Compare LEGO 2K Drive (Nintendo Switch) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Visual Concepts Entertainment. Published by 2K. Released on 5/19/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Multiplayer, Local Co-op, Racing, Arcade, Adventure.

An open-world LEGO kart racer where your vehicle auto-transforms between car, boat, and buggy. Fun for families, friendlier on a second controller than a solo grind.

LEGO 2K Drive sits somewhere between Mario Kart and Forza Horizon in a LEGO wrapper, and that description is less of a pitch and more of a literal map of its DNA. The open world of Bricklandia is split across four themed regions, including the dusty Big Butte County, the gold-rush hills of Prospecto County, and the gloriously creepy Hauntsborough, each with its own aesthetic and its own race circuits to unlock. The headline trick is the vehicle transformation system: your car swaps seamlessly between a street racer, an off-road buggy, and a speedboat depending on the terrain under your wheels. It happens in milliseconds and it never stops being satisfying. Controls are arcade-simple, drift-and-boost stuff that any player can pick up in under two minutes, which is exactly what you want when you are handing a Joy-Con to someone who has not played a racing game since Diddy Kong Racing. The core racing holds up well. Tracks are loaded with power-ups including homing missiles, rolling bombs, and spider webs, and the destructible LEGO scenery means every collision looks like someone kicked over a brick bucket. The story mode sends a nameless rookie up against a cast of rival racers for the Sky Trophy, and while the narrative is thin, the LEGO-brand humour lands often enough to keep adults smiling. Difficulty in the campaign is reasonable, though rubber-banding AI can make late races feel more RNG-driven than skill-based, which may frustrate players who like clean, earned victories. The build mode is a genuine standout if you are the creative type: around 1,000 brick pieces are available for custom vehicle construction, and vehicle stats change based on what you build, giving dedicated tinkerers a surprising amount of depth to explore. For local play specifically, the Switch version supports two-player split-screen across Story, Cup Series, and Race modes, and two Switch consoles can link wirelessly for local play as well. Online has a Shared World mode for up to six players and a ranked ladder that runs from Bronze through to the LEGO Maniac tier. Note that crossplay is not available on Switch, so your online pool is Switch-only. That is a meaningful limitation if you are hoping to race friends on other platforms. The Switch version also takes a visual hit compared to PC and current-gen consoles: cut-scenes look noticeably soft and textures lose detail, though the gameplay itself remains vivid and colourful enough that it rarely feels like a compromise mid-race. The elephant in the room is the monetisation. Earning in-game currency through normal play is a slow grind, and the real-money shop is hard to ignore at any age. For a game aimed squarely at a younger audience, the aggressive push toward paid content is genuinely frustrating and community consensus on every platform has echoed that same complaint. If you are buying this for a child, go in with eyes open about the store being a persistent presence. That said, the base racing game is generous with content: four open-world maps, a full story campaign, Cup Series tournaments, single races, and a slate of off-track minigames give you plenty to work through before the grind starts to bite. Bottom line for couch sessions: two-player split-screen on Switch works well, the controls are accessible for all ages, and there is enough visual chaos on screen to keep a room entertained. It does not hit four players simultaneously, which is a genuine limitation for group nights, but as a two-player family racer or a solo open-world cruise, LEGO 2K Drive delivers more than its mixed reputation suggests, provided you treat the shop like background noise. Riley, Scout Team

LEGO 2K Drive (Nintendo Switch)
Single PlayerMultiplayerLocal Co-opRacingArcadeAdventure

LEGO 2K Drive (Nintendo Switch)

May 19, 2023Visual Concepts Entertainment2K
GamerScout Says

An open-world LEGO kart racer where your vehicle auto-transforms between car, boat, and buggy. Fun for families, friendlier on a second controller than a solo grind.

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About LEGO 2K Drive (Nintendo Switch)

LEGO 2K Drive sits somewhere between Mario Kart and Forza Horizon in a LEGO wrapper, and that description is less of a pitch and more of a literal map of its DNA. The open world of Bricklandia is split across four themed regions, including the dusty Big Butte County, the gold-rush hills of Prospecto County, and the gloriously creepy Hauntsborough, each with its own aesthetic and its own race circuits to unlock. The headline trick is the vehicle transformation system: your car swaps seamlessly between a street racer, an off-road buggy, and a speedboat depending on the terrain under your wheels. It happens in milliseconds and it never stops being satisfying. Controls are arcade-simple, drift-and-boost stuff that any player can pick up in under two minutes, which is exactly what you want when you are handing a Joy-Con to someone who has not played a racing game since Diddy Kong Racing. The core racing holds up well. Tracks are loaded with power-ups including homing missiles, rolling bombs, and spider webs, and the destructible LEGO scenery means every collision looks like someone kicked over a brick bucket. The story mode sends a nameless rookie up against a cast of rival racers for the Sky Trophy, and while the narrative is thin, the LEGO-brand humour lands often enough to keep adults smiling. Difficulty in the campaign is reasonable, though rubber-banding AI can make late races feel more RNG-driven than skill-based, which may frustrate players who like clean, earned victories. The build mode is a genuine standout if you are the creative type: around 1,000 brick pieces are available for custom vehicle construction, and vehicle stats change based on what you build, giving dedicated tinkerers a surprising amount of depth to explore. For local play specifically, the Switch version supports two-player split-screen across Story, Cup Series, and Race modes, and two Switch consoles can link wirelessly for local play as well. Online has a Shared World mode for up to six players and a ranked ladder that runs from Bronze through to the LEGO Maniac tier. Note that crossplay is not available on Switch, so your online pool is Switch-only. That is a meaningful limitation if you are hoping to race friends on other platforms. The Switch version also takes a visual hit compared to PC and current-gen consoles: cut-scenes look noticeably soft and textures lose detail, though the gameplay itself remains vivid and colourful enough that it rarely feels like a compromise mid-race. The elephant in the room is the monetisation. Earning in-game currency through normal play is a slow grind, and the real-money shop is hard to ignore at any age. For a game aimed squarely at a younger audience, the aggressive push toward paid content is genuinely frustrating and community consensus on every platform has echoed that same complaint. If you are buying this for a child, go in with eyes open about the store being a persistent presence. That said, the base racing game is generous with content: four open-world maps, a full story campaign, Cup Series tournaments, single races, and a slate of off-track minigames give you plenty to work through before the grind starts to bite. Bottom line for couch sessions: two-player split-screen on Switch works well, the controls are accessible for all ages, and there is enough visual chaos on screen to keep a room entertained. It does not hit four players simultaneously, which is a genuine limitation for group nights, but as a two-player family racer or a solo open-world cruise, LEGO 2K Drive delivers more than its mixed reputation suggests, provided you treat the shop like background noise. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

steamOpen-World RacingVehicle BuilderAuto-Transforming Cars2-Player Split-ScreenRubber-Banding AIShared World OnlineFamily-FriendlyRanked Leagues

System Requirements

Minimum

64bit support
Yes
System requirements
TBD

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Visual Concepts Entertainment
Publisher
2K
Release Date
May 19, 2023

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