lego hobbit ps4 gameplay

lego hobbit ps4 gameplay

lego hobbit ps4 error

Lego Hobbit Ps4 Gameplay

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25 used & new from Warner Bros Entertainment Limited Ages 7 and Over Sold by Game Trade Online and Fulfilled by Amazon.DetailsLEGO Jurassic World (PS4) FREE Delivery on orders over . DetailsLego Marvel Super Heroes (PS4) FREE Delivery on orders over . PEGI Rating: Ages 7 and Over See more system requirements Delivery Destinations: Visit the Delivery Destinations Help page to see where this item can be delivered. Release Date: 11 April 2014 798 in PC & Video Games (See Top 100 in PC & Video Games) in PC & Video Games > Sony PlayStation 4 > Games > Children's in PC & Video Games > Games > Children's in PC & Video Games > Sony PlayStation 4 > Games > Adventure LEGO The Hobbit is based on the first two films of The Hobbit Trilogy, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey and The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, productions of New Line Cinema and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures (MGM). Additional content based on the third film, The Hobbit: There and Back Again, is planned to be available at a future release date.




LEGO The Hobbit will take players on epic quests and a variety of adventures as they explore key locations from the films, such as Lake-town, Dale, Erebor, Bag End, Goblin-town, Mirkwood, Rivendell and the treacherous High Pass over the Misty Mountains. Fans will also assume the roles of their favorite characters, including Bilbo Baggins, Gandalf, and the Dwarves of Erebor: Thorin, Fíli, Kíli, Óin, Glóin, Dwalin, Balin, Bifur, Bofur, Bombur, Dori, Nori and Ori, each possessing a unique and hilarious ability. One of the main new features of the game allows players to utilize the Dwarves’ combined abilities such as buddy fighting, two-player attack, staff climb, mace swing and belly bounce to help them fight Orcs and fouler things or to progress through the game. Friends and family will enjoy discovering Middle-earth through the easy access drop-in, drop-out gameplay option available on the consoles. Together players will navigate 16 levels, unlock more than 90 playable characters and partake in diverse treasure quests, mine for gems, discover loot from enemies, craft powerful magical items, and collect objects as they triumph in a game of riddles and discover the power of The One Ring.




Lego Harry Potter Collection (PS4) LEGO Jurassic World (PS4) LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens (PS4) Lego Marvel Super Heroes (PS4) See all 165 customer reviews See all 165 customer reviews (newest first) on Amazon.co.uk Speedy delivery and item works well great game for my 6 year old. Really enjoyable game, excellent for two players if you can work together! Wish they'd done the final part! It's only a half the story. I am pleased with the order and the seller . Love love love this PC & Video Games > Games > Adventure PC & Video Games > Games > Children's Win, 360, PS3, 3DS, Wii U, PS4, Xbox One, Mac, PS Vita Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment Lego the Hobbit is the best way to engage with the fictional world of The Hobbit short of reading the original book. Traveller's Tales' Lego games have always added a humorous spin to whatever property they were paired with. The team has found a perfect match in The Hobbit — the lighter, friendlier prequel to JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings series.




Lego the Hobbit takes inspiration from the slightly overblown recent films and runs with it, creating a plastic universe that's warm, funny and inviting. The storytelling is succinct, the gameplay is familiar and comfortable, and the world itself is a pleasure to explore, lending to a sense of adventure grander than the tiny plastic bricks would lead you to expect. Lego the Hobbit doesn't stray far from the formula set by previous Lego titles. Its action heavily emphasizes interplay among characters, all of whom appear as the signature Lego mini figures. All of the architecture, flora and fauna of the world are constructed as Lego blocks, much of which you can smash to collect millions of tiny studs (used as currency) and find hidden items. You always play as a team in Lego the Hobbit — either with a co-op buddy or with an AI companion or twelve — and each character has unique attributes, necessary for solving puzzles. Gandalf can use magic on special blocks and light up dark areas, for example, while most dwarf characters carry a hammer for pushing heavy blocks.




Tauriel, a female elf warrior, has a bow and can leap higher than the dwarf and hobbit characters. There's a strong sense of flow to using one character to latch onto a hook, another to jump on his back and leap across a chasm and another to mine precious resources in the newly-accessible spot. I felt like I was playing as a team of friends, and that reinforced the fiction. I felt like I was playing as a team of friends The new crafting system also makes a certain kind of sense, given the medieval fantasy setting and prevalence of dwarves. This system had me mining and collecting raw materials so that I could craft keys, build bridges and complete side quests. It functions, though it seemed shallow at first — whenever I needed to create something in a main story quest, my immediate surroundings were filthy with resources. I enjoyed crafting more in optional quests, where I had to scour the land for the right parts. I felt more rewarded than ever for my diligence in destroying all of the Lego scenery around me.




The game's cutscenes — which follow the story beats of the films — are so good that they also felt like a reward. In Lego tradition, they are beautifully animated and often funny, with little Lego gags at every opportunity. I actually enjoyed these scenes more than the movies themselves — they were shorter, cuter and snappier, and always contained plenty of little sight gags and jokes. Lego the Hobbit's touch of levity kept me interested even when the gameplay became formulaic. In most sequences, I smashed up the surrounding Lego blocks, solved a few basic puzzles and moved on. Sometimes, a combat sequence or platforming section would spice things up. These are worthwhile for the change of pace, but plain. The gameplay slips into a comfortable rhythm, but the simplicity grew stale after a few hours. In order to alleviate this repetition, Lego the Hobbit features open world segments that allowed me to run off the beaten path and complete optional quests. I had to go find a lost blacksmith in a mountain cave in one, and play a deranged Lego version of whack-a-mole in another — nothing too exciting, but these diversions are useful for breaking up the action.

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