lego alpha team ost

lego alpha team ost

lego alpha team mobile command center

Lego Alpha Team Ost

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Ogel is the villain of the Alpha Team theme. He has appeared in a total of five sets, and has had three different variations. Ogel was initially designed by Digital Domain, who were developing a video game then known as LEGO Logic. When LEGO Logic was redesigned into a mere six months before its release in 2000, Ogel was one of only two characters to be kept in the new design, the other being . This design of Ogel had a plain black torso/arms and legs, a custom armor piece, and a black helmet with a large gold visor. His face was never revealed. The color of his hands was inconsistent, with his in-game appearances in LEGO Alpha Team having yellow hands, but the intro animation for LEGO Logic giving him black hands. The final intro for the LEGO Alpha Team game shows him with both yellow and black hands at different points. When LEGO released sets based on LEGO Alpha Team in 2001, Ogel's design was tweaked. His hands were now consistently black, and he uses the armor piece originally designed for the Zotaxians (though it is possible his original armor design in the video game was already based on this piece, as they have several specific similarities, especially the details on the shoulders and back).




His face was also revealed, with a scowling expression and one red eye. In the 2002 Mission Deep Sea sets, Ogel's design remained unchanged aside from one of his hands being replaced with a transparent red hook, which was never specifically explained in the story. When Alpha Team relaunched in 2004, the hook's color was changed to transparent light blue. Alpha Team OST - Evil Ogel's Monologues In the original video game, Ogel has captured most members of the Alpha Team, and is producing that turn regular townspeople into mindless zombies (referred to as from the release of physical sets onward). The end goal of his plan is to load his Boggle Rocket with Evil Orbs and spread them across the whole world. The player, taking the role of Alpha Team chief, directs Dash and the other team members as they're rescued as they infiltrate Ogel's bases (Ogel Island, the Goo Caverns, the Deep Sea Orb Factory, and the secret Arctic Command Base) and stop his plan. Throughout the game, Ogel occasionally appears, monologuing to the team members as they progress through his bases.




In the end, the Alpha Team succeeds in stopping the Boggle Rocket from launching, and Ogel accidentally triggers the self destruction of the Arctic Command Base in a tantrum. The 2001 Alpha Team sets had a looser story surrounding them, but still followed the premise of Ogel attempting to take over the world by launching a rocket full of Evil Orbs, though this time from a base inside a volcano (6776 Ogel Control Center). Additionally, an online game/comic titled Evil Music was released, in which Ogel attempts to control the world's weather via a special pipe organ, but is stopped by Dash and Cam. The 2002 sets, "Mission Deep Sea", involved Ogel altering his orbs to mutate sea creatures in an attempt to control the world's oceans. Another online game/comic was released, Into The Deep, in which Dash, Cam, Radia, and Tee Vee venture underwater, save a group of scientists from the mutant sea creatures, and eventually stop Ogel, though he escapes. In the 2004 - 2005 story of the relaunched LEGO Alpha Team, his plan was to freeze the world and eventually time itself.




His plan succeeded, but then Zed arrived to battle Ogel in his Scorpion Orb Launcher. At the end of the comic, the LEGO Magazine had a contest for fans to write their ending to the battle. The winning entry was never revealed, but it is assumed that Zed defeated Ogel. In each year that Alpha Team received a major release, a set was included representing a new fortress for Ogel. All the fortresses have certain similarities, such a skull motif, and frequently grey colouring. In Alpha Team's first year, Ogel's base was 6776 Ogel Control Center. It consisted of a relatively small fortress, built on a large baseplate. A large portion of the control centre was taken up by a large rocket. The building was styled in red, black, and grey, and included two skeleton drones and a small flying vehicle for Ogel. In the Mission Deep Sea wave of sets, Ogel's base was in the set 4795 Ogel Underwater Base and AT Sub. The base was a large oval affair, mainly coloured black and grey. It included two skeleton drones to man it, as well as a mutant octopus.




Ogel's third and final base, released in 2004, was 4748 Ogel's Mountain Fortress. It was built on a large raised baseplate, and mainly consisted of a huge skull-like construction. The base as a whole was mainly coloured light grey and white, and featured two Ice Drones, as well as another personal flying vehicle for Ogel. Lego Rock Band is a 2009 music video game developed by Harmonix and Traveller's Tales, and published by MTV Games and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. The game, the fourth major console release in the Rock Band series, was released in November 2009 for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Wii, and Nintendo DS. Lego Rock Band allows one to four players to simulate the playing of rock music by providing the players with peripherals modeled after musical instruments. These include a guitar peripheral for lead guitar and bass gameplay, a drum kit peripheral, and a microphone. Lego Rock Band's soundtrack has been selected to be "suitable for younger audiences".




[1] All songs available in Lego Rock Band are compatible with previous entries in the Rock Band series and until 2014, could be exported to these games for $9.99 along with the use of a unique code included on a paper insert included in the game case. When Lego Rock Band was officially announced on 21 April 2009, only five songs were confirmed to be included: "Song 2" by Blur, "Kung Fu Fighting" by Carl Douglas, "The Final Countdown" by Europe, "Girls & Boys" by Good Charlotte, and "So What" by Pink.[1] Wired published leaked information from "a highly-placed source close to Harmonix" on 31 August, which included the names of thirteen songs which would be included in Lego Rock Band.[5] Additional songs were officially announced closer to the game's release date, including "The Passenger" by Iggy Pop and "Let's Dance" by David Bowie.[6] The full setlist was revealed on 12 October. The Nintendo DS version of the game features a 25-song subset of the 45 songs in the console versions as listed below.




See also: List of downloadable songs for the Rock Band series Lego Rock Band also supports existing downloadable content from the Rock Band series, as well as songs exported from other Rock Band titles that has been "identified to be suitable for all ages", except in the Wii version; however, songs released after Rock Band 3 are not compatible with Lego Rock Band.[9] The Lego Rock Band Music Store only includes Rock Band songs which have been cleared for use in the game. Also, any exported content from the original Rock Band and its Track Packs deemed "Family Friendly" can be used in the game. Users do not need to be signed in to use content that was downloaded on another account, as long as it is on the same console system, thus allowing a child's account to access the filtered set of music from a parent's account library. Eurogamer reviewer Keza MacDonald called Lego Rock Band's setlist "an unusual selection ... but undeniably varied.", but was disappointed by the small number of songs.

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