‘Lego
Marvel’s Avengers’ is the second video game to feature Marvel
Comics’ superheroes as Lego figures. I liked playing it overall, but it had its
frustrations. For some of its puzzles, that need to be solved to progress, it
wasn’t particularly clear what to do. I looked up how to open a gate on the
first level. I looked up how to beat Loki on the second level. I definitely had
to look up how the hell I got out of Manhattan. I never figured out what
exactly the floating ‘A’ logos were for, or how to use them. And then there
were a couple of times when I got stuck in exactly the wrong spot and
repeatedly died until I must have tilted my controller just enough to escape
the endless death loop.
The story that I played was
mainly a condensed version of Marvel’s first Avengers movie, but spliced with
other scenes. The first scene replays the Avengers’ assault on the HYDRA Fortress
from ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’. A few levels in, after Captain America meets
Nick Fury, there is a solo Cap and Bucky level which is a flashback to the
World War II scenes of ‘Captain America: The First Avenger’. Then we see the
various heroes join up, but wait … I thought they’d already met? And after the
first movie’s scenes had ended the game credits rolled, even though there looks
to be several more scenes from the second movie – but that’s where I left it.
As a long-time Avengers fan I
hoped that the game may actually draw upon my much-loved Avengers comic
universe, and we would see lots
of these Avengers, and
Kang the Conqueror, and that type of stuff. The game though is set firmly in
Marvel’s Cinematic Universe. Lego’s first Marvel super heroes game – ‘Lego
Marvel Super Heroes’ – turns out to have been more the game for the comic book
fans.
While the cut scenes are
basically straight replays of Marvel’s movies there are a few funny touches
that the game puts on them. The best is the first meeting between the Black
Widow and Bruce Banner/the Hulk, in which the Widow assures Banner that she is
alone, despite far more evidence than the movie to the contrary. Loki is also
far less subtle than in the movie about his intentions for the Hulk when he is
brought on to the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier. And there are the omnipresent
shakes.
In summary: ‘Lego Marvel
Super Heroes’ is better, but it would take a fair bit to go wrong for me not to
like an Avengers video game.
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