![]() ![]() Browse all Best Buy Memorial Day sale deals (opens in new tab) – savings on major appliances, electronics, outdoor tools and more.This year, we're expecting Best Buy to have one of the largest and most varied selections of Memorial Day deals, which will be a precursor to Amazon Prime Day. Last year, the top Memorial Day deals included more than $700 off a sleek and smart Samsung Bespoke 4-Door French Door Refrigerator with Beverage Center, as well as $330 off the Amazon 65-inch Omni Series 4K Smart Fire TV with Alexa. Best Buy also had great deals on dishwashers, vacuums, laptops and more. Hell it’s probably a better version of the film its based on, because I’m pretty sure that JJ Abrams didn’t film a scene where Kylo Ren used the dark side of the Force to ruin an ice cream treat for the First Order.If the latest appliances are what you're after, Best Buy's Memorial Day sale will be a must-shop event. It’s also the exact same game you and your kids have been jamming, albeit in Star Wars garb. ![]() But by sticking to its guns, it’s still a great game for the kids and bursting with quantity over quality content that is capped off with some wonderfully odd slapstick humour. Hell, you’ll spend a half hour alone in the prologue which retreads the third act from Star Wars: Return of the Jedi because reasons.Īt least LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens is trying to be something else, even if the effort doesn’t exactly pay off. Overall, it’s a lengthier game as well, as LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens focuses on just one film for a change and adds a few extra chapters along the way. There’s a feeling of better environments, more challenging puzzles and bigger setpieces at play here while a who’s who of the original cast adds some extra dialogue, albeit in a phoned-in manner so that they can go spend their shiny new pay cheque as quickly as possible.Īll this, and the trademark humour of TT’s LEGO game series, which is the closest we’ll ever get to having a proper Naked Gun sequel. The quality has also been increased with LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens. I’d rate that only Rocksteady games could give them a run for their money with their Batman series, which presumably cost many millions more to produce. When it comes to accurately capturing the excitement and attitude of the source material, they’re head and shoulders above everyone else in the industry today. They’re going to find success with it anyway, as this family game setup is a living example of not fixing something that isn’t broken.Īnd once again, kudos to TT Games for preserving the spirit of the original in their latest product. Thing is, TT Games doesn’t need to change their formula. They’re not still not enough however, and barely scrape the surface of evolution, let alone revolution.īasic firefights where you take cover and plough your way through First Order stormtroopers and new multi-part puzzles make up the bulk of this expanded content, but it still feels like the exact same LEGO game that we’ve been playing for several years now. A few new ideas and gimmicks to go along with the usual puzzles of connections and getting beyond barriers. Okay, so here’s the thing: There actually is some new gameplay content at play here in LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens. …What do you mean I haven’t reached my minimum word count yet? You suck Geoff. I could literally end my review right here and still be accurate. The basic formula hasn’t changed in many, many games: Players get a ludicrous amount of characters to unlock and play with, smash everything to pieces and work around several puzzles to progress further. They’ve also become somewhat stale as of late, even with all that reverence for the source material. They’re what happens when you combine the slapstick of a Zucker, Zucker and Abrams film with absurd amounts of fan service. LEGO games aren’t exactly hard to describe. ![]()
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