Compara los precios de LEGO: Worlds en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por TT Games. Publicado por Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. Lanzado el 7/3/2017. Disponible en PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch. Géneros: Adventure. Puntuación Metacritic: 71/100.

Closer to a Minecraft rival wearing a LEGO costume than a proper sandbox builder - the creative tools shine, but you'll grind through fetch quests for hours before you can actually use them.

I went into LEGO Worlds fully expecting the game I wanted as a kid: infinite plastic bricks, total freedom, no bedtime. What I got instead was a slow, gated adventure mode that spends roughly eight to ten hours teaching you the basics while dangling the good stuff just out of reach. The loop is straightforward enough - your minifig astronaut crashes their ship and needs gold bricks to fix it, so you hop between procedurally generated planets completing quests for NPCs to earn them. Biomes range from candy-coated sugar worlds to prehistoric jungles to Mordor-adjacent lava landscapes, and the variety is genuinely impressive on paper. In practice, most quests boil down to fetch tasks: find this item, build that structure, bring me a hammer. The same objectives recycle constantly, and the randomised reward pool means you could grind for hours chasing a specific brick type that never drops. The building toolkit, once fully unlocked, is where the game actually earns its place. You can raise or lower terrain in broad sweeps, place individual bricks with precise snapping, copy-paste entire structures, scan vehicles and minifigs to respawn them anywhere, and eventually get a jetpack and grappling hook for traversal. The copy-paste tool alone is a sanity-saver - build one decent house, paste it across a hillside in minutes. There is also a sandbox mode that hands you total control from the start, and that mode is genuinely fun for anyone who just wants to build without friction. The problem is that reaching it comfortably requires collecting 100 gold bricks, which is a long haul if you are doing it at a relaxed pace. The rougher edges are hard to ignore. Combat is clunky and imprecise - weapons feel random and enemy hit detection is inconsistent. The camera misbehaves frequently, especially indoors or in tight terrain. Performance on PC sits at a mixed 78% on Steam, which tracks with the general consensus: fans of the plastic brick aesthetic and sandbox tinkering will find enough to justify their time, while anyone expecting a sharp Minecraft alternative will bounce off the repetitive quest grind fairly quickly. The PC version scored a 71 on Metacritic, reflecting a game that is technically competent but undershoots its own ambition. Where LEGO Worlds works best is as a low-stakes, pick-up-and-put-down creative toy for younger players or adults with genuine nostalgia for the source material. Co-op is available but limited to two players, and the online implementation has historically been a weak point. If your priority is freeform building from minute one, the sandbox mode will satisfy. If you want a tighter game with progression that feels earned rather than gated, the campaign loop will frustrate you well before the gold brick count climbs high enough to open up the full toolset. Alex, Scout Team

LEGO: Worlds

LEGO: Worlds

7 mar 2017TT GamesWarner Bros. Interactive Entertainment
GamerScout opina

Closer to a Minecraft rival wearing a LEGO costume than a proper sandbox builder - the creative tools shine, but you'll grind through fetch quests for hours before you can actually use them.

PCXboxNintendo Switch
Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum
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Mínimo histórico: €1.17

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Acerca de LEGO: Worlds

I went into LEGO Worlds fully expecting the game I wanted as a kid: infinite plastic bricks, total freedom, no bedtime. What I got instead was a slow, gated adventure mode that spends roughly eight to ten hours teaching you the basics while dangling the good stuff just out of reach. The loop is straightforward enough - your minifig astronaut crashes their ship and needs gold bricks to fix it, so you hop between procedurally generated planets completing quests for NPCs to earn them. Biomes range from candy-coated sugar worlds to prehistoric jungles to Mordor-adjacent lava landscapes, and the variety is genuinely impressive on paper. In practice, most quests boil down to fetch tasks: find this item, build that structure, bring me a hammer. The same objectives recycle constantly, and the randomised reward pool means you could grind for hours chasing a specific brick type that never drops. The building toolkit, once fully unlocked, is where the game actually earns its place. You can raise or lower terrain in broad sweeps, place individual bricks with precise snapping, copy-paste entire structures, scan vehicles and minifigs to respawn them anywhere, and eventually get a jetpack and grappling hook for traversal. The copy-paste tool alone is a sanity-saver - build one decent house, paste it across a hillside in minutes. There is also a sandbox mode that hands you total control from the start, and that mode is genuinely fun for anyone who just wants to build without friction. The problem is that reaching it comfortably requires collecting 100 gold bricks, which is a long haul if you are doing it at a relaxed pace. The rougher edges are hard to ignore. Combat is clunky and imprecise - weapons feel random and enemy hit detection is inconsistent. The camera misbehaves frequently, especially indoors or in tight terrain. Performance on PC sits at a mixed 78% on Steam, which tracks with the general consensus: fans of the plastic brick aesthetic and sandbox tinkering will find enough to justify their time, while anyone expecting a sharp Minecraft alternative will bounce off the repetitive quest grind fairly quickly. The PC version scored a 71 on Metacritic, reflecting a game that is technically competent but undershoots its own ambition. Where LEGO Worlds works best is as a low-stakes, pick-up-and-put-down creative toy for younger players or adults with genuine nostalgia for the source material. Co-op is available but limited to two players, and the online implementation has historically been a weak point. If your priority is freeform building from minute one, the sandbox mode will satisfy. If you want a tighter game with progression that feels earned rather than gated, the campaign loop will frustrate you well before the gold brick count climbs high enough to open up the full toolset.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Etiquetas

steamSandbox BuilderProcedural GenerationFamily-FriendlyCo-opOpen World ExplorationCreative ModeFetch Quest HeavyGold Brick Grind

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
Intel Dual Core 2GHz
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
512MB GPU with Shaders 3.0
DirectX
Version 9.0
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
10 GB available space

Recomendados

Processor
AMD or Intel Quad Core running at 2.6GHz
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 480 or ATI Radeon HD 5850 or better
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet con…

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
71
Steam
78%(15,585)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
TT Games
Distribuidora
Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment
Fecha de lanzamiento
7 mar 2017

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible LEGO: Worlds?

LEGO: Worlds está disponible en PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch.

¿Cuándo se lanzó LEGO: Worlds?

LEGO: Worlds se lanzó el 7 de marzo de 2017.

¿Quién desarrolló LEGO: Worlds?

LEGO: Worlds fue desarrollado por TT Games y publicado por Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment.

¿Merece la pena comprar LEGO: Worlds?

LEGO: Worlds tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 71/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Adventure. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.