a numbered third installment during the same console generation, we’ve only had Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens in 2016 since.Īll of which brings us lurching to the present and Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga. Of course, there’s since been many many different Lego games based on many other film franchises, not just Star Wars. Lego Star Wars on PS2 was quite the revelation at the time and it seemed staggering that nobody had come up with it before. They might seem like a videogame staple now, but back in early 2005 there was no such thing as a Lego videogame. Apin PS4 / PS5 / Reviews tagged cold lampin with flavor / daft ada / lego / mc ren controls the automatic / skyyywalker himself / star wars / that's not how you spell kylie / traveller's tales by Ian ![]()
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