![]() ![]() With so much to do in the hub area and within the story itself, which spans both The Incredibles films, LEGO The Incredibles is pretty substantial, even if it seems comparatively small next to LEGO Marvel Super Heroes 2 with its 200-odd characters and multiple hub worlds.įamily Builds bring something else new to the table too, enabling the Parr family to band together and create large scale objects that are often used to defeat bosses or overcome huge obstacles during the story, or restore a structure within Municiberg. Each district has its own set of missions and challenges to complete, and there are five district bosses to defeat and send to prison. Municiberg city serves as the hub area tying it all together, and here you'll find ten different regions, each with its own Crime Wave unfolding that you'll need to foil. As ever, to achieve 100%, you'll have to play through the game twice. Obviously, there are still many of the same core mechanics at work in LEGO The Incredibles, but there's enough new stuff here to make it at least feel a bit different.įundamentally, you'll find yourself still carrying out many of the same tasks from the previous LEGO games, whether it's breaking structures and scenery then collecting millions of little studs, fighting enemies with single button combos, or figuring out which ability you need to find ever minikit when you're replaying the story in Free Play mode. There are twelve, mostly varied levels to punch and smash your way through, with each member of the super-powered Parr family packing their own unique abilities that feed into co-op actions and some light puzzling that actually strays from the usual LEGO path. ![]()
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