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Nintendo Wii : Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga Reviews

Gas Gauge: 81
Gas Gauge 81
Below are user reviews of Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.

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ReviewsScore
Game Spot 70
Game FAQs
GamesRadar 90
IGN 80
GameSpy 90
1UP 75






User Reviews (1 - 11 of 83)

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LEGO Starwars

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 1 / 1
Date: September 01, 2008
Author: Amazon User

It is a great video game. it has a ton of levels and you will never get bored of the game!!!!! once you beet the game you will want to start all over again!!!

Lego Star Wars was a huge it for all the family

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: May 12, 2008
Author: Amazon User

This game is awesome, I bought this for my son who just turned 4 years old since he has been playing it over his Uncles house, and its just great. There are times that I (the parent) want to play more than my son. And even my husband is into this game. So if you love STar Wars or even if you dont this is a great game, very fun, alittle hard for the younger kids so thats why we parents play hhaha.Its really a fun game, we all have really enjoyed it Thank you

More than 6 games in one Disc !!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 1 / 1
Date: April 19, 2008
Author: Amazon User

When I've seen some reviews and trailers, I wasn't sure about to buy. But in recent Christmas, I was in Mcallen and bought it.

The game is "easy", because everyone has been see Star Wars movie, knows what happened and the history is playable. You must know about habilites from each one, because some canisters and red bricks are available for some type of characters (dorids, jedis, humans, etc. etc.).

Also you must be patient, remember that are 6 movies, so they have 6 games, and each "game" has 6 levels (and extras). This game is for be finished in a long long time. In fact I think that when you finish you'll say "A long long time ago, I bought Lego Star Wars and I've start to play...." ta da da daaaa daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.....

Hint and beware for the programmers and game play developers: My son do not know about Star Wars movies, so we have be seening every movie before a new movie in the game starts. In The Revenge Of The Sith, my son said... "Daddy... Where are the canisters???? In the game ARE A LOT OF THEM, and in the movies NOT!!!.

May the force be with you padawans...

One Of The Greatest Of All Time

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 3 / 3
Date: April 13, 2008
Author: Amazon User

Lego Star Wars was introduced a few years ago as a kid's game (12 and under). I discovered it through my friend's son, who was a 5 year-old Star Wars fan. At one point, he needed help with an area and asked me to guide him. So I took the controller and tried my best. After about a half hour, he asked if he could play again, but I told him that I was still "trying to figure out how to play this game." (In actuality, it was an instant addiction.)

What I learned about Lego Star Wars is that the two-player function is awesome, but only if you are already friends with your counterpart and/or they are a skilled gamer. If not, you will find yourself directing their every action (to help move the game along), and they might take exception to that.

Anyway, if I may now review this particular rendition, Lego Star Wars: Complete Saga...

The game is awesome. I put it on par with the classics (Legend of Zelda, the Super Mario games, Sonic the Hedgehog, etc.). That may sound like hyperbole, but let me assure you that Lego Star Wars: Complete Saga is the real deal. The fact that the current generation game consoles enable new features (like Wii's remote control of the light sabers, guns, and Force) only bring this game from cult classic (kid's and diehard Star Wars fan's game) to popular classic (that everyone loves).

Lego Star Wars: Complete Saga will take you approximately 40-50 hours to complete. (That is, to get 100% completion of the game.) And it won't be 40-50 hours that you regret; even if you take a break from the game and come back to it in, say, 6 months, you will gladly find yourself playing the next 40 to 50 hours that you allot. (And I recommend coming back to it after a while - that way you don't always remember where everything is in the game, thus maintaining some challenge. Also, like that cool song on your new CD - don't play it out too fast, even if it is the best song ever!)

Star Wars fans probably found this game first, but it was the Lego concept that makes this a classic game. I grew up with Legos, and Star Wars was pretty scary to me when it first came out. Combining the two did what one expected: offered a fantastic venue for humor.

As you play along to the Star Wars theme and plots, the Lego style adds some of the funniest things you will have seen in a video game. I laughed out loud at some of the mini-movies in between the chapter stories. Also, the way that characters die... their Lego bodies fall apart! This really keeps the game tame for the younger set, but for us adults, it just adds that wonderful, simple, comic humor that we can appreciate.

The Lego Star Wars: Complete Saga version is an addition to the Lego Star Wars series. In the beginning, they released Chapters 1-3 to coincide with the Chapter 3 movie release (marketing). LucasArts was already releasing their "grown-up" versions of a Star Wars game at the same time, so Lego Star Wars was decidedly their kid's version.

A strong market was found, however, among a wide range of ages, so the developers released Chapters 4-6 with more featuers so as to close out their video game series, and thus the Star Wars saga. Or did they...?

