communicate of Lego Harry Potter - Years 1-4

The Lego game idea has spanned three beloved franchises in the past: Star Wars, Indiana Jones and Batman. Now a fourth has been added to the list in the form of the Boy Who Lived. Jk Rowling's creation, Harry Potter, has been given the little plastic block treatment, and the follow is a game that is fun, fresh and very addictive.

The Lego games have always been fun, thanks to their excellent recreation of the field matter on which they are based, as well as the irreverent attitude they take to that field matter. But, aside from characters and settings, there precisely hasn't been much of a unlikeness between them. We've been to Tatooine and the Amazon with these games, but the unabridged dynamic hasn't changed much in any of the former versions. You can read that someone else way, of course... The game-play was getting old.

Harry Potter

It seems that developers Travellers Tales were well aware of the problem, because Lego Harry Potter: Years 1 - 4 brings a very distinct feel with it. Sure, it's still a Lego game, and the basic ideas are the same, but additions and tweaks to these ideas have made a weighty unlikeness to the unabridged palpate that it offers.

communicate of Lego Harry Potter - Years 1-4

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The distinct change is that the game has a distinct setting. Now the player will be able to eye a Lego version of Hogwarts, which is a sprawling environment that allows the player a lot of freedom. The magic school has been recreated from the films, and events that play out in the game are based on the movies, rather than the books (hardly surprising when you reconsider that the game is published by Warner Bros, the same business that did the films). There is a lot to do in Hogwarts, from collecting studs (which is tasteless to all the games, and serves as currency in this title) through to gathering Hogwarts crests and more. The free roaming that the game allows implies (as do the myriad items that propose interactions later on) that the player will be revisiting areas time and again to way things they couldn't get to before. This is a wonderful concept, but it also adds a bit of trudging to the game.

The player will be able to make use of 167 unlockable characters through the policy of the game, and will be able to learn new spells and abilities as they go through the various chapters in the game. That's where going back to redo things comes in. Take, for example, polyjuice potion. Studying to use this potion will allow the player to change characters at favorably placed cauldrons. Need to get through a door that will only allow Hufflepuff house students access? No problem... Simply use polyjuice to assume the form of a Hufflepuff character. The catch is that you may come over such a door in the first chapter, but you'll only learn the skill in the second. I am sure you see what I am getting at.

It's great fun, and the use of distinct magic spells allows the player to interact with the world of a Lego game like never before. Wingardium Leviosa, for example, will enable the player to design individual Lego blocks to solve puzzles. Previously, construction was kind of automated, and while there still is automatic construction this time around, the puzzles add a new dimension to the game.

The game also features a drop-in / drop-out multiplayer, which is brilliantly handled this time around. Players can play through all four chapters together (which cover The Philosopher's Stone, The chamber of Secrets, The Prisoner of Azkaban and The Goblet of Fire) thanks to an intuitive split screen implementation that only splits the screen when necessary. This is one of the best implementations of split screen we have ever seen.

The game doesn't highlight too many boss battles, and vehicle sections are mercifully kept to a minimum (because they were nasty in other Lego titles). On the whole, the game is a beautifully presented, fairly forgiving title that shines above a few of the former Lego games. It's great fun for the whole family, and well worth playing, offering tons to do and lots of humour for those customary with the Harry Potter stories.

At A Glance

A great adventure for the whole family, based on the Harry Potter universe.

Developer: Traveller's Tales
Publisher: Warner Bros
Distributor: Nu Metro

Platform:

Pc
Ps3
Xbox 360
Wii
Psp
Ds

communicate of Lego Harry Potter - Years 1-4

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