lego movie wii u features

lego movie wii u features

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Lego Movie Wii U Features

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& FREE Delivery in the UK on orders over £20.00. 30 used & new from Warner Bros Entertainment Limited Ages 7 and Over & FREE UK Delivery on orders dispatched by Amazon over £20. Order within and choose at checkout. Sold by Galactico and Fulfilled by Amazon. FREE Delivery on orders over . DetailsLEGO Marvel Super Heroes (Nintendo Wii U) FREE Delivery on orders over . DetailsLEGO Jurassic World (Nintendo Wii U) FREE Delivery on orders over . Nintendo Wii UStandard Edition Also check our best rated Wii U Game reviews Platform: Nintendo Wii U See more system requirements Delivery Destinations: Visit the Delivery Destinations Help page to see where this item can be delivered. Release Date: 14 Feb. 2014 988 in PC & Video Games (See Top 100 in PC & Video Games) in PC & Video Games > Nintendo Wii U > Games in PC & Video Games > Games > Adventure The fate of the LEGO world lies in your hands! In a scenario drawn from the film, The LEGO Movie Videogame puts you into the role of Emmet, an ordinary, rules-following, perfectly average LEGO minifigure who is mistakenly identified as the most extraordinary person--and the key to saving the world.




Guide him as he is drafted into a fellowship of strangers on an epic quest to stop an evil tyrant, a journey for which Emmet is hopelessly and hilariously underprepared. In The LEGO Movie Videogame you will be able to collect and use LEGO instruction pages to build construction sets or harness the awesome power of the Master Builders to virtually build extraordinary LEGO creations along the way. With more than 90 characters inspired by the film and 15 exciting levels, you can build and adventure like never before. 1 Wii U Game LEGO Jurassic World (Nintendo Wii U) LEGO Marvel Super Heroes (Nintendo Wii U) Lego City: Undercover Select (Nintendo Wii U) LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Nintendo Wii U) See all 76 customer reviews See all 76 customer reviews (newest first) Have a 11 and 4 year old who both love this game the same, is good for any age. For my grandson so don't know much about it but I'm sure he's pleased with it My son loves this game.




Good game although the kids aged 7 and 9 struggle with some parts of the game, there is a lot of puzzles that require you to do some thinking Great price bought for Grandson he loves it Sharing the pleasure of this game with my 7 year old son was a standout gaming experience of my life! Not seen the movie but it does not hamper the gameplay in the least. I am pleased as in most of the Lego games that there is plenty to amuse the girls and keep them entertained. See and discover other items: Best rated Wii U Games reviews PC & Video Games > Games > AdventureA reader reveals how Lego games have been his son’s main introduction to video games, and why he’s been happy to indulge him. What is it with Lego games and kids, or maybe just my son? My son is five-years-old and in P1 at school. He has been playing on my Wii U since he was three. We have played numerous games from Mario Kart, Smash Bros., and Yoshi’s Woolly World to Lego Jurassic World. The most fun he has had has been down to one type of game: Lego games.




Strangely we have lots of Lego and he isn’t very interested in playing with it. Maybe he likes playing them due to collecting the various characters/yellow bricks/red bricks, etc. or the fact it is so simple to control the character. The one that started it all was Lego City Undercover. Some may argue that it has been the pinnacle of Lego games, which in my opinion it was, but in the eyes of a three-year-old (the beginning of it all!) this was the start of a magical association with Lego games. Now Lego City Undercover is a single-player experience and we generally took turns, just driving about, doing missions and collecting everything in sight we could. He loved flicking between the policeman, robber, and fireman etc. I then got the first game my son could play on my PlayStation 4: Lego Marvel Super Heroes. This he thought was the bee’s knees, we could both play together. This was fine by me as it was a great title, and maybe still the best superhero game I have ever played.




Collecting all those superheroes was his main objective, and he just followed me about tracking each one down. His mum soon put a stop to him playing it though, he was four-years-old at the time and she had seen the box said PEGI 7, and she got on her soapbox being in the anti-games camp. She briefly flirted with Guitar Hero but the nail in the coffin was Mario Kart on the Wii, when she couldn’t drive in a straight line with the motion controls and a four-year-old was whooping her ass. Anyway I digress, the poor wee fella was distraught at the time, but now as he’s 5½ I think he’s gotten over the running about the house pretending to be the Hulk phase so we could maybe play it again. Since that I bought Lego Jurassic World on the Wii U, as at the time he loved dinosaurs and, well, I ‘needed’ an excuse to buy it. He couldn’t get enough of it and we blitzed the main story campaign. Well, I say blitzed, he was four so we couldn’t play for eight hours straight.




We played it maybe in hour bursts over about two or three weeks, and it’s the only game he wanted to play. I then bought The Lego Movie Videogame and Lego Dimensions for the PlayStation 4, and he hasn’t had quite the same attachment to those as he has the previous three I’ve mentioned. Maybe it was due to Mario Kart, Smash Bros., and the Yoshi and Kirby games being around on the Wii U that he was playing at the time, but no doubt he’ll go back to them. Then I recently got Lego Batman 3 on the PlayStation 4, as part of Sainbury’s Nectar points double up. Well, this time he was hooked again, and has now got to an age where he can complete levels on his own, and can go off and get those yellow bricks on his own. He loves all the characters, even though he has never heard of half of them, but I’ve enjoyed unlocking them and trying to tell them who the character is even though a few of them are beyond me. Recently I’ve picked up digital copies of Lego Star Wars: The Complete Sage and Lego Pirates Of The Caribbean for the Xbox 360, which can be played on the Xbox One, for a combined total of less than a fiver.




Bizarrely, as I write this, for the last week or so we have went back to playing Jurassic Park and have over 70% of the game completed. He would not rest until we had all the amber bricks, which meant we could use every dinosaur in free play. He was over the moon we got the elusive Dilophosaurus. We’ve spent more time on it now than we did the first time we played it over a year ago. It’s just as well I can play something different at night when the kids are in bed or I’d be going mad! He also has a 2DS, so he got his first Lego game for that. So I’ll see how that pans out. Now to try and get him back onto Lego Dimensions. By reader Westhamwhit (gamertag/PSN ID/NN ID) The reader’s feature does not necessary represent the views of GameCentral or Metro. You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot. As always, email gamecentral@ukmetro.co.uk and follow us on Twitter.

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