The Complete Saga obviously combines the two previous versions, but also adds content. For example, new characters become available, as well as new levels, quests, and features. On the topic of the latter, the first version of Lego Star Wars (Chapters 1-3) had a relatively limited stud-collection/quest system. In the Complete Saga, these chapters are fleshed out (as in the later version - Chapters 4-6), and many more sequences are provided.

In all, if you want a game for yourself and/or a game for your kids, Lego Star Wars: Complete Saga is where it's at! It is easy enough to simply pick up and play, with really only 4 or 5 buttons to use (4 buttons if you only play the Story Mode). But if you are interested in taking the game beyond the Story Mode, you will find yourself having to manage your characters to know which situations call for which abilities (in the Free Play Mode). This means that the game reaches out to the kids and to the kids within us!

In my experience, the younger kids (ages 12 and under) will likely only appreciate the Star Wars concepts and gameplay. Also, that sense of accomplishment as they complete the Story Mode (where they kind of know what to expect, thus keeping them thinking along). If your kid does not like Star Wars, the Legos concept will probably not redeem the value for them.

For the older kids (ages 13 to 70), the Story Mode is way cool, but the Free Play is where we get to use our management skills! What awed me the most were the great and true renditions of the environments that were present in the movies. I always wanted to go to Endor, for example (not Northern California, by the way, but the make-believe location). Now, in this video game, I can guide characters in a wider use of the Endor location - not just the parts that were featured in the movie.

And that is just one example... The Complete Saga has more levels in it, such as the sequence where Anakin and Obi Wan are onboard General Grievous' ship. (And the deleted scene from the movie where Shak Ti is killed by General Grievous.) And there are still others...

If you even WANT this experience to last only 40-50 hours, then I think you have rushed it, my friend! I highly recommend taking your time (when you are not up against the clock) to really explore all that is in this game, the Complete Saga. It goes so far above and beyond what we saw in the original two releases, and the game itself, as I stated at the beginning, is a true classic video game. The Complete Saga is the seminal classic incorporating the two prior versions and expanding upon them. (You may want to get one copy and console for yourself and one of each for the kids!) I recommend buying this for any console that you own.

Fun for two!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: April 09, 2008
Author: Amazon User

The best thing about this game is the fact that two players can play simultaneously. My 8-year-old daughter and her father have been playing this game together in every spare moment. The fact that the two of them are working together to solve the puzzles and get through the episodes make it a winner in my book. We do have the Prima Games Guide to help them through some of the harder parts. We are new to video games, though, so more experienced game players may be able to figure more of it out on their own.

My kids would rather play this game than watch the movies!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 2 / 2
Date: March 25, 2008
Author: Amazon User

Being a huge Star Wars fan myself, my kids were already well aware of the Star Wars movies. As a family, we have enjoyed many great movie nights that included Star Wars! So it was not a big surprise how excited they were to try out Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga for Wii. I must say I have found this game much more fun that I thought it would be. It is truly a well done, fun game for the entire family. Now instead of my kids bugging me about watching the Star Wars movies, they ask to play "Star Wars Wii!!!"

Instantly addictive game

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: March 24, 2008
Author: Amazon User

This is really a super Wii game. It incorporates the Star Wars storyline into each level without becoming predictable in any way. The two player option is incredible, it's hard enough for skilled players yet easy enough for anyone to simply pick up and join in. It even has a little puzzle action for the more creative players out there. There is definitely no reason why a 7-year-old couldn't play alongside an adult and actually compete at the same level. It's great fun to cooperate and figure out how to complete each level, all the while blasting your enemies. We've been playing for a few weeks and still have over one hundred levels to complete. Just such a creative and fun game all around, very well done Nintendo!

Enjoyable fun game for all!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: March 20, 2008
Author: Amazon User

I'm not a big Star Wars fan but my 8yr old is and this game turned me into a SW fanatic. He was more into the Episode characters and movies where I was more the Hans Solo fan. :)
We tackled this game together finally finishing all levels, bricks, True Jedis and both Canisters. It is is fun tag teaming each other with the different characters. He likes to be Boba Fett blowing everything up where I am more the quiet Anakin/Obi ghost type. I love sneaking up and using the Jedi Slam.
Can't wait for Indy!

game review and tips

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: March 19, 2008
Author: Amazon User

This game is really easy if you know how to finish the level. And here's a tip if you already have the game: Look for all the glasses you can use the Force on (they'll be glowing) and once they're all in one pile, they will begin jumping up and down. To build, press Z once you're close to them and they will look like a bowling ball set. Then a bowling ball will appear in the cantina. Use the Force on it, then wait for a few seconds and they'll explode for extra studs.

Fun and Cool Game

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: March 16, 2008
Author: Amazon User

It is an awesome game that has features like power-ups, which are little purple balls that make you invincible. They give you studs when you defeat enemies, they let you "use the force" faster, and they let you build lego objects faster. There are new levels in the game compared to the older versions of the game. There are new extras that for example, let you use studs to buy characters that you can use in free play mode.


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