![lego star wars tcs nexus 7 lego star wars tcs nexus 7](https://staticdelivery.nexusmods.com/mods/1363/images/thumbnails/4/4-1562466868-1698349488.png)
Also make sure you have installed the most recent firmware.
LEGO STAR WARS TCS NEXUS 7 INSTALL
This game is filled with content! You’ll need 1.44gb of available space on your device if you install over wifi, but only 735mb of space if you download on your computer and then sync.Īs with many large app installations, we advise that you restart your device after installing as this will resolve some stability issues.
LEGO STAR WARS TCS NEXUS 7 ANDROID
Fun + Star Wars + Lego = Win.Experience the entire collection that combines the original LEGO Star Wars: The Video Game and the sequel LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy for hours of epic Star Wars content and fun gameplay all from your Android device! Begin your adventure in Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace and journey through all six episodes in the whimsical style and humor of LEGO. The length at which you can play this game and still be having fun makes it a very money friendly purchase. Overall: LEGO Star Wars is a very simple, yet fun platformer with massive replay value, especially for young kids, but any fan of the Star Wars universe is going to get a kick out of playing. I would recommend playing with someone you know though, as it is much more fun and you at least know you're going to get a game instead of waiting hours for Xbox Live to find you one. The graphics are simple enough for the game to be able to render at a decent speed, so providing you have a decent internet connection I can't imagine there being too much lag. Multiplayer: While the game has multiplayer in the sense that you can team up on Xbox Live to play co-op with someone on the other side of the world, I can't really comment on it as when I was playing I never found one game to join. Long Term: LEGO Star Wars is outstanding in the long term, while the actual Story Mode itself probably lasts about 6 -7 hours, the amount of things you can do after this is extraordinary - easily increasing the total play time to well over 20 hours. If you get near the end and have to go away, you're starting from the beginning of the level next time. Each level lasts about 30 minutes, and the only way to save is to complete the level. The problem comes if you want to play for shorter than that. Short Term: If you want to play LEGO Star Wars for about 30 minutes, you can. It's a standard platformer, with standard platformer puzzles and scenarios, but it's LEGO and it's Star Wars. There's not really anything else I can say about this game, if you like Star Wars and you're partial to a bit of LEGO building then this is the game for you, there's no two ways about it, you'll have massive amount of fun from beginning to end, even if nothing about the game is revolutionary. The Star Wars universe is no exception, it' bright and colourful with a dash of humour to give it that 'Classic Game' flavour. The main reason people play these LEGO games is to experience LEGO's unique take on several different universes. The gameplay itself is very fun, it's more along the lines of classic platformers: there's no real skill involved in the combat, just mash the button repeatedly and you're bound to come out on top, but the average gamer isn't playing LEGO Star Wars for the combat system, so I can't imagine this bothering too many people in the long run. On top of that, upon death you lose a substantial amount of studs - Sonic style, meaning that in the end I lost more studs trying to get that one than I would have if I had just left it alone. This mechanic change between the two versions often left me feeling frustrated with the game because I would die to no end, being the all-or-nothing person that I am, just trying to get that last stupid stud on a platform. On the DS version when collecting studs you only have to be in the general area of a stud to pick it up however, in the Xbox 360 version, you must physically collide with a stud to pick it up. I enjoyed LEGO Star Wars quite a bit, but my main problem was that, because I'd played the DS version a couple of months ago, there wasn't enough of a difference between that version and the Xbox 360 version that I had played. I played and loved the Original LEGO Star Wars, but I never got the chance to play LEGO Star Wars: The Original Trilogy, so I was happy when they released both of these games in one complete package.įear not! For I have. When I heard news that LEGO and Lucasarts were joining forces, excited would be a moderate way of describing how I felt.