Its Lego counterpart isn’t affected by this drop in movie quality, focusing on the the best action scenes and giving a keynote version of the story, at times almost certainly mocking the convoluted nature of the latter movies’ twists and turns. The second and third (and for all intents and purposes, probably the fourth) Pirates of the Caribbean films were a bit rubbish, hampered by a poor plot born out of an attempt to turn a single film into a linked quadrilogy. So charming, in fact, that they manage to smooth over the flaws of the source material. Combat is still designed to be fun rather than particularly challenging, and the stories are presented in that effortlessly charming way. You bound about these, solving environmental puzzles and using the massive selection of characters’ unique abilities to progress. As expected, you have a small hub area that links you to each of the four films, which in turn are split into their own series of levels. Traveller’s Tales have been at this for a good while now, and Lego Pirates of the Caribbean is the absolute refinement of what they’ve done to date. So, if you’re going to be one of those idiots shouting rubbish about how the Lego games have become stale and they’re not moving forward this probably isn’t going to convince you any differently, but more fool you. It follows the foundations set by the previous games, eschewing the slight changes made in some of the more recent titles – such as the large scale battles from Lego Clone Wars, or the experimental hub from Lego Indiana Jones 2 – instead focusing on refining and improving upon the already winning formula. Lego Pirates of the Caribbean is no different. They’re all top-notch platformers, with some inspired decisions regarding the difficulty and gameplay, aiming for all ages and abilities, all wrapped up in a package that just oozes with charm and fun. The Lego games from Traveller’s Tales are that rarest of beast, a game aimed at the younger audience that us reviewers don’t have to justify poor quality releases with the caveat “it’s for kids”. The game features two-player cooperative mode, in which players each control a character to experience the story together, and freeplay mode, which lets players return to levels to discover new items.Another Lego game based around a major children’s movie franchise! Brilliant! No, really. Throughout the game, players will also have the freedom to explore environments from the highly acclaimed movie series in more than 20 levels. Players can take on the roles of more than 70 characters and experience the pirate adventure, irreverent humor and amazing creatures of the Pirates of the Caribbean films, through action-adventure gameplay and hilariously quirky LEGO cut scenes. LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game will re-create the action, adventure and memorable moments of the Pirates of the Caribbean mythology in LEGO form, incorporating the humor of LEGO minifigures and fantastic worlds built from LEGO bricks and elements for players to explore. LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game will be based in the world of the globally successful film franchise, incorporating storylines, locations and characters from the first three films ("Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl", "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" and "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End") as well as the upcoming fourth film, "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides".
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