A blocky empire strikes back in this sequel to the surprisingly enjoyable lite actioner Lego Star Wars.
Available on:
Xbox 360
,
PSP
,
GameCube
,
DS
,
GBA
,
PC
,
Xbox,
PS2
Genre: Action Expected release date: Q4 2006 Release date: September 12, 2006 Published by: LucasArts Developed by: LucasArts Traveller's Tales
There's not many ways you could improve on Han, Luke and Leia - but this might be one of them
Aug 17, 2006
Hands-on time with LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy only confirms what you already knew: If this adorable game does not make you smile, you have no soul. Of course, cute ain't everything, and that's the real reason why our time traipsing through Episodes IV (A New Hope) and V (The Empire Strikes Back ) in a preview version of this Xbox 360 action/adventure was so satisfying. Not only is the game almost huggable (all these warm-fuzzy screens are taken from the Xbox 360 version), it's a
» Read Full Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy preview
Stormtroopers get blasted into plastic pieces as we take the controls
Jul 13, 2006
A rebel ship disappears from orbit, sucked into the belly of an Imperial Star Destroyer. Rebels hold their breath and take up defensive positions as a door is breached. Stormtroopers flood in. Shots are fired. Cute plastic heads clatter to the floor and slowly blink out of existence.
Beginning with the first scene of A New Hope, Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy finally gives fans what they really want: the chance to play through Lego versions of the first three films. We've finally had
» Read Full Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy preview
Luke, Han and Leia get blocky in the sequel to last year's surprise hit
May 18, 2006
Our first real glimpse of Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy was of Luke Skywalker running over pedestrians in a landspeeder. As he thoughtlessly careened around the streets of Mos Eisley, any Lego people who got in his way were reduced to flailing their limbs while lying helplessly on their backs. No wonder those goons in the cantina don't like him.
While it still features plenty of the adorable lightsaber-swinging, puzzle-solving, multiple-character-controlling action that made the
» Read Full Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy preview
As Traveller's Tales allies itself with the LucasArts empire, its feisty adaptation remains rebellious
Mar 17, 2006
Lego Star Wars didn't so much secure the support of a wide audience as capture, for entirely separate reasons, the hearts of two. Children warmed to its unpatronising approach and to adults it provided an antidote to George Lucas' wavering prequels.
For its successor - at first glance a project with everything to gain - the use of Episodes IV to VI as source material is, in the eyes of adults at least, of significant concern. Will innocent parody earn the same appreciation when applied to
» Read Full Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy preview
Slicing plastic robots into tumbling bricks as a miniature and rather angular Obi-Wan Kenobi plugs into that "pure fun" part of our brain in the same way that building forts out of couch cushions used to. Lego Star Wars drew out that imaginative joy with ease, and now we get to do it all over again ... but with the original trilogy of Star Wars
» Read Full Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy preview
ESRB Rating
Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy is rated: Everyone
Cartoon Violence