"Clocking in at a fairly short six-to-eight hours, Lego Horizon Adventures offers up frequent, brief bursts of fun with its excellent combat encounters. However, this is wrapped up in an experience that feels way too shallow and repetitive to recommend to anyone other than the most enthusiastic Horizon and Lego fans. It's clear that the intention is to woo new, younger gamers to Sony's flagship franchise, but if you already own Zero Dawn and Forbidden West on PlayStation, we can't see any reason why you'd want to check this one out. Mind you, if all you've got is a Switch, then this endearingly light-hearted introduction will have to do for now. It could have been so much more, though." - Ollie Reynolds | NintendoLife
VGChartz's Mark Nielsen: "In a year that was to a large extent carried by the game developers of Japan (and to some extent China), western games can rejoice that there was at least one category they managed to dominate: that of Most Disappointing. Sometimes disappointment comes from high expectations met with something middling, other times it comes from middling expectations met with something terrible. This year managed to deliver a bit of both, so either way there was enough disappointment to go around."
Why not mention the 19,000 Steam games of which 80% weren't good enough to merit "success" on the platform?
VGChartz's Lee Mehr: "The overarching issue with LEGO Horizon Adventures can be interrogated with its own title: what exciting adventures can be promised by fusing these two properties together? For the plethora of LEGO adaptations of blockbuster films that carry prominent cultural cache, the answer is immediately obvious: the fun in re-experiencing beloved franchises and moments as a playable parody. Their mechanics are simplistic, but their tacit goals are immediately clear and cohere with the young-ages fun of these toys. By lacking a sense of purpose or direction here, it feels like this developer duo couldn't be as creative with the license as they ought to have been; and, as a result, neither can you."
Dragon Age: The Veilguard, Mario & Luigi: Brothership, LEGO Horizon Adventures, Metal Slug Tactics, and more get reviews in EDGE #405 magazine.
Woke detected... you gave black myth wukong a 6 and yet dragon age the veilguard a 7 ???
25+ hours in playing DA with zero expectations and not wanting it to be anything else than its own experience. I think the game is just as good as many others in the 7-9 range of modern AA-AAA. Very much enjoying a quality game. Why look for more flaws in some vs others?
No way I’m getting this.. Every true gamer must get Dragon Quest 3 tomorrow instead of this joke