LEGO Builder's Journey box art

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LEGO Builder's Journey

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LEGO Builder's Journey

Dec 20, 2019

Main game

3.20 average rating based on 121 ratings

5
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A story about play, connections and adventure. Step through levels brick by brick with puzzles that ask us to sometimes follow the instructions… and sometimes to be creative and break the rules. Builder’s Journey is a poetic puzzle that takes place in a LEGO brick world, brought to life with the most accurately rendered LEGO elements yet to feature on screens. Be taken through a breathtaking world filled with brick-by-brick effects, accompanied by a beautiful soundtrack. Throughout the narrative, there will be ups and downs, challenges and celebrations. Take the time to experiment, and most importantly, to play as figuring … More
A story about play, connections and adventure. Step through levels brick by brick with puzzles that ask us to sometimes follow the instructions… and sometimes to be creative and break the rules. Builder’s Journey is a poetic puzzle that takes place in a LEGO brick world, brought to life with the most accurately rendered LEGO elements yet to feature on screens. Be taken through a breathtaking world filled with brick-by-brick effects, accompanied by a beautiful soundtrack. Throughout the narrative, there will be ups and downs, challenges and celebrations. Take the time to experiment, and most importantly, to play as figuring out who we are and what we become is the Builder’s Journey. Less
Release Dates
Dec 20, 2019 (Worldwide)
Mac, iOS
Jun 22, 2021 (Europe)
Nintendo Switch
Jun 22, 2021 (North_America)
Nintendo Switch
Jun 22, 2021 (Worldwide)
PC (Microsoft Windows)
Nov 25, 2021 (Worldwide)
Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S
Apr 19, 2022 (Worldwide)
PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5
Feb 02, 2024 (Worldwide)
visionOS
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User Stats
667
In Collection
43
Wish Listed
21
Playing
275
Backlogged
How Long Is LEGO Builder's Journey?
Main story: 2.8 hours
100% completion: 2.4 hours
Total completions: 17
tylerisrandom
tylerisrandom gave Jan 19, 2020
tylerisrandom gave Jan 19, 2020
Pleasant but missing some pieces

The game's protagonists enjoy a nice campfire

LEGO Builder's Journey is a short little adventure game with very light puzzle elements. Each little diorama is beautifully crafted and the game's mood is consistent and enjoyable. It's a surprisingly soft-spoken and contemplative experience for two gargantuan corporations to release in collaboration. It's also the first LEGO-branded game I've enjoyed enough to finish.

I am puzzled by some of the UX design choices here. Specifically:

  • The lack of support for pinch and zoom.
  • The abundance of 1×1 pieces. These are too small to comfortably and consistently select via touch.
  • The inability to rotate a level for more than a couple of seconds. I frequently found myself racing the camera in order to place a block obscured by some other portion of the level.

These UX problems are significant because they often led me to believe I was on the wrong track, only to discover later that, yes, the solution really does require placement of a 1×1 piece on a tile that's partially obscured by scenery.

I still enjoyed this game and would recommend it if you like LEGO and bite-sized interactive narratives. It's easy to play intermittently in short bursts, which is nice. Just don't expect a fully …

Read More

The game's protagonists enjoy a nice campfire

LEGO Builder's Journey is a short little adventure game with very light puzzle elements. Each little diorama is beautifully crafted and the game's mood is consistent and enjoyable. It's a surprisingly soft-spoken and contemplative experience for two gargantuan corporations to release in collaboration. It's also the first LEGO-branded game I've enjoyed enough to finish.

I am puzzled by some of the UX design choices here. Specifically:

  • The lack of support for pinch and zoom.
  • The abundance of 1×1 pieces. These are too small to comfortably and consistently select via touch.
  • The inability to rotate a level for more than a couple of seconds. I frequently found myself racing the camera in order to place a block obscured by some other portion of the level.

These UX problems are significant because they often led me to believe I was on the wrong track, only to discover later that, yes, the solution really does require placement of a 1×1 piece on a tile that's partially obscured by scenery.

I still enjoyed this game and would recommend it if you like LEGO and bite-sized interactive narratives. It's easy to play intermittently in short bursts, which is nice. Just don't expect a fully polished experience.

Read Less
JohnZ
JohnZ gave Apr 20, 2023
JohnZ gave Apr 20, 2023
A mobile game through and through
This review is for the PlayStation 5 version

I bought this one at 50% percent discount and I still feel ripped-off. They shouldn't sell mobile games like this one at full digital prices (20€ in this case). I don't think games should just be measured by how many hours of gameplay they provide, but in this case we have neither quality nor quantity.

