So, guess who's fresh off of yet another LEGO game?
LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean was released in 2011 (ten days before the release of the fourth film, On Stranger Tides) for all platforms. Differences between the handheld games and the console and PC versions are per usual. The copy I'm reviewing is for the 360, though I own the PC version as well (my computer doesn't run it well, hence why i bought it for console).
Unlike Batman 2 and Marvel Superheroes, LEGO PotC doesn't have an original plot; instead, the game utilizes the plots of the movies. The game is split up into four parts, each based on one of the four films, and every one of those parts has five levels (called chapters in-game) to play through, covering the major events of each movie. Due to the nature of the films (especially the fourth one), this game has the feeling of having four separate plots rather than one continuous story that spans all of its levels, despite the fact that the first three movies all link together.
I want to get out my complaints, since I have relatively few of them. The number one is, of course, the lack of female characters. This game has 16 girls out of 79 playable characters overall, which lands it right between Batman 2 and Marvel Superheroes in terms of ratios. However, this game has a one particularly infuriating difference than the last two. Like LEGO Harry Potter, and I assume some other games, characters with different costumes are considered as separate playable characters in the game. Due to that, the number of individual playable girls drops down to 9. Nine. Elizabeth, by herself, makes up over a third of the playable female characters due to costume changes. What fresh hell is this? And I understand that a lot of it has to do with the fact that there are a distinct lack of women in the film series this game is based on (unlike the last two, which just cherry picked small amounts out of literally hundreds of characters), but then I direct my question to them: where are the girls??? This is especially mind boggling because they even included side characters like Giselle and Scarlett, and bit parts like Lian and Park, the twins that appeared in the beginning of At World's End. Adding Tamara, the blonde mermaid from On Stranger Tides (and a character I kind of wanted to play) wouldn't even hep much. It's downright ridiculous how under represented we are in media, honestly.
Beyond that one, terribly huge stain on the game (and the film series), everything else is pretty perfect. Coming back to this after spending weeks playing the lovely but maddening Batman 2 made me remember what it was like to play a LEGO game and feel relaxed. No really; I played this game one day to calm me down after I'd gotten all stressed out about something I was writing at the time. The game is absolutely beautiful and does the films justice. They also had one of my favorite things about LEGO games based on movies: the original scores, which really helped set the mood. They even mixed up some of tracks in a way that enhanced the experience - for example, using Jack Sparrow's theme, which didn't come along until the second film (I know!) in the Smuggler's Den level from the first part of the game. The ambient noise in this game is stellar as well* (stand inside of the miniature version of Tia Dalma's shack in the hub with the music turned off. It's wonderful, and surprisingly creepy). Speaking of the hub, since this game is pre-Batman 2, the hub isn't open world, but that doesn't take away from the game at all. Though small, it's surprisingly engaging. Also, this game's bonus level is a miniaturized version of the game's boss levels formulated to mimic the original ride, complete with A Pirate's Life For Me playing in the background. It's absolutely adorable.
I totally recommend this game, especially if you're a fan of the LEGO game and especially especially if you love the films. It's a definite must play for me.
* Playing LEGO games with the sound off is something I started doing during my last replay of LEGO Marvel Superheroes, just because I wanted to know what the city sounded like. I recommend doing it if you're the kind of person who doesn't mind quiet; it can actually be quite soothing.
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