lego star wars things to build

lego star wars things to build

lego star wars the

Lego Star Wars Things To Build

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I currently own these LEGO Star Wars sets: LEGO Star Wars X-Wing Starfighter 9493 LEGO Star Wars Millennium Falcon 7965 LEGO Star Wars Tie Fighter 9492 LEGO Star Wars Emperor Palpatine's Shuttle (8096) LEGO Star Wars Slave 1 (8097) LEGO Star Wars Anakin's & Sebulba's Podracers 7962 LEGO Star Wars AT-RT 75002 LEGO Star Wars 9496 Desert Skiff LEGO Star Wars 9498 Saesee Tiin's Jedi Starfighter LEGO Star Wars Rancor Pit 75005 LEGO Star Wars Luke's Landspeeder (8092) LEGO Star Wars 9516 Jabba's Palace LEGO Star Wars 9515 The Malevolence Lego Star Wars Geonosian Starfighter 7959 I would like to know if there are alternative builds/sets I can make with some or all of them? My goal is to build something else with what I have that is Star Wars related. /, that lets you enter the sets you have, and it compares the inventories to other sets to determine which other official sets you can build with those pieces.




It also includes unofficial MOCs that other builders have submitted, and it will substitute other part colors if you choose. /mocs/anincompoop25/tie-interceptor) for which you already have all of the pieces. Did you find this question interesting? Sign up for our newsletter and get our top new questions delivered to your inbox (). However, if you're looking for an official alternate/combiner build, then no. Star Wars isn't very big on combiner or alternate models, although the early, 1999 sets include inspirational photos. Over the years, Star Wars combiners/alternates have been released via LEGO Club or LEGO Build Together, but unfortunately none of your sets have an alternative/combiner build.Browse other questions tagged building star-wars or ask your own question.There are conceivably people out there who won't enjoy Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Maybe they're the ones who moan about the movie and can't stand its recycling of existing Star Wars bits. Maybe they're the ones who've grown bored of the Lego series, with all their well-worn block-bashing, hero-swapping, puzzle-solving stuff.




Maybe they just want to play something that's genuinely innovative, more serious and more focused on the deadly important business of shooting people in the face. Well, they're welcome to their opinions. We still think they're missing out.Sure, those who claim that the series hasn't evolved much have a point. By now you know what you're getting with a Lego game: a series of themed levels which you can roam around, filled with enemies to fight, scenery to smash and things to build with the resulting bricks. You'll have characters with different abilities, and by building and using those abilities you can solve the game's various puzzles. Yet Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens adds a few new ideas to the mix, giving the gameplay a shot in the arm.The first is that all those block-building puzzles no longer revolve around building just one object. Instead, a quick sweep of the left-stick selects one of several spots to build on and an object to build on it, giving you a little more choice.




In some cases, a puzzle might have several possible solutions, but in others you need to build things in the right order, bashing each one up to make the next. This adds an extra dimension to the puzzles in a game where, generally, they err on the side of too simple.The second is a sort of lightweight cover shooting, where characters can duck behind certain marked walls and fire blasters or throw grenades from an over-the-shoulder, third-person view. It's not enough to make The Force Awakens feel like Lego: Gears of War, particularly as there's no precision shooting and the auto-targeting system targets a new stormtrooper every time you squeeze the left trigger. Yet it does give the action a more immersive, run-and-gun feel, perfect for blowing away the First Order's finest then ducking back behind the wall. There's even room to factor in the puzzles, with Chewbacca's grenades and Han Solo's grapple both coming into play.As in the movie, it's surprising how well the new cast mixes in with the old.




BB-8 is a star, acting as a super-charged R2-D2 with a range of objects that can launch him into new areas so that he can activate or unlock various controls. Finn is your all-purpose action man but played as a bit of a wuss, while Rey is arguably Lego's finest heroine, with a great mix of acrobatic combat manoeuvres and superb platforming skills. The vehicle sections, meanwhile, feel less like filler and more like a high-point of the game. The Millennium Falcon's escape from Jakku dishes out the high-speed spectacle, but the various dogfights and fleet battles are even better, taking you back to the good old days of Rogue Squadron II. Frankly, Star Fox Zero could learn a thing or two.There's some evidence of filler in the linking hubs and fetch-and-carry objectives, but much less than you might expect when there's just the one film to work with. And while it won't take you more than a day or so to get through the main campaign, you could spend weeks trying to collect all the characters, vehicles, kits and red and gold bricks, not to mention a True Jedi rating in every chapter.




You'll also need all the gold bricks you can get, because these unlock a series of missions that go beyond the main storyline of The Force Awakens to explore, say, Poe Dameron's heroic efforts for the Resistance or Kylo Ren's quest for power. TT Games has even been able to enlist the vocal efforts of the cast, with Harrison Ford putting in a more energetic performance than you'd find in, well, 90% of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.That's characteristic of the love and attention to detail that extends across this game. It's brilliantly funny, missing no excuse to grab a cheap laugh at the expense of any scene or any character, with poor Kylo Ren's Kevin the Teenager schtick coming in for a lot of laughs. Solemn movie moments fall prey to surreal sight gags, while absurd running jokes about lazy stormtroopers and refreshment-ready rebels are maintained throughout. All these little things, some fantastic graphics and the brilliant music, make Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens a thing of Star Wars joy.

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