While they may seem catered toward children, Lego games have a long-lasting appeal for people of all ages.
I've always thoroughly enjoyed the puzzle solving and button mashing that comes with every Lego game. The puzzles feed your mind and the button mashing makes even the most casual player feel highly skilled.
And even with all the similarities in gameplay across the roster of Lego games, each installment within each series brings something new and interesting to the table.
One of the more entertaining things each game does is find different ways to make characters who died in the source material stay alive in some weird fashion. One example of this is in "Lego Jurassic World" when all the "dead" characters are still alive in the mosasaurus' stomach, just playing a card game.
I wanna play cards with Zara too ;-; And Indominus Rex. He seems chill when dead 🥺🥺 AND THE CARDS ARE SO BIG IN ZARA HANDS ðŸ˜ðŸ˜ pic.twitter.com/CKdPINN2JR
— wenting 🥺 (@energywen) January 9, 2020
Likewise, achievement hunting within each game can keep anyone busy with hours upon hours of enjoyable content, even when cheat codes are turned on. My goal is always to try and 100% Lego games, no matter how long it takes.
And the popularity is clearly long lasting even for older Lego games. My brother's "Lego Marvel Superheroes" videos from a year ago are some of the most popular videos on his YouTube channel, as shown with the video above that has over 110k views.
Lego really is for everyone, especially in regard to its games.
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