The puzzles are super simplistic and boring, in 80% of the screens you just put a couple of blocks and make your character move on top of them from left to right, that's it. There are a few more elaborate ones, but they are not enough for a game that can easily be beaten in under two hours. Controls can be cumbersome at times as well, showing this wasn't initially designed for a controller but a touch screen. The way it tells its story through Lego blocks can be charming, but it's another example of the trite plot "child doesn't get enough quality time with their father because of his job".

Its positive aspect is its presentation, which is beautiful. A soothing soundtrack coupled with beautiful visuals. The ray tracing mode can look gorgeous at times, but they use FSR and this results in obnoxious …

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I bought this one at 50% percent discount and I still feel ripped-off. They shouldn't sell mobile games like this one at full digital prices (20€ in this case). I don't think games should just be measured by how many hours of gameplay they provide, but in this case we have neither quality nor quantity.

The puzzles are super simplistic and boring, in 80% of the screens you just put a couple of blocks and make your character move on top of them from left to right, that's it. There are a few more elaborate ones, but they are not enough for a game that can easily be beaten in under two hours. Controls can be cumbersome at times as well, showing this wasn't initially designed for a controller but a touch screen. The way it tells its story through Lego blocks can be charming, but it's another example of the trite plot "child doesn't get enough quality time with their father because of his job".

Its positive aspect is its presentation, which is beautiful. A soothing soundtrack coupled with beautiful visuals. The ray tracing mode can look gorgeous at times, but they use FSR and this results in obnoxious ghosting at 30fps and even some glitchy pixels on the border of the screen at times. I recommend people to play a couple of screens on that mode and see if they can cope with the ghosting. Otherwise, just switch to the performance mode since it still looks great without the ray tracing.

On mobile, for 5 bucks or less, it could be worth it as a relaxing experience you can spend an afternoon with. On console, at its current price, this is outright theft IMO.

Read Less
thebigmack
thebigmack gave Oct 14, 2023
thebigmack gave Oct 14, 2023
A Commercial Journey
This review is for the PC (Microsoft Windows) version

While my computer is finally starting to show its age, I appreciate the look and feel above of all else.

I can't shake the notion that Builders Journey is a highly polished toy commercial, masterfully blended into limited, story driven interactivity. Nearing the end, I fully expected a link to the Lego store before the credits rolled. There is sky high puzzle potential with an undercurrent of just wanting to get through it.

Only Lego could get away with this, so in that regard, I'm glad it's them instead of... Playmobile. -shudders-

bluejay211
bluejay211 gave Jul 12, 2023
bluejay211 gave Jul 12, 2023
healthy for the mind
This review is for the PlayStation 5 version

this game is cute. it takes the concept of lego and throws you into a puzzle game. it's not like most lego games where you're just playing levels and collecting minikits and studs. it actually leans into the building aspect and you need to use your head to build unique solutions using lego bricks. this game isn't life-changing, and it's pretty short (i beat it in one sitting). but it's inoffensive, and a good way to spend a morning to get your gears churning.

thebigmack
thebigmack updated their status Apr 10, 2023
thebigmack updated their status Apr 10, 2023

While my computer is finally starting to show its age, I'm appreciating the look and feel above of all else here.

Can't shake the notion that its more of a highly polished toy commercial, masterfully blended into limited, story driven interactivity. I must be nearing the end but fully expecting a link to the Lego store before the credits roll. Sky high puzzle potential with an undercurrent of just wanting to get through it.

Only Lego could get away with this, so in that regard, I'm glad its them instead of -shudders-... Playmobile.

Justeego
Justeego updated their status Dec 28, 2022
Justeego updated their status Dec 28, 2022

Even if it looks charming the gameplay is boring, the "story" is uninteresting

Grimug
Grimug updated their status Dec 26, 2022
Grimug updated their status Dec 26, 2022

Short but a fun experience, computer isn't strong enough for the amazing graphics 😂 I'll try it again when i upgrade

anarchistica
anarchistica updated their status Dec 21, 2022
anarchistica updated their status Dec 21, 2022

This is free in the Epic store today only:

https://store.epicgames.com/en-US/p/lego-builders-journey

Tomorrow we get something radiation-related.