Compare LEGO: Jurassic World prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by TT Games Ltd. Published by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. Released on 6/11/2015. Available on PC, Nintendo Switch, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure. Metacritic score: 72/100.

Four Jurassic Park films rebuilt in plastic bricks, with local co-op and a roster of playable dinosaurs - a comfort-food adventure that knows exactly who it's for and mostly delivers.

I've spent enough time with TT Games' LEGO formula to know when a license is pulling its weight and when it's just wearing a costume. LEGO: Jurassic World sits somewhere in the middle - and honestly, that's a more interesting place than pure cynicism gives it credit for. The game covers all four films across 20 levels (five per movie), with four open-world hub islands connecting them. That's a legitimate amount of content for a single-player run, and hunting down the 200 minikits, 20 amber pieces, gold bricks, and red bricks can push a completionist well past 25 hours. The headline hook is the playable dinosaurs, and it genuinely is fun. Stomping around as a T-Rex or sprinting as a Velociraptor in the hub world unlocks through Dino-spawns tied to gold bricks, and the roster covers everything from tiny Compsognathus to the Mosasaurus. The problem critics and players repeatedly land on is the same: these moments are underutilized. The different dinosaur abilities mostly serve as keys to unlock specific areas or secrets rather than flexible tools to experiment with. You find the one solution, you progress, you repeat. For a game built around creatures famous for being unpredictable, that rigidity is noticeable. The puzzle and combat loop is the standard TT fare - smash objects into studs, build things from the debris, switch characters to match the required skill (agile characters double-jump, scientists interact with specific panels, and so on), beat up enough enemies to clear a room. It moves at a good clip on PC, and the split-screen local co-op holds up as the best way to play. The slapstick humor lands more often than it doesn't; the velociraptors accidentally wearing human clothing and a well-timed Jaws reference are genuinely funny. The game also pulls archive audio from the first three films for its dialogue, and the quality gap between that recycled audio and the freshly recorded lines from Jurassic World cast members like Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard is audible and distracting. The open-world hubs on Isla Sorna feel like filler - translucent stud trails guide you to the next level, but the geography doesn't always cooperate and hunting around can kill momentum fast. For the audience this is aimed at - kids who love dinosaurs, parents who want something to co-op on a couch, and adults with a soft spot for the original trilogy - LEGO: Jurassic World does what it needs to do. The charm of seeing Jeff Goldblum rendered in plastic bricks holds up. Veteran LEGO game players who've already done this dance with Star Wars or Marvel will feel the formula fatigue harder; there is genuinely nothing new here beyond the dino roster. But 93% positive across more than 10,000 Steam reviews tells you the right people are finding the right game. Go in knowing it's a breezy, low-stakes nostalgia trip and it won't let you down. Alex, Scout Team

LEGO: Jurassic World

LEGO: Jurassic World

Jun 11, 2015TT Games LtdWarner Bros. Interactive Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Four Jurassic Park films rebuilt in plastic bricks, with local co-op and a roster of playable dinosaurs - a comfort-food adventure that knows exactly who it's for and mostly delivers.

PCNintendo SwitchXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
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Historical low: €1.11

GamerScout Verdict

Best for Jurassic Park fans and families who want a low-stakes co-op romp - LEGO veterans will feel the formula fatigue faster.

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Price History

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About LEGO: Jurassic World

I've spent enough time with TT Games' LEGO formula to know when a license is pulling its weight and when it's just wearing a costume. LEGO: Jurassic World sits somewhere in the middle - and honestly, that's a more interesting place than pure cynicism gives it credit for. The game covers all four films across 20 levels (five per movie), with four open-world hub islands connecting them. That's a legitimate amount of content for a single-player run, and hunting down the 200 minikits, 20 amber pieces, gold bricks, and red bricks can push a completionist well past 25 hours. The headline hook is the playable dinosaurs, and it genuinely is fun. Stomping around as a T-Rex or sprinting as a Velociraptor in the hub world unlocks through Dino-spawns tied to gold bricks, and the roster covers everything from tiny Compsognathus to the Mosasaurus. The problem critics and players repeatedly land on is the same: these moments are underutilized. The different dinosaur abilities mostly serve as keys to unlock specific areas or secrets rather than flexible tools to experiment with. You find the one solution, you progress, you repeat. For a game built around creatures famous for being unpredictable, that rigidity is noticeable. The puzzle and combat loop is the standard TT fare - smash objects into studs, build things from the debris, switch characters to match the required skill (agile characters double-jump, scientists interact with specific panels, and so on), beat up enough enemies to clear a room. It moves at a good clip on PC, and the split-screen local co-op holds up as the best way to play. The slapstick humor lands more often than it doesn't; the velociraptors accidentally wearing human clothing and a well-timed Jaws reference are genuinely funny. The game also pulls archive audio from the first three films for its dialogue, and the quality gap between that recycled audio and the freshly recorded lines from Jurassic World cast members like Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard is audible and distracting. The open-world hubs on Isla Sorna feel like filler - translucent stud trails guide you to the next level, but the geography doesn't always cooperate and hunting around can kill momentum fast. For the audience this is aimed at - kids who love dinosaurs, parents who want something to co-op on a couch, and adults with a soft spot for the original trilogy - LEGO: Jurassic World does what it needs to do. The charm of seeing Jeff Goldblum rendered in plastic bricks holds up. Veteran LEGO game players who've already done this dance with Star Wars or Marvel will feel the formula fatigue harder; there is genuinely nothing new here beyond the dino roster. But 93% positive across more than 10,000 Steam reviews tells you the right people are finding the right game. Go in knowing it's a breezy, low-stakes nostalgia trip and it won't let you down.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steamLocal Co-opCouch Co-opSplit-screenCompletionistMovie Tie-inDino RosterFree Play ModeHub WorldFamily-FriendlyPuzzle-Adventure

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo or equivalent AMD dual core CPU
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 7600GS or ATI Radeon 1950, 256 Mb R…

Recommended

Processor
Intel i5, 4 x 2.6 GHz or AMD equivalent
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 480 or ATI Radeon HD 5850 or better, 1Gb RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Bro…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
72
Steam
93%(10,920)

Game Info

Developer
TT Games Ltd
Publisher
Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment
Release Date
Jun 11, 2015

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Frequently asked questions about LEGO: Jurassic World

How much does LEGO: Jurassic World cost?

LEGO: Jurassic World pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is LEGO: Jurassic World available on?

LEGO: Jurassic World is available on PC, Nintendo Switch, Xbox.

When was LEGO: Jurassic World released?

LEGO: Jurassic World was released on 11 June 2015.

Who developed LEGO: Jurassic World?

LEGO: Jurassic World was developed by TT Games Ltd and published by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment.

Is LEGO: Jurassic World worth buying?

LEGO: Jurassic World holds a Metacritic score of 72/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.