LEGO Worlds Reviews
A little rough around the edges, but LEGO Worlds has huge potential with its extensive creativity and humour. If you can tolerate a wayward camera and occasionally fiddly controls, then there's a wealth of enjoyment to be mined from building, destroying, and collecting.
LEGO Worlds allows the player to unleash his own creativity: the game is an enormous 'toy box' in which we can create everything we desire.
Review in Italian | Read full review
LEGO Worlds is a nice building game, offering a complete experience packed with some humor, but it lacks diversity in its environements and missions, and sometimes suffers from its bad camera.
Review in French | Read full review
Forget everything you've seen so far of LEGO franchise. In this new LEGO game you are alone in a galaxy where you can visit a great amount of worlds in which you can create all the constructions you imagine. Without crafting, without having to search and store materials, without having to face any enemies, without complications ... LEGO Worlds is probably the best building game you can find in the market today.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Put it all together and you have a game that’s good enough to keep kids busy on a rainy Sunday afternoon, but nowhere near as absorbing or addictive as Minecraft (which some parents may think is a good thing).
LEGO Worlds may not have a story mode that emulates the whimsy of its licensed tie-ins or a game engine that runs at a consistently smooth rate, but it may just be the purest LEGO game ever made thanks to a sandbox that has solid family-friendly foundations.
Lego Worlds has a lot of potential and the fun of building wherever you want with Lego bricks on its virtual universe, but on the other side it feels half-cooked with random and tedious activities, a problematic camera and some technical issues. The worst part of the game is that you need to repeat the same again and again in order to begin to really create your own world.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
A really nice Lego sandbox, which hides its charms behind a few hours of tedious quests and is cumbersome to control.
Review in German | Read full review
Stupidly enjoyable and endlessly charming, LEGO Worlds is the gift that keeps on giving with different biomes – jungles, spooky forests, deserts, swamps, candy lands with gingerbread men and more - an adventure filled with quests and infinite scope to make whatever you want. LEGO Worlds is fantastic.
Overall, LEGO Worlds is a LEGO game many fans of the franchise have been waiting for. Between the robust create tools and ability to discover randomly generated worlds, LEGO Worlds offers a ton of great fun. While it’s not nearly as addictive or simple as a game like Minecraft, it should be viewed as a different take on the Create-Your-Own-World genre. The game is unfortunately brought down by it’s floaty and odd controls, but having thousands of classic LEGOs in the game can make up for it if you’re looking for a nostalgic LEGO trip.
Combination of unsuccessful Minecraft clone and No Man’s Sky. LEGO Worlds looks nice, but it quickly become a chore to play.
Review in Polish | Read full review
Although LEGO Worlds is a little rough around the edges and is definitely not a Minecraft killer, it's a delightful game that LEGO fans should look into.
When it comes to LEGO Worlds the sad fact is that the constant technical issues make it a frustrating experience, and locking LEGO pieces behind gamification doesn't make it feel like I have achieved something. I congratulate everyone for what they've accomplished with LEGO Worlds, but many of the issues with this game are not easily forgiven in modern game development.
You won’t build all that much in the initial hours of LEGO Worlds.
Lego Worlds is a colorful and lively sandbox, but with too many technical problems and with a cumbersome gameplay.
Review in Italian | Read full review
A cheery and extensive world-building game that has unfortunately been swamped by busy work and glitches.
Clicks together beautifully like LEGO, but you might be searching for that final elusive brick.
LEGO Worlds may be TT Games' best LEGO title yet, but even so it falls short at almost every turn.
At $30 you’re looking at game with plenty of replay value, charm, a little frustration, and some amazing creations.
The game still has a fair few bugs and an awkward story-based progression mechanism, concerns that should have been ironed out with its retail release. This game is essentially about building Lego wonders and we enjoyed it the most when we totally ignored the storyline. But if that's the kind of experience you're looking for, Minecraft is still the more polished alternative.